I knew going into YA novel The Guinevere Deception that I would like it. I am a fan of Kiersten White, so it wasn’t a big leap.
Browsing: YA
Billed as Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea meets Frankenstein, Frances Hardinge’s Deeplight is a fantasy adventure that you won’t want to put down.
At this point, we could all use a little escape. If a romantic regency escape is jam, then Megan Walker’s Lakeshire Park may just be your cup of tea.
Adalyn Grace’s YA novel All the Stars and Teeth is one of the darkest, grisliest books I’ve read in a while. It’s an acquired taste.
In The Surface Breaks, by Louise O’Neill, reimagines Hans Christian Andersen’s original fairy tale with a feminist twist.
Shadow Mountain’s latest proper romance, A Song for the Stars, by Ilima Todd, transports readers to 1779 Hawaiian Islands.
I don’t know what I was expecting going into Mary Watson’s YA novel The Wren Hunt, but it certainly wasn’t what I thought.
If by reading the synopsis you think that Morgan Matson’s YA novel Save the Date sounds like a Netflix movie, you’d be correct.
The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein makes me want to read Mary Shelley’s book, and then return to Kiersten White’s again.
Little White Lies, by Jennifer Lynn Barnes, is being billed as the Southern mash up of Gilmore Girls and Pretty Little Liars, and that’s exactly right.