Cynthia Murphy’s book The Midnight Game is nightmare fuel.  Although her novel may not reflect the same fear-factor as a Dean Koontz or Steven King work, it is certainly sinister.  A group of teens make the mistake of meeting up in real life with people they’ve met in internet chat rooms and through online threads. Ellie, Mei, Hugo, Callum, Toni, and Reece join in a terrifying game in which the Midnight Man comes to hunt. Classed as a pagan ritual, The Midnight Game was “a punishment for wrong-doers. . . . It was sort of a trial. . . . If the ‘player’ survived, theyRead More →

With his book Wolves at the Door, Steve Watkins writes a horrific reminder of the effects of war. Painting with historical accuracy, he captures the lives of eleven-year-old Asta, her nine-year-old sister Pieta, and their eventual ten-year-old friend Gerhard. The three are thrust in the midst of the last days of World War II, in the harsh winter of 1944-45 when more than two million people desperately fled the northeastern German province of East Prussia, just weeks ahead of the Soviet Red Army invasion. The trio of youth are traumatized by the Königsberg bombing and fearful of more planes and more bombs. Although Asta typicallyRead More →

In a similar style as that written by Tom Leveen in his book Party (Random House, 2010), Justin Reynolds edits a book entitled House Party, in which ten authors pen perspectives from ten teens who all attend the party of the year at DeAndre Dixon’s house. Set in Florence Hills, a glitzy, corporate, and commercial suburb of Chicago, this party is one of hook-ups, showmances, dangerous flirtations, and heart break. It’s where the young come to dance with abandon, confess feelings, reveal secrets, make future plans, or have a fashion show down. “The unfiltered life of the party is the perfect backdrop to the highlyRead More →

In her newest novel in verse, Meg Eden Kuyatt again writes from personal experience to create her protagonist Valeria, aka V. Describing herself as possessing a “neuro-spicy brain,” V considers art her superpower, a key survival mechanism: “the one thing I know to do to help me survive the summer with Jojo. So even if I don’t know how just yet, I’ll find a way to paint my own reality” (14). With The Girl in the Walls targeted to middle-grade readers, Kuyatt takes on the topic of generational neurodivergence and describes how various characters employ their coping mechanisms. V hasn’t yet discovered the beauty inRead More →

Eight years ago, as just a nine-year-old, Darius Logan lost his parents and baby brother in The Attack. Since the band of ACU-64 Killbots wreaked havoc, destroying his life and devastating his neighborhood, Darius has been fighting to survive. His juvenile probation officer, Edith O’Malley is the closest thing to family he has looking out for him. However, Darius is a fighter who refuses to give in to fear. “If he knew anything at all, he knew how to fight—it came as naturally as breathing” (9). Eventually, Darius gets himself into trouble with the law, and he can’t fight his way out of the sentence.Read More →