“Connection is important. It’s how we learn. And, when we find ourselves caught in the middle of the good kind of trouble, then we aren’t alone.”
Category Archives: romance
Five Feet Apart by Rachel Lippencott
“I’m not a doctor or scientist, so it’s not likely that I’ll be developing cures for various diseases any time soon. But, I do like to talk about books. So, when I can share voices and stories of young people who experience adversity like this, I make a point to do so. Maybe those young people will feel less alone because they see themselves in the literature they read.’
A Song Below Water by Bethany C. Morrow
“With a focus on female friendships, social justice, and the power of identity — all with the magic of the sea sprinkled throughout — A Song Below Water is a unique blend of fantasy and reality.”
A Song of Wraiths and Ruin by Rosanne A. Brown
“The fantastical elements of A Song of Wraiths and Ruin will capture your imagination, but it’s the characters and their ways of surviving adversity that capture our interest and our emotions.”
Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys
“dfather was only twenty-one when he saw the horrors of a concentration camp. War and violence are rooted in evil, pride, and ego. There’s almost always another alternative, but it seems the world has yet to embrace this fact. And it is the children who innocently suffer.”
Pride by Ibi Zoboi
“nto something so much more for young readers still carving out their identities.”
Shadow of Night (#2 in All Souls Trilogy) by Deborah Harkness
“No, Diana can save herself. She even saves her significant other, Matthew de Clairmont on more than one occasion. This pattern continues in the second installment of the trilogy Shadow of Night.”
Drums of Autumn (Outlander #4) by Diana Gabaldon
“Drums of Autumn has plenty of action, violence, romance, family reunion, and time travel. Despite the horrors and traumas of various characters, this installation in the series is perhaps the richest as it brings multiple worlds together.”
With the Fire on High by Elizabeth Acevedo
“I love this book for what it tells my students: no matter what life hands you, no matter how difficult it may be, surround yourself with people who cheer you on and hold on to your power, talent, and inherent worth. Don’t let anyone try to tell you you aren’t worthy because of x,y, or z. Because they are wrong.”
The Legend of Fire Horse Woman by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston
“the United States government long concentrated populations of American Indians on reservations, prisoners of the Civil War, and incarcerated Japanese Americans in camps.”