When I read Shelley Sackier’s YA novel, The Antidote, I did not want to put it down — I think I read the novel in two sittings.
Browsing: YA review
I don’t read a lot of books written in verse. But the buzz for Kip Wilson’s White Rose was so strong, I decided to give it a try. I’m glad I did.
Though Daises and Devotion is the second book in Josi S. Kilpack’s Mayfield Family Regency series, the romance also stands alone.
Shadow Mountain’s latest proper romance, A Song for the Stars, by Ilima Todd, transports readers to 1779 Hawaiian Islands.
I’m still trying to decide how I feel about Susan Kaplan Carlton’s new YA novel, In the Neighborhood of True, which sticks with you.
Last of Her Name has quickly became one of my favorite books of 2019. From the beginning, I found myself swept into Jessica Khoury’s world.
Jennifer A. Nielsen’s impressive heroine Kestra Dallistor returned to readers’ consciousness this February in The Deceiver’s Heart.
Wicked Saints, the first book in Emily A. Duncan’s Something Dark and Holy series, is a dark and well-developed YA fantasy.
In Jessika Fleck’s YA novel Beware the Night, readers are transported to a dystopian land that feels very much like ancient Rome.
When I first started reading Crystal Smith’s young adult novel Bloodleaf, I wasn’t sure if I’d be able to finish. I’m glad I did.