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Love in an MMORPG, A Sinister Finishing School, and More YA Book Talk and News: May 30, 2024

Hey, YA Readers!

I hope if you had a long weekend that you were able to relax with a good book and if you had a normal weekend that you carved out a little time to do so, too. It feels fully like summer is here, and my TBR is topped with tons of forthcoming late summer and early fall reads, so I’m all set to enjoy it as much as possible.

Make this your most bookish summer yet with personalized reading recommendations from Tailored Book Recommendations! Our bibliologists (aka professional book nerds) are standing by to help you find your next favorite read. Get your recommendations via email, or opt to receive hardcovers or paperbacks delivered right to your door. And with quarterly or annual plans available, TBR has something for every budget. Get started today from just $18!

Since we missed Monday’s newsletter, today you’ll get some hardcover releases featured, with mentions of a couple of paperbacks as well. Then we’ll dive into the news like usual on Thursdays.

Ready. Set. Let’s book nerd!

Bookish Goods

3D printed popsicle book marks

Melted Popsicle Bookmark by ChameleonPrinting

How sweet (heh) are these 3D-printed bookmarks that look like melted popsicles? I’m especially fond of the green and orange ones, which would be the popsicles I’d be picking out from a pack. $8 each.

New Releases

There are actually more paperback releases this week than hardcover titles, so I’m going to do something a little different this week. You’ll get to check out three hardcover releases, followed by a handful of paperback releases. As always, full lists of hardcover releases and paperback releases are available at the respective links.

Flawless Girls book cover

Flawless Girls by Anne-Marie McLemore

The Soler sisters are supposed to be polished and poised in polite society, but they aren’t. Their grandmother, who has raised them, has not cared until now. She realizes that life will be especially difficult for two Latina girls if they can’t at least blend in with their manners and attitudes. Grandma is able to get both girls a spot at Alarie House, a prestigious and hard-to-get-into finishing school.

In one day, younger sister Isla has come back home. She cannot do it, and she cannot stand how fake everything is at Alarie. Older sister Renata, though, sticks it out and when she comes home months later, she is a completely different person. Isla sees Renata behaving with eerie politeness and pleasantness…and murderousness. The night Renata returns home, she also vanishes.

While Grandma does what she can to find Renata, Isla decides to go back to Alarie House and find out what’s going on there. But it is a demanding finishing school and it certainly isn’t going to simply tell Isla what’s going on.

hurdles in the dark book cover

Hurdles in the Dark by Elvira K. Gonzalez

This is a harrowing work of nonfiction about author Elvira’s life as a teenager in the border town of Laredo, Texas. At 14, she was given 24 hours to find $40,000; the drug cartels had her mother and that was the cost of her mother’s freedom.

Caught up in the Mexican Drug War, Elvira ends up in a dangerous juvenile detention facility. When she’s finally released, she’s bound and determined never to go back, and she works toward realizing her new dream: getting an athletic scholarship to get her out of Laredo. She is working her butt off to become as good as possible at track and field, including breaking into her school before the sun rises to get extra practice time in. Although she catches the attention of a highly decorated high school coach, his attention soon turns to more than her performance on the team. Now, at 17, Elvira is dealing with the pressure of being sexual with an adult man in his 30s—it’s a reality of young athletes in too many situations, especially those teen athletes who are from any marginalized background.

Though tough and tragic, Elvira succeeds in her journey, becoming the first in her family to go to college and a top-ranking hurdler.

twelfth knight book cover

Twelfth Knight by Alexene Farol Follmuth

This is an enemies-to-lovers romance set in the world of MMORPG.

Viola is over the fact that her friend thinks she needs to be more likable, that her campaign for a tabletop game was rejected, and that the person in the position of student body president—Jack—is annoying and too laid back, which makes her job as vice president so much harder than necessary. She finds stress relief and joy in the MMORPG called Twelfth Knight, even though that isn’t a particularly safe space for an outspoken, confident girl like her either. To solve this problem, she creates a masculine alter ego in the game and suddenly, she finds herself being respected a heck of a lot more.

So when Jack sustains an injury and has himself become sucked into the world of Twelfth Knight, Viola is surprised at how well-matched their two online egos are. The problem is, of course, they get along too well online and, well, Jack doesn’t know that her fake persona online is her.


As for paperbacks, a few you’ll want to make sure you know have hit shelves this week—and read, obviously—include Enduring Freedom by Trent Reedy and Jawad Arash, Lying in the Deep by Diana Urban, Nigeria Jones by Ibi Zoboi, Only This Beautiful Moment by Abdi Nazemian, and The Quince Project by Jessica Parra, which is one of the rare YA books that will release simultaneously as both a hardcover and paperback (and “rare” seems to be becoming less rare lately, which I love—give folks both at the same time and you reach your teen readers with the lower price point of a paperback and institutions like libraries with more durable hardcovers!).

For a more comprehensive list of new releases, check out our New Books newsletter.

YA Book News

Given the US holiday, it’s a quieter news week here.

  • I mentioned in this week’s Hey YA podcast episode that we’re seeing a number of older YA books being optioned for adaptation, and here’s one more. Gemma Malley’s 2007 dystopian The Declaration was picked up by a French studio. Since it’s international, it’s hard to say if this will see US screens.
  • Here’s another casting update for the adaptation of We Were Liars.

As always, thanks for hanging out. We’ll see you on Saturday with your YA book deals, followed by your regular Monday newsletter next week.

Until then, happy reading!

–Kelly Jensen, currently reading Aisle Nine by Ian X. Cho