by Andy Corren
Dirtbag Queen is a raucous joyride of a memoir. Andy Corren tells the story of his mother, Renay Corren, and the community of misfits who orbited her. He begins with the Correns and their eccentricities, or as he puts it: "These people. These beautiful, loud, leathery, Jewish people. My people." He progresses to a series of vignettes about getting along with his family, growing up queer in 1980s North Carolina, and burning bowling pins to keep warm each time the family failed to pay their power bill. And at
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by Tao Leigh Goffe
Climate change and eco-conscious political action are at the forefront of various global conversations as it becomes harder to deny that the current status quo is not going to be sustainable for much longer. As debates rage about the most effective course of action, interdisciplinary theorist Tao Leigh Goffe passionately argues that the future cannot be solved without turning to the past. Using both personal history and an approachable distillation of academic research, Goffe presents in Dark Laboratory a
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by Natalie C. Parker
A teen with a rare superpower--invincibility--must defend herself and her one-year-old babysitting charge in this energetic and emotional thriller packed with bitter battles, heartrending grief, and hard-won trust.
Tru Stallard is a bastion. If Underhill, the peacekeeping taskforce of "talents," knew the 17-year-old was nigh invincible, they would lock her "away in a bunker" for fear of her powers. Her secret life is imperiled during a babysitting gig: Logan Dire, her adoptive father and the legendary Ghoul
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by Han Kang, trans. by Paige Aniyah Morris, e. yaewon
"Sometimes, with some dreams, you awake and sense that the dream is ongoing elsewhere." So it is with We Do Not Part, a sublime, fever dream of a book by South Korean author Han Kang (The Vegetarian; Human Acts), translated from the Korean by e. yaewon and Paige Aniyah Morris
Set in contemporary South Korea, We Do Not Part explores themes of human connection and inhuman brutality. Kyungha, a writer left haunted and specter-like since completing her book about a recent uprising, is suddenly contacted
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by Angela Dominguez
Two-time Pura Belpré illustration honoree Angela Dominguez (the Stella Diaz series; Mango, Abuela, and Me) gives young readers a hilarious and exceedingly relatable series opener, Gabby Torres Gets a Billion Followers, about a nine-year-old's first time navigating social media.
Gabby Torres is the youngest member of the Sea Musketeers, a group of kids whose mission is to spread awareness about protecting the ocean. Gabby proposes they create a social media account, telling them that she helps her mom
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by Erika Krouse
In Erika Krouse's fourth book, the sparkling short story collection Save Me, Stranger, chance meetings prompt realizations and momentous choices.
These 12 first-person narratives are voiced by people in crisis, whom Krouse adroitly and compassionately connects readers to, despite their sometimes extreme cases. But encounters with strangers tender the possibility of transformation. In the title story, the narrator is taken hostage during a convenience store hold-up. Seeing that she is shielding her 10-year-old
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by Debbie Levy
The past feels astonishingly present in Debbie Levy's comprehensive and conversational A Dangerous Idea, a nonfiction work for young readers about the 1925 battle over evolution in the classroom that features a book ban, sensationalistic journalism, celebrities turned politicians, and sparring over curriculum.
John T. Scopes was fresh off his first year of teaching when "the leading citizens of the tiny burg of Dayton, Tennessee" summoned him to the drugstore for a chat. Scopes had unwittingly violated the
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