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Teen Scene
June 2018

Recent Releases
A court of frost and starlight
by Sarah J Maas

"As Feyre navigates her first Winter Solstice as High Lady, she finds that those dearest to her have more wounds than she anticipated--scars that will have far-reaching impact on the future of their Court"
A Girl Like That
by Tanaz Bhathena

What it's about: piecing together how (and why) headstrong orphan Zarin and her childhood friend Porus wound up dead by the side of a highway in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. 

Who it's for: With postmortem narration, a diverse cast, and an unflinching portrayal of abuse, A Girl Like That will grab readers looking for unconventional stories about girls who defy society's rules. 
Puddin'
by Julie Murphy

Featuring: optimistic Millie Michalchuk, who's decided to ditch fat camp for a journalism program; and popular Callie Reyes, who's planning a revenge prank with her dance team frenemies.

What happens: When the aftermath of the prank brings the two Texas teens together, they discover that they inspire each other in unexpected ways.

Series alert: You don't need to have read Dumplin' to appreciate this feisty follow-up, but fans will be excited to revisit familiar characters.
American Panda
by Gloria Chao

Starring: 17-year-old MIT freshman Mei, whose future has been planned by her traditional Taiwanese parents: medical school, marriage to a Taiwanese guy, babies. With such heavy expectations, how can Mei tell her parents that she hates germs, loves dancing, and might be falling for her Japanese-American classmate? 

Why you might like it: It's a funny, even-handed look at a teen girl's struggle to define herself without losing her family. 

Read this next: Erika L. Sanchez's I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter or Samira Ahmed's Love, Hate, & Other Filters.
Bruja Born
by Zoraida Córdova

Still feeling broken after her family's battle in Los Lagos, Lula invokes a dark spell to bring her boyfriend and others back after a fatal bus crash, but unwittingly raises an army of hungry, half-dead casimuertos, instead
Focus on: Summer Reads
These gripping summer reads are almost enough to make you forget to reapply your sunscreen. 
 
When Dimple Met Rishi
by Sandhya Menon

Romance. What's a modern feminist to do when she accidentally falls for the guy her parents have chosen as her future husband? That's the question facing high school grad Dimple Shah when she meets Rishi Patel at a con for app developers. They get off to a rocky start, and the sparks nearly fizzle out before they begin to fly. Though they're both smart, geeky, first-generation Indian Americans, forward-thinking Dimple is openly ambitious while the more traditional Rishi hides his true interests, leading to an odd-couple relationship that's as authentic and hysterically funny as you'd expect. Already generating buzz, this debut is a can't-miss read for romance fans.
Textrovert
by Lindsey Summers

When her phone is accidentally switched with a phone belonging to a jock classmate just as he departs for summer football camp, a high school senior steps out of the shadow of her more popular twin brother and finds herself falling for the boy when they meet to exchange phones, despite having discovered the secret he's been keeping along the way.
One of us is lying
by Karen M. McManus

When one of five students in detention is found dead, his high-profile classmates—including a brainy intellectual, a popular beauty, a drug dealer on probation and an all-star athlete—are investigated and revealed to be the subjects of the victim's latest gossip postings. Simultaneous and eBook.
Eliza and Her Monsters
by Francesca Zappia

When the anonymous teen creator of a wildly popular webcomic is tempted by a school newcomer to pursue real-world relationships, everything she has worked so hard to build crumbles in the wake of their highly publicized romance. By the author of Made You Up. Simultaneous eBook.
The Lines We Cross
by Randa Abdel-Fattah

What it's about: the unlikely romance between Mina, a smart prep school student whose family came to Australia as refugees from Afghanistan, and Michael, a white classmate whose family founded a very vocal anti-immigrant group.  

Why you might like it: Along with realistic dialogue and alternating narration, this love story offers insight into the deeply personal side of politics.
Contact your librarian for more great books for age 14 and up!


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