We humans are all broken, broken by life’s trials and tribulations, fragmented by bullies who shoot holes in our confidence, or traumatized by loss—whether a consequence of death, divorce, or some other life-altering trauma. How we respond to this brokenness forms the core of Kathleen Glasgow’s newest book, The Glass Girl. In this powerfully poignant book, Glasgow features fifteen-year-old Isabella Leahey’s relationship with alcohol.   Bella wears not only her make-up like a mask but baggy clothes “to leave room for her pain to grow” (2). Suffering from anxiety disorder, neglect, and low-confidence levels, Bella stays at the margins and tries not to think too much. Because ofRead More →

Charlene Allen’s debut novel, Play the Game is one rich with riddles and layered with mystery. It tells the story of Ed Hennessey, a fifteen-year-old game designer with a brain that works like that of a scientist. A Black teenager, Ed is a lover of rebus puzzles, fart jokes, and imagined worlds. In the Ed-i-verse, Ed has created mutants and monsters to make-up for what isn’t working in his life. Sadly, he is tragically shot in the parking lot of Yard restaurant by Phillip Singer, a White huckster of stolen goods. Now, a year later, Singer has been shot, and Victor (aka VZ) Gleason’s friendRead More →