Review of Under This Forgetful Sky, by Lauren Yero

Under This Forgetful Sky

by Lauren Yero

Atheneum, 2023. 399 pages.
Review written September 10, 2023, from a book sent to me by the publisher
Starred Review

This book is eligible for the Morris Award, so I’m writing this review after reading it myself, but before any discussion with the committee, so the opinions are entirely my own. I won’t post the review until after our Winners are announced. (Okay, long after – it got stuck in the cracks.)

This book was quite different than the other books I’ve read. It’s set in Chile in the distant future after environmental disaster. Wealthy, comfortable people live in the Upper Cities, closed in by a wall. Below them, without the same things making their lives easy are the Lower Cities, which in many places have been poisoned by chemicals from the Upper Cities.

We first meet Paz, a girl who lives in Paraíso (once Valparaíso), one of the lower cities. She works as a Scout for the Library. Today she found a dead hummingbird, and she’s privately tracking where she finds them, and it points to the Upper City of St. Iago. Here’s how she puts it:

But there’s a saying in Paraíso: sin pega, no vales nada. Without a job, you’re nothing. I was lucky to have this high-class job as a Library scout. I had a curse hanging over my head – in the eyes of the Library, my right arm was a sinner’s arm, shriveled and shameful. Most everybody in my condition picked trash. If I held up the bright green picaflor and told how I’d traced the stiff bodies of a thousand poisoned creatures all the way to St. Iago, I knew how it would look. It would look ungrateful. It would look like I was courting radical ideas. Everybody knew what they did to traitors.

Our other viewpoint character is Rumi, a boy who lives in St. Iago. He lives in comfort, but his every move is monitored. And he sees the world through virtual reality specs. Today’s the anniversary of his mother’s death by terrorism, and official eyes are on him and his mental health.

But then Rumi’s father comes home from a secret trip to the Lower City infected with a strain of Zábran, the virus that caused widespread death and destruction before the Upper City citizens were able to separate themselves from such contaminants. If the government finds out, he’ll simply be expelled to die – so Rumi goes on a quest to find a cure, which may exist in the Lower Cities.

Once there, he gets captured by the terrorists Las Oscuras. Where Paz is also imprisoned. Then Rumi thinks Paz rescues him, not knowing that finding out what he’s up to is her initiation to join the terrorist group. She takes Rumi to the Library, where they do get information how to find a person who has the cure – but Rumi also gets secrets to keep from Paz.

The bulk of the book is the dangerous journey to find a cure, but there are secrets and intrigue in the background.

Right up until the end of the book, I wasn’t sure how much I liked this book. Some of the interplay between powerful forces was a bit confusing. But let me say only that the author pulled it off. She shows us that people are complicated, but will fight for Hope. She didn’t tie things up in a neat bow or leave too easy solutions, but she showed us people taking steps to find solutions to difficult problems, and learning to see from the perspectives of others with very different backgrounds.

laurenyero.com
simonandschuster.com/teen

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/under_this_forgetful_sky.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of Reasons We Break, by Jesmeen Kaur Deo

Reasons We Break

by Jesmeen Kaur Deo

Hyperion, 2025. 406 pages.
Review written November 24, 2025, from a book sent by the publisher.
Starred Review
2025 Sonderbooks Stand-out: #6 More Teen Fiction

Good girl Simran tutored Rajan in math all through high school. She was the first math tutor he could tolerate. After high school, Rajan shows up in her life again as a mentee in a program for helping troubled youth with community service. The rumors in their Sikh community say that he killed someone. Rajan’s visiting his probation officer as scheduled and trying to stay clean.

Then his old gang picks him up to pull him back into the gang – and grabs Simran, thinking she’s his girlfriend, as leverage. But that ends up turning out the opposite of expectations, as Simran volunteers to replace the gang’s bookkeeper (who recently got arrested) just long enough to pay off Rajan’s debt, so he doesn’t have work for them and break the conditions of probation.

Of course, once Rajan finds out about that, he’s not going to stand by and let Simran be in danger. But Simran is already intrigued by the puzzle of trying to figure out a rival gang’s code.

One thing keeps leading to another, and we gain insight that everyone can have life events that break them and lead them to choices they might not otherwise have picked.

It was interesting reading this book at the same time I was reading Gregory Boyle’s book, Cherished Belonging. Gregory Boyle works with gang members in Los Angeles, and is incredibly good at seeing their good hearts – and showing those good hearts to his readers. This story was fiction, but it also takes a compassionate look at teens caught up in gangs and all the difficulties of getting out.

The book also gives insight into the Sikh religion and that immigrant community in British Columbia – while delivering a suspenseful thriller about people we come to care about.

JDeoWrites.com
HyperionTeens.com

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/reasons_we_break.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of The Forbidden Book, by Sacha Lamb

The Forbidden Book

by Sacha Lamb

Levine Querido, 2024. 251 pages.
Review written February 18, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review
2025 Sidney Taylor Young Adult Silver Medal

The Forbidden Book is another brilliant paranormal story playing off Jewish folklore, as with When the Angels Left the Old Country that I enjoyed so much. This one is set in medieval Eastern Europe.

As the book opens, a lumber merchant’s daughter named Sorel is about to be married to the rebbe’s son from the nearby city. She knows she feels like the girl dressed up in the wedding clothes is a stranger, and she wants to leave. But it’s when she hears a voice in her head saying that they’ll go with her that she leaps out the window and flees.

She steals the stable-boy’s clothes where he stashed them in the stable, along with a knife. She cuts her hair short and sets out, feeling oddly free.

I thought it was a story about a young transgender man, but it turns out there’s more to the voice she heard than her own wishful thinking. When asked her name, Sorel comes up with Isser Jacobs, and before long, she gets attacked in an alley by thugs looking for Isser Jacobs and something he stole. But a giant black dog interrupts the attack and Sorel escapes.

But she’s worried about the girl, a friend of the real Isser, that the thugs mentioned. One thing leads to another, and Sorel and a small group of others are trying to find out what happened to Isser and looking for a magic book that he stole, which was written by the Angel of Death.

The book is full of that touch of magic and reads like a mystical folktale. Sorel has some encounters with spirits before she’s through and needs to think about what she actually wants for her life.

sachalamb.wordpress.com

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/forbidden_book.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of True True, by Don P. Hooper

True True

by Don P. Hooper

Nancy Paulsen Books (Penguin Random House), 2023. 368 pages.
Review written October 20, 2023, from my own copy, sent by the publisher.
Starred Review

True True is the story of Gil, a Black teenager from Brooklyn with Jamaican roots, who transfers for his senior year to a prep school in Manhattan to be on the robotics team. But once there, he gets confronted by racism – a football player and two teammates start a fight with him, and Gil is the only one who gets suspended and put on probation.

On probation, he’s not supposed to work with the robotics team for a month. But he knows he can help – is it worth doing if he can’t take any credit?

The racism is quite blatant, but still unacknowledged. Gil fumes and figures out how to get those opportunities his grandma and mother sacrificed for, while still showing his friends in Brooklyn that he cares about them. The sensei at his dojo has a copy of The Art of War, and Gil tries to use the principles found there to battle the racism so strong at school.

It’s all portrayed in such a way that it feels real, and we are with Gil as he tries to juggle friends, family, classes, martial arts, robotics, all while trying to battle racism in the most savvy way. He makes many mistakes along the way, which gets us all the more firmly on his side.

This book has so much heart, it doesn’t feel like an issue book. It’s a book about a teen trying to deal with what life throws at him.

DonHooper.com
PenguinTeen.com

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/true_true.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of Legendary Frybread Drive-In, edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith

Legendary Frybread Drive-In

Intertribal Stories

edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith

Heartdrum, 2025. 7 hours, 46 minutes.
Review written December 20, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

Seventeen authors and seven narrators have created this delightful work of art. Here’s how editor Cynthia Leitich Smith describes the magical place at the center of these stories:

Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In is a liminal (or in-between) space that feels like home, welcoming Indigenous young heroes and their chosen kin. It’s a refuge, a place of reconciliation, of romance, a warm meal, an Elder’s hug, and artistic inspiration. The grandparents who run it offer happiness, hope, and healing with frybread on the side.

The list of seventeen authors who collaborated on this book is impressive. The four I’d already read award-winning young adult novels from – Darcie Little Badger, Jen Ferguson, Byron Graves, and Angeline Boulley – did not disappoint, but neither did any of the other authors.

The idea behind the book is that Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In is a place outside regular time and space. And indigenous people – teens in these stories – can find their way to Sandy June’s from wherever they are in Turtle Island. The path will open up for them when it’s needed. And the food is the best anyone’s ever tasted.

The stories bring together people across generations, show us teens finding true love, grappling with loss, and finding self-confidence and direction.

I probably should have read the book instead of listening (and I still may some day) – but it was easier for the book to get to the top of my audiobook queue than my visual reading queue. But I may have to visually read it again to catch more of the characters who show up in more than one story – and to appreciate it from the beginning as I understand better how the paranormal drive-in works. Or just for the fun of reading it again! This is a set of feel-good stories from a bunch of stellar indigenous authors.

cynthialeitichsmith.com

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/legendary_frybread_drive_in.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich, by Deya Muniz

The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich

by Deya Muniz

Little, Brown and Company, 2023. 250 pages.
Review written June 20, 2023, from a library book
Starred Review

The Princess and the Grilled Cheese Sandwich is a delightfully fun and light-hearted graphic novel about a young noblewoman named Cam who must pose as a man in order to inherit her father’s estate. She moves to the capital city to be far away from the people who knew her before her father’s death – and catches the princess’s eye.

The two of them do many things together, including enjoying grilled cheese sandwiches. (Everyone in the capital city has a name that’s a type of cheese.) As they fall in love, Cam realizes she can’t take things any further because she needs to keep her secrets. And nobody likes to find out the one they love has been hiding who they really are.

I was rather amazed this is a debut. The drawings are wonderful – I especially loved all the outfits. Cam keeps her hair long but wears fake sideburns and nice suits when posing as a man, and it wasn’t too hard to believe that she could have fooled people. (Maybe a little hard. But not too bad, because she did look like a well-dressed young man.) There’s variety in the panel sizes, and the story keeps moving at a nice pace. It only took me about an hour to read, and left me smiling.

I’m writing this before discussing anything with the Morris committee, so my opinions are entirely my own, and I’ll have to wait to publish this review until after we’ve made our decision. But I am looking forward to more from this author, and I think teens are going to love her work.

lbyr.com
theNOVL.com

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/princess_and_the_grilled_cheese_sandwich.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of The Love Match, by Priyanka Taslim

The Love Match

by Priyanka Taslim

Salaam Reads (Simon & Schuster), 2023. 386 pages.
Review written February 10, 2023, from my own book, sent to me by the publisher.
Starred Review

The Love Match is a light-hearted rom-com novel set among the Bangladeshi Muslim diaspora community of Paterson, New Jersey, where the author grew up.

Zahra Khan has recently graduated from high school and is sad that she’s going to have to let go of her acceptance to Columbia, but with her father’s recent death, she needs to keep the family going. Her best friends are happily making college plans, while she keeps working and setting aside money. Her mother doesn’t respect Zahra’s dreams of being a writer and wants to find a nice Bangladeshi boy to marry Zahra and take care of her.

When her mother sets her sights for Zahra on a Bangladeshi boy from a rich family, neither Zahra nor the boy, Harun, are excited about the idea. But neither wants to disappoint their parents. So instead, they make a plan to convince their parents that this match can’t possibly work.

But while they are doing their fake dates, a new Bangladeshi starts working at the shop where Zahra does. He seems to understand her dreams in a way Harun doesn’t. But he doesn’t have any money or family, so how can Zahra ever get her family behind that romance?

The cover means we’re not surprised by the love triangle. It all plays out in happily predictable ways – a completely fun ride, with all the details about Bangladeshi culture making it all the more interesting. Zahra’s a character readers will be happy to root for. I enjoyed every minute I read this novel.

priyankataslim.com
simonandschuster.com/teen

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/love_match.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of Dan in Green Gables, by Rey Terciero and Claudia Aguirre

Dan in Green Gables

A Modern Reimagining of Anne of Green Gables

by Rey Terciero and Claudia Aguirre

Penguin Workshop, 2025. 252 pages.
Review written October 9, 2025, from a library book.
Starred Review

You know I had to read this book because of what an L. M. Montgomery and Anne of Green Gables fan I am!

This is not a retelling of Anne of Green Gables – it didn’t have very many parallel incidents or try to stick to the storyline (which is honestly pretty episodic, anyway). But the set-up parallels Anne’s situation:

Red-haired and freckled, 15-year-old Dan has been moving from place to place with his mother all his life. One day without warning, she takes him to the Tennessee home – complete with green gables – of his dead father’s mother and father – his Mawmaw and Pawpaw. Mawmaw is warm and welcoming, but his grandfather is immediately put off by Dan’s obvious queerness.

When his mother leaves without warning the next morning before Dan wakes up – Dan has to find his place there. Like Anne, he asks a lot of questions at church. Like Anne, his flamboyant presence at school makes a stir. Like Anne, Dan is rather dramatic in expressing himself. Though the details for all those things are quite different with a queer kid in 1995 small-town Tennessee instead of an orphan girl in 1800s small-town Prince Edward Island.

But like Anne, the beauty of the story comes in watching Dan settle in, make friends, find a home, and win the love of his two elderly caretakers – even the cantankerous one.

This is a graphic novel, so it’s a quick read – but packs a heart-warming punch.

rexogle.com
PenguinTeen.com

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/dan_in_green_gables.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of The Eternal Return of Clara Hart, by Louise Finch

The Eternal Return of Clara Hart

by Louise Finch

Little Island, 2023. First published in the United Kingdom in 2022. 260 pages.
Review written August 7, 2023, from a library book.
Starred Review

The Eternal Return of Clara Hart, no surprise, is a time loop book. And yes, it seems that every time Spence goes through that momentous day over again, it begins with Clara Hart hitting his car in the high school parking lot and ends with Clara Hart dead. But then Spence wakes up, again having spent the night in his car, and it happens all over again.

It wasn’t a day that Spence even wanted to live through once – it’s the anniversary of his mother’s death. His rugby friends don’t remember it’s a rough day for him. And he decides to get through the party they end the day with by drinking himself into oblivion. The first time, at least.

There are little changes, though. And then Spence decides to see if he can make changes himself. And get through the day without Clara dying. Surely, she must be the key. If he can save her life, maybe he can get to the next day of his own life?

To add to the fun, his philosophy class professor is talking about Nietsche’s thought experiment about eternal return: “the idea that this universe and our lives recur in an identical form an infinite number of times.”

This is not a truth, of course, but a thought experiment. If this were true, would we react with joy or despair? Would we affirm life or not? And if we had to live our lives over and over again, what implications would there be for our moral choices?

I didn’t like Spence at the start of the book. A character drinking himself into oblivion while his friends mistreat girls isn’t the way to win my heart. But by the end of the book, I liked him very much. He shows lots of character growth as the book goes on. The book has a lot in common with the film “Ground Hog Day,” but in a high school, as the character takes his repeated days to grow to care about others and examine what he took for granted.

The book warns the reader that there’s sexual assault in its pages. There’s also repeated death. But the author takes those situations and shows a high school boy learning to care about others and be a better person.

louisefinch.co.uk

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/eternal_return_of_clara_hart.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?

Review of When We Ride, by Rex Ogle, read by Ramón de Ocampo

When We Ride

by Rex Ogle
read by Ramón de Ocampo

Recorded Books, 2025. 3 hours, 28 minutes.
Review written July 11, 2025, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

I’ve come to know and love Rex Ogle’s writing from his award-winning memoirs about growing up in poverty and his recent Printz Honor book about being homeless as a teen after he came out as gay.

When We Ride is equally heartrending. This time a novel in verse. Fair warning: Like the others, it’s not exactly pleasant reading. But the novel is worse than the memoirs because now we have absolutely no guarantee the main character will get through it and come out okay. And here’s a heads’ up without being too spoilerish: The ending does not at all leave me feeling happy.

However, reading this short novel will build your empathy. I heard the author speak at ALA Annual Conference, and he said he wrote it in verse to give it lots of white space, since that’s the only kind of book his best friend from high school would ever read.

And the book is about two best friends in their senior year of high school. They live across the street from each other, and they’ve been friends since elementary school, so close they call each other Brother. Benny is the one telling the story. He’s working hard to go to college and get funds to pay for it. His mother is a drug addict who’s gotten clean, and she wants nothing more than for Benny to make a success of himself. And be nothing like her. She gave Benny her own car and rides the bus to her two jobs. And she works hard to provide for Benny, who also works at a diner in a job he hates, but works to help out his Mom.

Benny’s best friend Lawson, though, has taken another route to make ends meet. He’s dealing drugs. It starts as only weed, but things progress over the course of the year. Lawson doesn’t have a car, and most of the poems in this book begin with Lawson calling and saying, “I need a ride.”

Since Benny is Hispanic, it’s all too easy for him to imagine being pulled over by cops when Lawson is carrying drugs and Benny’s entire future being ruined. Lawson tells him if Benny doesn’t know he has drugs, there will be no problem. And as his brother, isn’t he supposed to be there when Lawson needs him? So Benny goes back and forth with guilt and anger and fear.

All the adults in Benny’s life tell him that Lawson is bad news and he needs to stop spending any time with him. But the reader (or listener) comes to understand how deep that tie of brotherhood runs and to see the great things about Lawson that keep Benny’s loyalty. But none of that makes Lawson’s path any safer.

This book is short, but hard-hitting. These characters will live in my head for a long time. It made me care about someone I would have otherwise dismissed – helping me understand more deeply my own belief that all people are made in the image of God. Yes, even drug dealers. When you know someone’s story, it’s so much easier to see their humanity.

rexogle.com

Buy from Amazon.com

Find this review on Sonderbooks at: www.sonderbooks.com/Teens/when_we_ride.html

Disclosure: I am an Amazon Affiliate, and will earn a small percentage if you order a book on Amazon after clicking through from my site.

Disclaimer: I am a professional librarian, but the views expressed are solely my own, and in no way represent the official views of my employer or of any committee or group of which I am part.

Subscribe for more reviews and talk about books.

Join the conversation: What did you think of this book?