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THE PEACH REBELLION

Highlights bonds between unforgettable female characters.

Ginny Rose Gilley’s family struggled to survive as migrant farm workers after losing their Oklahoma farm to the Dust Bowl.

On her birthday, Ginny Rose had to do something no newly 6-year-old should ever have to do: help her father bury her two younger brothers who died of dysentery. Now it’s 1947, and her father is working at a railway station, 16-year-old Ginny Rose has a job at a cannery, and the family is finally putting down roots in a town in California’s Central Valley they know well from their migrant farming days. However, their improving circumstances do little to ease her mother’s all-consuming grief that makes life difficult for Ginny Rose and her three younger sisters. Working gives Ginny Rose new freedom, and a rekindled childhood friendship with peach farmer’s daughter Peggy Simmons allows her to be a carefree teenager for the first time. Peggy’s wealthy best friend threatens to get in the way of the friendship, but an out-of-the-ordinary adventure unexpectedly brings the girls together. Themes of class and wealth are handled with a light but impactful touch, and the presumed White main characters resist the gender and economic inequalities they face with courage and grit. Unfortunately, racial themes are less well developed: Mexican fieldworkers’ lives are presented without nuance, and Japanese American farming families, a significant population in this region until their recent wartime incarceration, are not mentioned at all.

Highlights bonds between unforgettable female characters. (Historical fiction. 13-18)

Pub Date: May 17, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-593-37856-4

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Knopf

Review Posted Online: March 28, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2022

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WE'RE A BAD IDEA, RIGHT?

A light and entertaining plot-driven romance.

A Connecticut girl and her best friend devise a series of plans in order to achieve their goals: following a dream and winning back an ex.

Eighteen-year-old Audrey Barbour has a Master Plan: attend Blue Ridge Glass School in North Carolina and someday turn her Etsy shop, Golightly Glass, into a thriving business. But her uber-wealthy parents insist that she instead follow in their footsteps and go to business school. So Audrey decides to go find the tuition money she needs with help from her best friend, Henry Chen. Henry needs a favor, too: He hopes that fake dating Audrey will help him win back his ex-girlfriend, and he points out to a reluctant Audrey that this could make her crush, Griffin, notice her. While Audrey’s parents vacation in France for three weeks, the pair rent out the Barbour mansion on the Long Island Sound. Soon romantic chemistry grows alongside their business partnership. Despite the pair’s great preparation and an abundance of secondary characters with connections and talents to help pull off their increasingly ambitious ideas, plans go awry, leaving Audrey and Henry scrambling and second-guessing their choices. The pacing is even, but the characters often take a back seat to the whirlwind of activity that drives the plot, with the emphasis falling on each person’s practical skills and their role in keeping the action moving over their emotional bonds. Audrey is white, and Henry’s surname cues him as Chinese American.

A light and entertaining plot-driven romance. (Romance. 14-18)

Pub Date: March 31, 2026

ISBN: 9780593904794

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Delacorte Romance

Review Posted Online: Dec. 12, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2026

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RELEASE ME

From the Shatter Me Series: The New Republic series , Vol. 2

A character-focused entry that will satisfy fans.

Romantic complications between a trained killer and one of her captors drive this sequel to Watch Me (2025).

Appealing to readers who prefer their romantic dramas to be light on action and heavy on long passages of banter, bitter sibling arguments, and tortured reflections, Mafi continues the tale of Rosabelle Wolff, the flaxen-haired assassin from the dystopic Reestablishment, and magnetic, “impossibly stunning” James Anderson, her nemesis-turned-lover who’s still trying to take down the regime. Now desperate to accomplish several secret missions, Rosa easily escapes from one of The New Republic’s prisons, where she was left in the series opener, and, dressed in “a little kid’s cat onesie,” eludes all pursuers except for James, who can seemingly find her at will. Enigmatic Rosa responds unpredictably to many human contacts—including with violence, temporary death (one of her abilities), or a sudden panic attack. Along with the central pair of rivals and lovers, James’ older brother, Aaron, shares the narration. Bestseller Mafi tucks in several subplots, including, notably, a cameo from Juliette Ferrars, the protagonist of the original Shatter Me series, who’s undergoing a scarily difficult pregnancy. Amid the slowly simmering rising action, the author delivers a revelation and a twist that set up a potential series climax. Some ethnic diversity is present in the supporting cast.

A character-focused entry that will satisfy fans. (Dystopian. 14-adult)

Pub Date: April 7, 2026

ISBN: 9780063419056

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Storytide/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: April 7, 2026

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 15, 2026

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