Sara B. Larson’s Bright Burns the Night is an excellent sequel, and in many ways, I enjoyed it more than Dark Breaks the Dawn.
Browsing: young adult
Alexa Donne’s Brightly Burning is Jane Eyre reimagined. Some elements are so similar, you know exactly what’s coming next — or at least you think you do.
Going in to Cori McCarthy’s Now a Major Motion Picture, I thought it would be fun, but not much more. I was wrong. It was better.
Sony Pictures has already optioned The Final Six, and it’s easy to see why. It’s a dystopian adventure that seems plausible.
Tiffany Sly Lives Here Now author Dana L. Davis is passionate about changing the narrative facing people of color in film and TV.
Not If I Save You First, by Ally Carter, unfolds like an action movie that you just want to settle in with a bowl of popcorn.
Every once in a while I find myself unexpectedly swept away with a novel, which was the case with Adrienne Young’s Sky in the Deep. I read it in one sitting.
Paula Garner’s YA novel Relative Strangers starts out well and quickly becomes a page-turner. It’s not a romance and benefits from that.
Margaret Peterson Haddix’s The Summer of Broken Things explores the lives of two very different girls who are connected in an unexpected way.
When I began Brigid Kemmerer’s More Than We Can Tell, it was the cover and description that called to me. It was only after I began that I realized there was so much more.