Co-authored by powerhouses Erin Entrada Kelly and Kwame Mbalia, On Again, Awkward Again is a hilariously cringey 9th-grade romance. Featuring “love at first sight” in a nurse’s office amidst IBS and water fountain injuries, it perfectly captures the awkward transition to high school. It’s a rare “sweet spot” book: pacy and funny enough for middle schoolers, but aspirational enough for early high schoolers—all without mature content.
Part travelogue and part “Roman Holiday” reimagining, All Roads Lead to Rome follows a diplomat’s daughter caught in a celebrity fake-dating scheme. While the romance is sweet and the setting is breathtakingly vivid, the story offers a timely look at digital reputation and the impact of social media scandals. It’s a perfect pick for students who love stories about travel, identity, and the complexities of living in the public eye.
This stunning graphic novel adaptation of Ruta Sepetys’ Between Shades of Gray brings the harrowing history of Soviet deportations to life through expressive, haunting artwork. Following 15-year-old Lina from Lithuania to the depths of Siberia, the story explores the trauma of family separation and the power of art as a means of survival. An accessible yet deeply moving resource for middle and high school classrooms studying WWII.
The Color of a Lie is a high-stakes social justice thriller that uncovers the hidden history of Northern segregation and redlining in the 1950s. As Calvin’s family attempts to “pass” in an all-white suburb, they face the suffocating pressure of a dangerous lie. While a controversial ending may give some educators pause for a whole-class study, it remains an essential look at the systemic roots of housing inequality in America.
A haunting graphic novel set in a traveling carnival, where freedom comes at a heartbreaking cost. Isabel’s story blends history, grief, and ghostly mystery in a way that will keep readers turning pages.