Rebecca Anderson transports readers to 1850s Manchester in her Proper Romance novel, Isabelle and Alexander.
Browsing: YA review
Lynette Noni’s The Prison Healer is a gritty young adult fantasy that follows life in a notorious death prison.
What Beauty There is, by Cory Anderson, is an intensely brutal read intended for older, more mature young adults.
The tale of Peter Pan gets a decidedly modern twist in Aiden Thomas’ new young adult novel, Lost in the Never Woods.
A young woman comes to term with her grandmother’s death in Meredith Goldstein’s new YA novel, Things That Grow.
Sara Holland returns to Havenfall, a safe haven between four magical realms, in her new young adult fantasy novel, Phoenix Flame.
Alyssa Sheinmel’s The Castle School (for Troubled Girls) is a thoughtful look at mental illness, trauma and healing.
After three contemporary Proper Romance novels, Julie Wright has moved to the regency period with A Captain for Caroline Gray.
A young woman is forced to hide her true self in Cambria Gordon’s young adult novel The Poetry of Secrets.
After a bone-chilling curse upends the world, one girl finds herself holding the keys to humanity’s survival in Katharyn Blair’s Unchosen.