Something dark is afoot in Sanera, California, and four teens decide to solve the mystery. Let’s Split Up by Bill Wood features sensible Amber Grayson, quirky Jonesy with a high IQ, the track star Cameron who keeps the mood light, and a newcomer to town—the perceptive Buffy Allen who may be just a bit too interested in the case. These four sleuths are pressed into service after the deaths of football player Bradley Campbell and cheerleader Shelley Jones, who appear to have fallen victim to the Carrington Ghoul. Although the ghoul and the haunted Carrington Manor are urban legends, the eerily similar deaths between thatRead More →

Whether through empathy or some other form of understanding, humans will frequently attempt to form a connection with others in order to perceive alternate life experiences and to consider how those experiences might differ from their own. When documentary filmmaker James Robinson writes his memoir about seeing and being seen, he seeks to build not only understanding but compassion and a more accurate representation of the disability experience in the media. Whale Eyes relates Robinson’s experience from childhood through young adulthood as he contends with a condition often referred to as strabismus. With his misaligned eyes, which can make such tasks as reading and playingRead More →

In her novel for middle grade readers entitled What Happened Then, Erin Soderberg Downing writes about family and the generational trauma that gets passed down. Twelve-year-old Avery knows she’s best in small doses. “Every time I try to fade, I fail . . . and flare instead. In a crayon box of colors, I’m the shocking pink and laser lemon” (5). Although she wishes to be less exuberant and less talkative, she hasn’t yet mastered moderation. “I know I’m too much. Too loud, too annoying, too big for any room I step into. . . . I wish I could edit and refine myself, likeRead More →