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TWO WINTERS

Unabashedly queer, moving, and sincere.

This retelling of The Winter’s Talefollows parallel stories of family and forgiveness in two very different times.

Paulina is many things: a semicloseted bisexual, a responsible daughter with NASA ambitions, the keeper of everyone’ssecrets. And in winter 1997, St. Cecelia’s in rural, mostly White Havendale, Illinois, has some big ones. Paulina’s best friend, Mia, is pregnant by her other best friend, Tesla, who’s increasingly overwhelmed with the task of raising his little brother in lieu of his absentee parents. New kid Xander, the only Black student at the school, has not-well-hidden feelings for Mia. Devout, Mexican and Salvadoran American Mia is putting her trust in God alone, refusing to see a doctor or tell anyone except Paulina about the baby. Paulina herself is in love with Ani, a popular jock who won’t take their secret relationship public. (Paulina, Tesla, and Ani are White.) In 2014 Chicago, amateur clockmaker Perdita loves life with her quirky adoptive moms, who are Chinese American and Black, but yearns to find out about her past. When she’s pointed in the direction of Havendale, Perdita’s story and that of Paulina and her friends begin to converge. Finding the original play’s resonance in the complicated kingdoms of high school while still appealingly down-to-earth, the specificity of place and slow build toward complication and tragedy work well in Paulina’s section but less successfully in Perdita’s. Readers need not be familiar with Shakespeare’s original to appreciate this skillful adaptation.

Unabashedly queer, moving, and sincere. (Fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 14, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-63679-019-0

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Bold Strokes Books

Review Posted Online: July 26, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2021

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THE GLASS GIRL

A visceral, weighty read.

An unflinching portrayal of the complexities of one teenager’s journey through alcoholism and recovery.

Bella took her first drink when she was 11. Now she’s 15, and she and her friends have perfected the art of asking strangers outside liquor stores to buy them booze. It’s the best way to cope with her parents’ fighting, the grief and trauma of watching her beloved grandmother die, acting as a caregiver to her younger sister, and getting dumped by her first boyfriend, who said she was “too much.” A party a few weeks ago led to the drunken mess of a night known as Bella’s Extremely Unfortunate Public Downfall, after which her mom ruled: “no drinking, no parties.” But Bella’s parents are divorced, and when she’s staying with her permissive and inattentive dad, who’ll stop her? After Bella blacks out at a Thanksgiving party and her friends drop her on her mom’s stoop, she ends up hospitalized with alcohol poisoning and a broken face. Her mom sends her to an outdoorsy rehab center with a program focused on building self-awareness and self-reliance. Bella’s experiences with the program and her fellow residents are depicted with realistic nuance; nothing comes easily, and Glasgow carefully addresses relapses, anxiety disorder, self-harm, and death. After Bella’s treatment ends, she discovers that returning to her life may be the most significant challenge of all. Most characters are cued white.

A visceral, weighty read. (author’s note, resources) (Fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2024

ISBN: 9780525708087

Page Count: 464

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: July 19, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2024

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FORGING SILVER INTO STARS

From the Forging Silver Into Stars series , Vol. 1

A fiercely hopeful exploration of loyalty, perception, and agency in the face of fear, misinformation, and violence.

As Emberfall and Syhl Shallow prepare a Royal Challenge to promote unity between their countries, the vocally anti-magic Truthbringers conspire to turn public favor against King Grey.

Set four years after Kemmerer’s Cursebreaker trilogy, this timely, nuanced series opener introduces teen narrators Callyn, Jax, and Tycho, whose alternating perspectives navigate moral ambiguities and confront past and present traumas. Baker Callyn and blacksmith Jax have supported one another through many hardships: the accident that claimed one of Jax’s feet, the loss of Callyn’s parents, and the ongoing physical abuse Jax sustains from his father. Pushed to the point of desperation, Jax and Callyn accept a dangerous but well-paid job conveying potentially treasonous messages for the Truthbringers—but after a chance encounter with Tycho, the King’s Courier, the friends realize they’re in way over their heads. Notably, despite widespread distrust of magic, Tycho and others in Grey’s inner circle wear rings of Iishellasan steel that allow them to borrow his power, foreshadowing further revelations about how the magic functions. Tycho also faces scrutiny for his growing friendship with Jax and Callyn, and as the first Royal Challenge approaches, political and romantic intrigue abound. Both primary romances offer a masterclass in organic yet explicit depictions of consent, including a smoldering queer romance that’s profound in its treatment of intimacy with a sexual assault survivor. Major characters default to White.

A fiercely hopeful exploration of loyalty, perception, and agency in the face of fear, misinformation, and violence. (map, character list) (Fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: June 7, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5476-0912-3

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Bloomsbury

Review Posted Online: Feb. 8, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2022

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