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| The Love and Lies of Rukhsana Ali by Sabina KhanStarring: seventeen-year-old Rukhsana, who’s been hiding her girlfriend, Ariana, and her dreams of studying at Caltech from her conservative Muslim parents.
What happens: After she’s caught kissing Ariana, Rukhsana’s parents ship her off to Bangladesh, where she’s forced to grapple with new complications as she searches for a way to stay true to herself without losing her family.
Who it’s for: readers in search of true-to-life characters navigating intersecting cultures and identities. |
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| On the Come Up by Angie ThomasWhat it’s about: When her fiery performance at a rap battle goes viral, 16-year-old Bri knows that her newfound fame could be her family’s ticket to survival -- but she doesn't know how to deal with the onslaught of people trying to label her. Book buzz: Similar to her runaway hit, The Hate U Give, this latest from Angie Thomas features powerful writing and an unforgettable heroine. Try this next: Lamar Giles’ Spin offers another insider’s view of an underground music scene. |
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| Saints and Misfits by S.K. AliWhat it’s about: According to Janna Yusuf, there are three kinds of people: saints, like her brother's pious fiancée; monsters, like the seemingly saintly guy who assaulted Janna; and misfits, like Janna herself, a Flannery O'Connor-loving hijabi with divorced parents and a crush on a non-Muslim guy.
Read it for: Janna's authentically angsty struggle to find her place and her voice.
Award buzz: honored in 2018 by the Asian/Pacific American Literature Award. |
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| The Marrow Thieves by Cherie DimalineIn a world...where climate change has ravaged North America, Métis teen Frenchie and his fellow survivors are on the run from the Recruiters, who seek to harvest and sell Indigenous people’s bone marrow in order to restore white people’s lost ability to dream.
Read it for: gritty, vivid world-building that makes you feel like you’ve stepped into the post-apocalyptic future.
Award buzz: honored in 2018 by the American Indian Youth Literature Award (as well as several other awards). |
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| You're Welcome, Universe by Whitney GardnerWhat it’s about: After being expelled from the Kingston School for the Deaf, graffiti artist Julia Prasad is sent to a mainstream school where she finds a persistent new friend and an anonymous graffiti rival who won’t stop messing with her tags.
Art alert: When English just won’t do, Julia narrates her realistically complex story through art and drawn ASL signs.
Award buzz: winner of the 2018 Schneider Family Book Award. |
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| The Librarian of Auschwitz by Antonio Iturbe; translated by Lilit ThwaitesWhat it is: a sophisticated, harrowing novel (based on real events) that tells the story of Dita, a 14-year-old girl who protects a collection of forbidden books in the “family camp” at Auschwitz.
Try this next: Vesper Stamper’s What the Night Sings or Elizabeth Wein’s Rose Under Fire -- both are similarly moving reads about lesser-known aspects of concentration camps.
Award buzz: winner of the 2018 Sydney Taylor Book Award. |
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| If I Was Your Girl by Meredith RussoWhat it’s about: Eighteen-year-old Amanda has survived a lot in order to live as her true self, but when she moves to small-town Tennessee, she decides to “go stealth” about her trans identity -- being the new girl in school is hard enough. Why you might like it: new friendships, a tender romance, and a poignant father-daughter relationship add even more depth to this coming-of-age story. Award buzz: winner of the 2017 Stonewall Book Award. |
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Contact your librarian for more great books for ages 14 and up!
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