New Release Spotlight: May 19, 2026

It’s officially our last week of school!!!!! Whoohoooo!

This week’s New Release Spotlight is another giant-sized May edition, featuring 14 fantastic new titles.

Because the list is so lengthy, I have once again added jump-to links below to help you navigate directly to the sections you need most: Young Adult, Middle Grade, or Picture Books.

This Week’s Top Picks

If you only have time to check out a few, here are the three titles (featured on this week’s cover!) that you won’t want to miss:

  • YA Graphic Fiction: Landing in Place by Sherine Hamdy
  • Chapter Book: The Shrew Detective: The Case of the Pilfered Pearls by Margi Preus
  • Informational Picture Book: We the People is All the People by Howard W. Reeves

Spotlight Housekeeping & Links

  • Want the whole lineup for the May New Release Spotlight? Click below to view the full May New Release List on Amazon and easily add these titles to your cart!

  • Free Canva Templates: Keep an eye on your inbox! Canva links for this week’s graphics will be sent out via email on Tuesday morning, May 26, 2026. These templates are totally free to my email list—sign up here to get the April links today and join the list to receive the May links on May 26th.

  • The Ginormous Booklist: For those keeping track, this week’s titles are #5227 – #5241 on the master list.

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YOUNG ADULT (GRADES 7+)

YA Graphic Fiction
Landing in Place

Author: Sherine Hamdy

Illustrator: Myra El Mir

Genre: graphic fiction, realistic fiction

Setting: Long Island, New York, USA and Cairo, Egypt

Themes: wearing hijab, family heritage, artists, traveling abroad, identity, religion, parental expectations, immigrant families

Protagonist: female, age 18, Egyptian American, Muslim, college freshman

Recommended for: Grades 7-12

Starred Reviews: Booklist, Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and SLJ

Notes: Text in English and Arabic.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Anisa is following in her sister Reem’s footsteps: She’s a freshman at her sister’s alma mater, she’s on the same premed track, and she’s inherited Reem’s old hotpot, mini-fridge, and textbooks.

Even though Anisa would prefer to study art, her parents discount that as a valid career choice. The path laid out before her starts to crumble as Anisa feels she doesn’t belong—either in her organic chemistry class or among the other Muslim students on campus.

When Anisa fails her first semester, she begs her parents to let her take time off to visit Cairo and stay with her beloved grandfather. Finally free to have her own experiences, Anisa begins a journey of self-discovery and, as she bumps up against familial, societal, and religious expectations, she starts to develop her own artistic voice.

When Anisa returns to the United States, many of these expectations shift, but she learns to draw on the love of friends and family—including those she’s often at odds with—in order to stay true to herself.

YA Adventure
This Could All Go Bad

Author: Spencer Hall

Genre: humor, adventure

Setting: night before 8th grade graduation

Themes: dares, competition, friendship, anxiety, transition to high school, shenanigans

Protagonist: male, age 14, white, almost-9th grader; cast is racially diverse

Recommended for: Grades 6-10

Starred Reviews: Booklist and SLJ

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

It’s no secret that Jensen Chapman is a coward (though he prefers the term ‘risk averse’).

He’s scared of dodgeball day in gym class, intimidated by his older sister (she’s weirdly strong, alright?), nervous around his crush Leslie Chen, and freaked out about starting high school…just to name a few things. But on the night before his eighth-grade graduation, that’s all about to change.

When Jensen’s two best friends, Maleek and Cooper, show up to kidnap him (OK, recruit him) to compete against a group of girls-including Leslie Chen herself-in a series of escalating dares, Jensen knows it’s now or never: face his fears once and for all, or face a life of spinelessness forever.

The boys set out on an epic race against the clock that includes faulty skateboards, internet-famous ferrets, and a stolen golf cart. But when Jensen finds out that Maleek and Cooper have been keeping a huge secret from him, he’ll need every scrap of his newfound bravery to save their friendship.

YA Novel in Verse
An Expanse of Blue

Author: Kauakanilehua Mahoe Adams

Genre: novel in verse, realistic fiction

Setting: suburb in Washington (state), USA; January 25th through Easter

Themes: identity, faith, community, coming of age, controlling parent (father), ancestral gods, spirituality, sisters, parental infidelity, AAPI Month

Protagonist: female, age 17, Native Hawaiian

Recommended for: Grades 8-12

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly and Booklist

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Aouli Elizabeth Smith is adrift: unheard at home and an unbeliever at church, fighting her sister and losing her best friend. Overflowing with feeling, she pours her secrets and herself into her song journal when the world threatens to sweep her away.

The one place she feels tied down to earth is at her Aunty Ehu’s house. Those joyous Saturdays with her extended Native Hawaiian community living in Western Washington are precious to her. Under the maple trees, the fragments of her life fit together, if only for an afternoon.

Then, an unspeakable truth about her father shatters this one perfect corner of her life.

As Aouli’s world constricts around what others wish she could be, language fails her. But when a new boy, Nalu, turns up with eyes that seem to pierce right into her soul, maybe it’s love that can give her the words to set herself free.

YA Dark Fantasy
The Lustrous Dark

Author: Loretta Chefchaouni

Genre: dark fantasy, folklore

Setting: city of Nezjar (fictional, but Morocco-inspired)

Themes: magic, apprentices, female enslavement, mothers and daughters, oppression, addiction, mythology, monsters, poverty, depression, worldbuilding, toxic mothers

Protagonist: female, age 18, Moroccan, orphan

Recommended for: Grades 8-12

Starred Reviews: SLJ

Notes: Inspired by the Moroccan folktale “The Jealous Mother.” Hardcover may have sprayed edges.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Orphaned as a baby, Shay has spent her life training as the midwife’s apprentice. Her role grants her stability, yet Shay has always yearned for more. Namely, motherly affection and answers regarding her mysterious birth—neither of which the midwife deems practical to provide.

After Shay discovers her birth mother, Hind, is still alive and addicted to a magical drug called Snow, she determines to get the woman clean. But when Hind betrays Shay to get her hands on more Snow, Shay’s abandoned within a deadly forest and forced to rely on a band of monstrous ghouls for safety.

Shay’s realm has long stood on the brink of war between the men who control magic and the revolutionaries who want to eliminate it. But in the forest, Shay hears the pleading call of ancient spirits who claim that not only has magic been stolen, but Shay has the power to return it.

With the help of a spitfire revolutionary and the boy who’s winning over her heart, Shay discovers the horrific truth of who produces Snow and will have to decide for herself whether to heed the spirits’ charge or fade into obscurity.

MIDDLE GRADES (3rd – 8th GRADES)

Jump to:

MG Graphic Fiction
The Hidden Dominion of Geordie James

Author and Illustrator: Mike Dawson

Genre: graphic fiction, realistic fiction

Themes: friendship, online gaming, science fair, grief, death of a parent (mother), anxiety, role-playing games, human impact on the environment, pigs

Protagonist: male, age 12, white, 6th grader

Recommended for: Grades 3-8

Starred Reviews: SLJ, Booklist, and Kirkus

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

When Geordie becomes obsessed with the fate of a pig who escaped from a factory farm, the group project is put in jeopardy. As Geordie starts to push harder into difficult questions, he finds everything changing—his friendships, his ability to express himself, even how he plays his favorite online role-playing game, Dominion.  

The Hidden Dominion of Geordie James is about kids coming to terms with a world that feels outside of their control, ending with the message that we humans do not exist apart from nature, but rather as an integral part of it.  

MG Realistic Fiction
A Wish with Wings

Author: Sarah Guillory

Genre: realistic fiction

Setting: Little John Island, Louisiana, USA

Themes: mining industry, birds, courage, fear, anger, grief, racial discrimination, civil rights, prejudice, right versus wrong

Protagonist: female, age 12, white

Recommended for: Grades 3-8

Starred Reviews: Booklist, SLJ, and Kirkus

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Everyone says twelve-year-old Evan Calais is feral. She likes to spend her time outside, fishing and having mud fights in her small town of Little John Island, Louisiana.

But when a sinkhole causes the town mine to collapse, trapping all forty-eight miners, everything in her life comes to a standstill. Because Evan’s dad is one of the miners trapped inside.

Evan seeks solace the only way she knows how―in the outdoors―and comes upon the most peculiar thing.

An egg.

It’s a large egg. And it’s alone. So while Evan waits for her dad to come home, she also finds herself caring for the strange, abandoned egg. If this egg can hatch…maybe her dad has a chance of coming home, too. But as she incubates the egg, Evan will need to make a big decision. For she has a secret―she might know what caused the cave-in.

MG Novel in Verse
My Brother Oliver

Author: R.L. Toalson

Genre: realistic fiction, novel in verse

Themes: brothers, bullying, suicidal ideation, neurodivergent sibling, guilt, alternating timelines, mental health

Protagonist: male, white, 6th grader

Recommended for: Grades 3-8

Starred Reviews: Publishers Weekly, SLJ, and Kirkus

Notes: Includes an author’s note and resource list.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

My brother’s not here.
My brother’s not here.
My brother’s not here.
And it’s all
because of
me.

Brooks loves and adores his older brother, Oliver. That’s why it was so hard—practically impossible, really—for him to have done what he did and told his parents about what Oliver wanted to do.

Now Oliver has been sent away. He’s miserable, and Brooks’s family is falling apart. His mom and dad are sad and scared, and it seems like nothing will ever be okay again. Maybe things would be better if Brooks had just kept his mouth shut. Can he and his family find the hope they need to keep going?

MG Animal Fantasy
Bad Badger

Author: Maryrose Wood

Illustrator: Giulia Ghigini

Genre: animal fantasy, longer chapter book

Themes: badgers, seagulls, friendship, sea turtles, found family

Protagonist: anthropomorphic badger and seagull

Recommended for: Grades 1-6

Starred Reviews: Kirkus

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Septimus is not good at being a badger. He adores the sunset. He dreams of going to Venice. And he lives alone in a charming cottage by the sea. He’s not unhappy with his tidy, solitary life, but there are times when being so bad at badgerdom makes him wonder if he’s even a badger at all.

When a gull of very few words lands on the windowsill, Septimus leaps at the possibility of friendship. However, his new confidant soon goes missing and Septimus is bereft.

Determined to find his best—and only—friend, he ventures into new territory and encounters a cast of surprising characters. Can Septimus be as brave and bighearted as he’ll need to be to find Gully? Or is he really a bad badger after all?

Chapter Book
The Shrew Detective: The Case of the Pilfered Pearls

Author: Margi Preus

Illustrator: Junyi Wu

Genre: mystery, chapter book, animal stories

Themes: detectives, wordplay, murder, shrews, shrew facts, vocabulary, missing objects

Protagonist: anthropomorphic pygmy shrew, female; humans are white of the page

Recommended for: Grades 1-5

Starred Reviews: SLJ, Publishers Weekly, Kirkus, and Booklist

Notes: Book 1 of The Shrew Detective series.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Mystery: Something that is difficult or impossible to understand.

With a curious mind and a vast vocabulary (thanks to her wallpaper―pages of a discarded human dictionary), tiny Minerva Shrew would love nothing more than to solve the Big Mysteries of Life and the Universe.

Instead, in The Case of the Pilfered Pearls, she’s called upon to help her cousin Tenacity solve a mystery in the most dangerous of places: a human house. When a string of pearls goes missing, the human owner is sure a “dreadful rodent” has pilfered them―and now the lives of all Minerva’s friends are at risk! Will Minerva find the true culprit before the exterminators arrive?

With wit and warmth, Margi Preus creates a charming woodland world filled with creatures both whimsical and nefarious (neh-FARE-ee-us: wicked or criminal), along with suspense, intrigue, and, thanks to Minerva’s metabolism, plenty of snacks.

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PICTURE BOOKS (USUALLY PreS-GRADE 5)

This Week's Featured Resource
Summer Camping Library Storytime

Before we jump into the picture books: Planning a Camp Read-A-Lot?


While my school is officially out after this week, I know many of you are still powering through until June!


Whether you are looking for a highly engaging lesson to survive those final, chaotic weeks of school, or you are prepping for a summer library camp, my Summer Camping Storytime is fully prepped and ready to go in the shop. It includes everything you need to bring the campfire inside.

Informational Picture books
We the People Is All the People

Author: Howard W. Reeves

Illustrator: Duncan Tonatiuh

Genre: informational picture book

Themes: US Constitution, US history, Preamble to the Constitution, civics, civil rights, discrimination, equality, racism, America 250

Protagonist: many people, diverse in skin tone, ability, and age

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 5

Starred Reviews: Kirkus, Publishers Weekly, and SLJ

Notes: Caldecott 2027 contender?

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Three starred reviews! We the People Is All the People is “a clearly rendered tribute to community care and unity that’s anchored in hues of red, white, and blue.” (Publishers Weekly)

We the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union . . . 

Who are the “we the people” mentioned in the preamble to the U.S. Constitution? They are our neighbors next door, down the street, or across the country. They live in different places, worship in different ways, come from different backgrounds and histories. They struggle, achieve, and overcome. They are you, and me, and us. 

Because, as we strive to create a more perfect union, “we” should mean “all.”

This beautiful picture book celebration of the best of America includes the preamble to the United States Constitution as well as notes from the author and artist.

Also look for the Spanish-language edition, Nosotros, el pueblo somos todos.

Picture Book
The Outermost Mouse

Author: Lauren Wolk

Illustrator: Kristen Adam

Genre: picture book

Setting: Cape Cod, Massachusetts, USA

Themes: home, storms, the ocean, change, protecting one’s home, mice

Protagonist: female mouse

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

Starred Reviews: Booklist, SLJ, and Kirkus

Notes: 2027 Caldecott contender?

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

The Outermost Mouse loves her life at the tip of the beach. She has blue sky above and sand as warm and soft as her mother below.

Best of all is the house, a huge nest she has made her own. There are jam-jar posies, lanterns full of gold, and a clock that tick-tocks her to sleep at night.

But a storm is coming. When the sky goes dark and a cold wind rises, the little mouse must do everything she can to protect her home. Even though she’s small enough to fit into a teacup, the Outermost Mouse is smart, strong, and brave—and ready to face the wild waves.

Informational Picture Book
Reaching Across the Sky: A Celebration of Bridges

Author: Christy Hale

Genre: informational picture book

Setting: multiple countries worldwide

Themes: bridges, STEM, civil engineering, bridge types

Recommended for: Grades 1-6

Starred Reviews: Hornbook and SLJ

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Bridges accomplish many things—they span obstacles (rivers and canyons); they join places (cities and states and even countries); and they carry cars, trucks, and trains to deliver essential goods (food and clothing). Above all, bridges are feats of human innovation that bring people together.

This essential STEAM offering celebrates these spectacular wonders of architecture and engineering, including examples found in nature, different styles and materials used in their construction, and the science behind how they work.

It’s a one-stop information panoply for young readers on all there is to know about these magnificent structures that unite people throughout the world.

Informational Picture Book
At the Edge: Curious Creatures of Planet Earth

Author: David Elliott

Illustrator: Clover Robin

Genre: poetry, informational picture book

Setting: worldwide

Themes: wildlife, biology, animals, animal research

Protagonist: 14 animal species

Recommended for: PreS-Grade 3

Starred Reviews: SLJ

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

Why does the axolotl salamander always seem to be smiling? Is it true that the wild goat known as a markhor is excellent at parkour? What happens when the peacock spider’s dance, complete with its rumble-rumps, doesn’t please the object of its affection?

Providing a peek at everything from scaly pangolins to duck-billed platypuses, from the lemur known as an aye-aye to the perpetually grumpy (and adorable) black rain frog, David Elliott’s poetic vignettes deliver a witty and informative take on some of the world’s oddest animals. Brought to life in striking illustrations by collage artist Clover Robin, this roundup of unique creatures will delight animal lovers of all stripes.

Picture Book
The Boy, The Father, and The Bear

Author and Illustrator: Per Gustavsson

Genre: picture book, fairy tale

Setting: a home by the sea

Themes: aging, healing, grief, death of a parent (father), bears, human-animal friendships, transformation, trees, metaphors

Protagonist: Human characters have skin the color of the page.

Recommended for: Grades K-4

Starred Reviews: SLJ

Notes: Translated from Swedish by Eva Apelqvist.

PUBLISHER’S SUMMARY

A boy and his father live alone on an island. They play football, fish, and have a very happy life together. His father gives him advice, to avoid bears and sharks, but as the father’s life comes to an end he remarkably turns into a tree…

“Everything will be all right,” the branches creaked back.
It was as if his father were talking to him.


The boy must set out on his new life of his own. Along the way, he encounters new friends who help him discover that even after loss, life can still be filled with companionship and wonder.