Hour of the Bees, by Lindsay Eagar.
While her friends are spending their summers having pool parties and
sleepovers, twelve-year-old Carolina — Carol — is spending hers in the
middle of the New Mexico desert, helping her parents move the
grandfather she's never met into a home for people with dementia.
At
first, Carol avoids prickly Grandpa Serge. But as the summer wears on
and the heat bears down, Carol finds herself drawn to him, fascinated by
the crazy stories he tells her about a healing tree, a green-glass
lake, and the bees that will bring back the rain and end a hundred years
of drought. As the thin line between magic and reality starts to blur,
Carol must decide for herself what is possible — and what it means to be
true to her roots.
Readers who dream that there's something more out
there will be enchanted by this captivating novel of family, renewal,
and discovering the wonder of the world.
Lady Midnight (The Dark Artifices #1), by Cassandra Clare.
It's been five years since the events of City of Heavenly Fire
that brought the Shadowhunters to the brink of oblivion. Emma Carstairs
is no longer a child in mourning, but a young woman bent on discovering
what killed her parents and avenging her losses.
Together with
her parabatai Julian Blackthorn, Emma must learn to trust her head and
her heart as she investigates a demonic plot that stretches across Los
Angeles, from the Sunset Strip to the enchanted sea that pounds the
beaches of Santa Monica. If only her heart didn't lead her in
treacherous directions...
Making things even more complicated,
Julian's brother Mark—who was captured by the faeries five years ago—has
been returned as a bargaining chip. The faeries are desperate to find
out who is murdering their kind—and they need the Shadowhunters' help to
do it. But time works differently in faerie, so Mark has barely aged
and doesn't recognize his family. Can he ever truly return to them? Will
the faeries really allow it?
Maybe a Fox, by Kathi Appelt. Illustrated by Alison McGhee.
Sylvie and Jules, Jules and Sylvie. Better than just sisters, better
than best friends, they'd be identical twins if only they'd been born in
the same year. And if only Sylvie wasn't such a fast—faster than
fast—runner. But Sylvie is too fast, and when she runs to the river
they're not supposed to go anywhere near to throw a wish rock just
before the school bus comes on a snowy morning, she runs so fast that no
one sees what happens...and no one ever sees her again. Jules is
devastated, but she refuses to believe what all the others believe,
that—like their mother—her sister is gone forever.
At the very
same time, in the shadow world, a shadow fox is born—half of the spirit
world, half of the animal world. She too is fast—faster than fast—and
she senses danger. She's too young to know exactly what she senses, but
she knows something is very wrong. And when Jules believes one last wish
rock for Sylvie needs to be thrown into the river, the human and shadow
worlds collide.
Writing in alternate voices—one Jules's, the
other the fox's—Kathi Appelt and Alison McGhee tell the searingly
beautiful tale of one small family's moment of heartbreak, a moment that
unfolds into one that is epic, mythic, shimmering, and most of all,
hopeful.
On the Edge of Gone, by Corinne Duyvis.
January 29, 2035. That’s the day the
comet is scheduled to hit—the big one. Denise and her mother and sister,
Iris, have been assigned to a temporary shelter outside their hometown
of Amsterdam to wait out the blast, but Iris is nowhere to be found, and
at the rate Denise’s drug-addicted mother is going, they’ll never reach
the shelter in time. A last-minute meeting leads them to something
better than a temporary shelter—a generation ship, scheduled to leave
Earth behind to colonize new worlds after the comet hits. But everyone
on the ship has been chosen because of their usefulness. Denise is
autistic and fears that she’ll never be allowed to stay. Can she obtain a
spot before the ship takes flight? What about her mother and sister?
When the future of the human race is at stake, whose lives matter most?
Rebel of the Sands, by Alwyn Hamilton.
Mortals rule the desert nation of Miraji, but mythical beasts still roam
the wild and remote areas, and rumor has it that somewhere, djinn still
perform their magic. For humans, it's an unforgiving place, especially
if you're poor, orphaned, or female.
Amani Al'Hiza is all three.
She's a gifted gunslinger with perfect aim, but she can't shoot her way
out of Dustwalk, the back-country town where she's destined to wind up
wed or dead.
Then she meets Jin, a rakish foreigner, in a shooting
contest, and sees him as the perfect escape route. But though she's
spent years dreaming of leaving Dustwalk, she never imagined she'd
gallop away on mythical horse—or that it would take a foreign fugitive
to show her the heart of the desert she thought she knew.
Rebel of the Sands
reveals what happens when a dream deferred explodes—in the fires of
rebellion, of romantic passion, and the all-consuming inferno of a girl
finally, at long last, embracing her power.
The Secret Subway, by Shana Corey and Red Nose Studio.
New York City in the 1860s was a mess: crowded, disgusting, filled with
garbage. You see, way back in 1860, there were no subways, just
cobblestone streets. That is, until Alfred Ely Beach had the idea for a
fan-powered train that would travel underground. On February 26, 1870,
after fifty-eight days of drilling and painting and plastering, Beach
unveiled his masterpiece--and throngs of visitors took turns swooshing
down the track.
The Secret Subway will wow readers, just as Beach's underground train wowed riders over a century ago.
The Serpent King, by Jeff Zentner.
Dill has had to wrestle with vipers his whole life—at home, as the only
son of a Pentecostal minister who urges him to handle poisonous
rattlesnakes, and at school, where he faces down bullies who target him
for his father's extreme faith and very public fall from grace.
He and his fellow outcast friends must try to make it through their
senior year of high school without letting the small-town culture
destroy their creative spirits and sense of self. Graduation will lead
to new beginnings for Lydia, whose edgy fashion blog is her ticket out
of their rural Tennessee town. And Travis is content where he is thanks
to his obsession with an epic book series and the fangirl turning his
reality into real-life fantasy.
Their diverging paths could
mean the end of their friendship. But not before Dill confronts his dark
legacy to attempt to find a way into the light of a future worth
living.
The Steep and Thorny Way, by Cat Winters.
A thrilling re-imagining of Shakespeare's Hamlet, The Steep and Thorny
Way tells the story of a murder most foul and the mighty power of love
and acceptance in a state gone terribly rotten.
1920s Oregon is not a
welcoming place for Hanalee Denney, the daughter of a white woman and an
African-American man. She has almost no rights by law, and the Ku Klux
Klan breeds fear and hatred in even Hanalee's oldest friendships. Plus,
her father, Hank Denney, died a year ago, hit by a drunk-driving
teenager. Now her father's killer is out of jail and back in town, and
he claims that Hanalee's father wasn't killed by the accident at all
but, instead, was poisoned by the doctor who looked after him—who
happens to be Hanalee's new stepfather.The only way for Hanalee to get
the answers she needs is to ask Hank himself, a "haint" wandering the
roads at night.
(All descriptions from OverDrive.)
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