Archives de catégorie : Children’s Books

NEW KID de Jerry Craft remporte le Kirkus Prize !

★“An engrossing, humorous, and vitally important graphic novel that should be required reading in every middle school in America.”  — Kirkus Reviews

Le roman graphique jeunesse NEW KID de Jerry Craft a été récompensé par le Kirkus Prize ! Ce prix vient s’ajouter aux autres distinctions déjà reçues : il fait partie de la sélection des meilleurs livres de 2019 de Publishers Weekly et a également été en lice pour le Harvey Award for Best Children’s Book of the Year.

Un nouveau titre de Jerry Craft, CLASS ACT, paraîtra chez HarperCollins à l’automne 2020.

EXCUSE ME WHILE I UGLY CRY de Joya Goffney

A heartfelt, tortured, contemporary YA high-school romance with epistolary elements about an overly enthusiastic list maker who is blackmailed into completing a to-do list of all her worst fears. Perfect for fans of Jenny Han’s To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before.

EXCUSE ME WHILE I UGLY CRY
by Joya Goffney
On submission in the US

Quinn Jackson keeps track of everything—from the days she’s ugly cried, to “The Most Horrifying Moments of My Humanity”, to all the boys she’d like to kiss. All her lists are organized in a sectional red notebook that unfortunately looks a lot like Carter Bennett’s.

When Carter comes over after school to work on their history project, Quinn, distracted by his good looks and charm, doesn’t notice when their notebooks are switched. Not only does Carter read her entire (mortifying!) journal of lists, he charges her hundreds of dollars to get her journal back… and further, comes up with a to-do list of his own, with separate fees attached to each challenge. If Quinn doesn’t complete every item by the end of the month, he’ll post pictures of her most personal lists to the whole school. Through facing Carter’s enraging to-do list, Quinn unexpectedly finds the courage to move from passivity to action—to change the way she’s living her life, and somehow, to fall in love along the way.

THE CHANCE TO FLY de Ali Stroker & Stacy Davidowitz

Making Your Limitations Your Opportunities.”

THE CHANCE TO FLY
by Ali Stroker & Stacy Davidowitz
Abrams, publication Spring 2021

An inspiring middle-grade novel about one young girl’s quest to defy not only gravity, but all expectations. Ali is the first wheelchair-bound actor to perform on Broadway and be nominated for a Tony Award, and won.
THE CHANCE TO FLY is about 14-year-old Nat Beacon, a Broadway superfan who uses a wheelchair, and the summer when she overcomes her fears to turn her fandom into stardom.
When 14-year-old Natalie “Nat” Beacon and her parents move across the country from San Francisco to Saddle Stream, New Jersey, Nat’s not sure what to expect. Although she’s a huge Broadway fan and wannabe actress, Nat was in a car accident when she was two and has used a wheelchair for as long as she can remember. Nat’s disability has prevented her from feeling ready to go out for school musicals or theatre-related extracurriculars up until this point, but when she stumbles upon an opportunity to audition for the Saddle Stream Broadway Bounders’ production of Wicked, Nat seizes her chance. While she doesn’t land a part, she’s thrilled to be picked for the ensemble, and the other cast members (well, most of them) are super cool and inclusive—especially Malik, the male lead and cutest boy Nat’s ever seen. With a few exceptions, getting to know her peers, the lakeside cast retreat, and arduous rehearsals go way better than Nat could have ever hoped, but when a lead has to back out a week before opening night, will Nat be able to take what she’s learned about herself over the summer to cast her fears and insecurities aside and “Defy Gravity” in every sense of the song title?
Nat navigates challenges, both of the universal middle grade sort (changing friendships, first crushes, body hang-ups, and fitting in) and others more specific to her disability (accessibility, prejudice, and limited opportunities because of what people think they know about her) as she makes true friends and learns to trust and stand up for herself—and all people with disabilities—in this middle grade novel full of heart, humor, and so much song. While we’ve seen significant efforts and progress with respect to inclusion and diversity in recent years, people with disabilities are still very underrepresented in the books and media we consume. Nat’s story is an opportunity to connect with young readers on this front and remind them that we all have limitations, but those don’t make us who we are—how we choose to address them does.

Stacy Davidowitz is the New York-based playwright, actress, screenwriter, and the author of Abrams’ Camp Rolling Hills series, as well as the tie-in books to the hit YouTube series Hanazuki.
Ali Stroker made history as the first actress who uses a wheelchair to appear on Broadway. She’s the first wheelchair user to graduate from the NYU Tisch drama program, and she has starred, recurred, and guested in numerous network television productions.

THE MEMORY THIEF de Lauren Mansy

A heart-pounding YA fantasy

THE MEMORY THIEF

by Lauren Mansy
     HarperCollins, October 2019

In the city of Craewick, talents are bought and sold, and memory reigns over everything. Madame, the power-obsessed ruler of the city, has cultivated a society in which memories are  currency, citizens are divided by ability, and Gifted individuals can take memories from others through touch as they please. Seventeen-year-old Etta Lark is desperate to live outside of the corrupt culture, but grapples with the guilt of an accident that has left her mother bedridden in the city’s asylum. When Madame  threatens to put her mother up for Auction, a Craewick tradition in which a “worthless” person’s memories are sold to the highest bidder before she is killed, Etta will do whatever it takes to save her. Even if it means rejoining the Shadows, the rebel group trading in the black market of memories, who she swore off in the wake of the  accident years earlier. To prove her allegiance to the Shadows and rescue her mother, Etta must pull off the greatest heist of her life – steal a memorized map of the Maze, a formidable prison created by the bloodthirsty ruler of a neighboring realm. So she sets out on a journey in which she faces startling attacks, unexpected romance, and, above all, her own past in order to set things right in her world.

Lauren Mansy has built a career from working with young people, and her debut novel has already attracted a devoted legion of fans

LONER de Georgina Young

An irresistible new voice alive to the choices and confusions of youth, and the messiness of learning how to adult

LONER
by Georgina Young
Text Publishing, 2020

LONER moves beyond the expected boundaries of young adult fiction. It is an intimate, comic novel about learning how to be, and how to not be, a person in this world. It is about finding and creating yourself—as many times as it takes. Lona spends her days developing photographs in the dark room of the art school she dropped out of. She spends her nights DJ-ing the roller disco at Planet Skate. She is in inexplicable, debilitating love with a bespectacled, Doctor Who-obsessed former classmate. She is in comfortable, platonic love with her best friend, Tabitha. When Lona’s grandfather moves into her home, she finds herself bonding with him as she watches his health decline. When she is promoted to manager of checkout three in her supermarket job, she argues for a demotion to trolley-girl. When she meets a bass-playing, cello-shredding, charming-as-all-hell suitor, she is thrown by somehow finding herself in a romantic relationship with another human being. Lona doesn’t know what she wants, but she knows what she doesn’t want—well, some of the time.

Georgina was born in 1995 and lives in Melbourne. She has been published in a number of anthologies and literary magazines..