, these are the recently released (or soon-to-be released) middle-grade and teen novels that most grabbed my attention:
The Head of the Saint
by Socorro Acioli, trans. by Daniel Hahn. A Brazilian boy who lives in a giant,
hollow, concrete head of St. Anthony can hear people’s prayers—and decides to
answer them.
The Leaving by
Tara Altebrando. Eleven years after six kindergartners went missing without a
trace, five of them return—not knowing where they’ve been.
The Way Back to You
by Michelle Andreani and Mindi Scott. Two teens take a road trip to meet three
people who received their late best friend’s organs.
The Parent Agency
by David Baddiel. Tired of his strict parents, Barry makes a wish that
transports him to a world where kids choose their own parents.
Some of the Parts
by Hannah Barnaby. Grieving her older brother’s death, Tallie tries to track
down the recipients of his donated organs.
Nine, Ten: A
September 11 Story by Nora Raleigh Baskin offers a look at the days leading
up to the tragic events and how that day impacted the lives of four middle
schoolers in different part of the country.
Scarlett Epstein
Hates It Here by Anna Breslaw. A teen finds an outlet for her fanfic
writing by posting a fanfiction narrative about her schoolmates online.
The Classy Crooks
Club by Alison Cherry. AJ discovers that her strict grandmother’s “bridge
group” is actually a club of crooks.
The Season of You and
Me by Robin Constantine. After her boyfriend breaks up with her, Cassidy
falls for a paralyzed fellow counselor at a summer camp.
Sticks and Stones
by Abby Cooper. A girl who has a rare disorder that makes words people say
about her appear on her body finds ways to accept who she is.
Hot Pterodactyl
Boyfriend by Alan Cumyn. Shiels falls for the first-ever interspecies
transfer student at her school.
Breaker by Kat
Ellis. The death count on campus rises after Kyle, son of an executed serial
killer, arrives at his new school.
The Secret Destiny of
Pixie Piper by Annabelle Fisher, illus. by Natalie Andrewson is the first
of a duology about a girl descended from Mother Goose.
Cleo Edison Oliver,
Playground Millionaire by Sundee T. Frazier. Inspired by a woman
entrepreneur on TV, Cleo launches a tooth-pulling business at school.
Twisted by Hannah
Jayne. When her father is accused of being a serial killer, Bex becomes the
ultimate bait in a dangerous game of cat and mouse.
The Deadly 7 by
Garth Jennings. An ancient machine pulls the seven deadly sins from a boy’s
soul, turning them into creatures who help find his missing sister.
Dreamology by
Lucy Keating. After Alice falls in love with the boy who has long appeared in
her dreams, he shows up at her new school.
The Museum of
Heartbreak by Meg Leder, photos by Jill Wachter. Penelope curates a
mini-museum dedicated to all the different heartbreaks—love and friendship— in
her life.
The Sleepover by
Jen Malone. Three friends try to piece together the evidently outrageous antics
of their sleepover the night before, when they may have been hypnotized.
Save Me, Kurt Cobain
by Jenny Manzer. A girl who’s been adrift since her mother vanished suspects
that Kurt Cobain is still alive—and that he’s her father.
How to Hang a Witch
by Adriana Mather. Sam discovers she’s at the center of a centuries-old curse
affecting anyone with ties to the Salem witch trials.
Nowhere Boys by
Elise McCredie. After four boys spend a stormy night in the bush, they return
home to discover that no one knows them.
26 Kisses by Anna
Michels. After a break-up, Veda finds the perfect solution to heal her
heartbreak by embarking on a summer-long quest to kiss 26 boys—one for every
letter of the alphabet.
Gemini by Sonya
Mukherjee. The story of 17-year-old conjoined twins is told in alternating
perspectives, marking Mukherjee’s debut.
The Greatest Zombie
Movie Ever by Jeff Strand. Justin and his filmmaking buddies decide it’s
time to make the greatest zombie movie ever.
The Last Boy and Girl
in the World by Siobhan Vivian. Keeley and her friends make the most of
their remaining time together after a storm floods their hometown and everyone
is ordered to pack up
and leave.
Demon Dentist by
David Walliams, illus. by Tony Ross. Is the new dentist in town responsible for
the creepy crawlies appearing under kids’ pillows in place of coins from the
tooth fairy?
Dreamers Often Lie
by Jacqueline West. After a high-school actress fractures her skull, she’s
afraid to admit that she’s hallucinating about Shakespeare.