Young Adult Newsletter April 2026
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The Teen Librarians are reading...
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Teen Collection Development Librarian Rachel is reading...
| The Blue Line Letters: A Novel | Steven Christiansen |
Ty has to ride the blue line every day of the summer before his senior year. While he works on assignments, he also chronicles his journey in letters to his teacher and hopes for the attention of his fellow rider and classmate, Janie. |
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Teen Programming and Outreach Librarian Lily is reading...
| For Every One | Jason Reynolds |
"Your dream is the mole behind your ear, that chip in your front tooth, your freckles. It's the thing that makes you special, but not the thing that makes you great. The courage in trying, the passion in living, and the acknowledgement and appreciation of the beauty happening around you does that," Reynolds tells the reader ("dreamer," as he calls them) in this poem about what it means to reach towards a dream. |
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Crafting at the Library: Beginner Weaving |
Saturday, April 4 | 3:00pm-5:00pm Library Lab
Join us for a rotating monthly craft program on the first Saturday of the month. In April, we will make small woven pieces on a frame loom!
Learn more. |
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Teen Advisory Board (TAB)
| Tuesday, April 7| 3:30pm-4:30pm Hotpick Meeting Room
Teen Advisory Board (TAB) is your chance to be heard! Learn more about the Library, make suggestions for materials and programs, connect with peers, earn volunteer hours, and have fun.
TAB is open to young adults in grades 7-12.
Learn more. |
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Girls Who Code: Grades 6-12 |
Thursday, April 9, 16, 23, 30 | 4:00pm-6:00pm Library Lab
Girls Who Code is a program designed for young women to engage with science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) in an environment that fosters problem solving, teamwork, and personal skill development. Each of the sessions in this Spring 2026 club will include instruction as well as hands-on project work. No coding experience is necessary!
While Girls Who Code was specifically designed to remove the barriers preventing girls from engaging in science and technology education, our program is open to young people of all genders.
Learn more. |
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Dungeons & Dragons
| Saturday, April 11, 25 | 3:30pm-5:30pm Library Lab
Become the hero of your own adventure! Join us on a magical journey where we'll rely on our wits, imagination, and teamwork to play Dungeons & Dragons. No experience necessary!
Recommended for players ages 12+.
Learn more. |
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Babysitter's Training |
Sunday, April 12 | 9:00am-5:00pm Dunaway Community Room
Become a Red Cross certified babysitter at this training provided by Georgina Levey! Lunch will be provided to attendees.
Open to patrons 11-16 years old. Registration is required.
Learn more. |
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Bookish Crafts: Bookmarks
| Saturday, April 18 | 3:00pm-5:00pm Library Lab
Join us on the third Saturday of the month for a rotating lineup of literary-inspired projects. In April, we'll be decorating bookmarks with a variety of mediums and supplies!
Learn more. |
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Book Thieves Book Club |
Tuesday, April 21 | 3:30pm-4:30pm Hotpick Meeting Room
Join the Book Thieves, a group of enthusiastic readers who meet monthly to discuss exciting young adult literature.
April's book is Just Between Us by Adeline Kon.
Learn more. |
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Every month, we highlight stories with a different genre or theme in the
Teen Area. Enjoy the lyricism of these novels in verse for National Poetry Month! |
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The Leaving Room |
Amber McBride |
Gospel is the Keeper of the Leaving Room—a place all young people must phase through when they die. The young are never ready to leave; they need a moment to remember and a Keeper to help their wispy souls along.
Gospel assumes that there are countless other Leaving Rooms because many children pass, but she suspects they are not like her Leaving Room which is small (like a walk in closet) with shelves full of tiny jars that hold the memories of those who have gone.
When a random door opens and a Keeper named Melodee arrives, their souls become entangled. Gospel's seriousness melts and Melodee’s fear of connection fades, but still—are Keepers allowed to fall in love? Now they must find a way out of the Leaving Room and be unafraid of their love. They must claw their way back to their bodies because there is so much more life to explore—together. |
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Wings in the Wild |
Margarita Engle |
Winged beings are meant to be free. And so are artists, but the Cuban government has criminalized any art that doesn’t meet their approval. Soleida and her parents protest this injustice with their secret sculpture garden of chained birds. Then a hurricane exposes the illegal art, and her parents are arrested.
Soleida escapes to Central America alone, joining the thousands of Cuban refugees stranded in Costa Rica while seeking asylum elsewhere. There she meets Dariel, a Cuban American boy whose enigmatic music enchants birds and animals—and Soleida.
Together they work to protect the environment and bring attention to the imprisoned artists in Cuba. Soon they discover that love isn’t about falling—it’s about soaring together to new heights. But wings can be fragile, and Soleida and Dariel come from different worlds. They are fighting for a better future—and the chance to be together. |
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The Siren and the Star |
Colby Cedar Smith |
Introverted and homeschooled, vocal prodigy Luciana “Lula” Gabroni is ready to become the star she’s trained all her life to be. After entering the New England Conservatory of Music, she is immediately chosen to join an elite ensemble of peers who will compete in a prestigious music festival in modern-day Venice, Italy.
Barbara Strozzi is a poor young woman living in 17th-century Venice who dreams of making her mark on the world through her gift of song. She is determined to fight against the prescribed path of an illegitimate servant girl, daring to envision a life filled with intellect, pleasure, and independence—even as the restrictions of her gender and status threaten to silence her forever.
When Lula comes across Barbara’s bold and seductive music in the Conservatory library, she immediately feels a striking kinship with the mysterious female composer. After an incident at school sends Lula searching to reclaim her voice, she soon realizes she must connect with the ghosts of the past to find her heart’s true song once again. |
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Truth Is |
Hannah V. Sawyerr |
Seventeen-year-old poet Truth Bangura begins senior year unsure of life after graduation, but when she learns she's pregnant by her ex-boyfriend, she makes one decision she is sure about—an abortion. When Truth performs a poem about her decision and her emotionally turbulent home life, the performance is recorded and posted online for everyone to see—including her mother. |
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A Warning About Swans |
R.M. Romero |
Bavaria. 1880. Hilde was dreamed into existence by the god Odin, and along with her five sisters, granted cloaks that transform them into swans. Each sister’s cloak is imbued with a unique gift, but Hilde rejects her gift which connects her to the souls of dying creatures and forces her to shepherd them into the afterlife—the “Other Wood.”
While guiding the soul of a hawk to the Other Wood, Hilde meets the handsome Baron Maximilian von Richter, whose father was once a favorite of the king and left him no inheritance. Hilde is intrigued by Richter’s longing for a greater life and strikes a deal with him: She will manifest his dreams of riches, and in return, he will take her to the human world, where she will never have to guide souls again.
But at the court of King Ludwig II in Munich, Hilde struggles to fit in. After learning that fashionable ladies are having themselves painted, she hires non-binary Jewish artist Franz Mendelson, and is stunned when Franz renders her with swan wings. The more time she spends with Franz, the more she feels drawn to the artist’s warm, understanding nature, and the more controlling Richter becomes. When Hilde’s swan cloak suddenly goes missing, only Franz’s ability to paint souls can help Hilde escape her newfound prison. |
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Have questions?
| Call 970-429-1900 |
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