September/October 2025 Kids Indie List

This bi-monthly list features the top picks from independent booksellers across the country of books for children and teens releasing these months. Here are the selected books:

#1 PICK

Whodonut?: A Holiday Mystery by Josh Funk, illustrated by Brendan Kearney

PICTURE BOOKS

Aggie and the Ghost by Matthew Forsythe

Bob the Vampire Snail by Andrea Zuill

Buffalo Fluffalo and Puffalo by Bess Kalb and Erin Kraan

Cat Nap by Brian Lies

Everything Grows in Jiddo’s Garden by Jenan Matari, illustrated by Aya Ghanameh

Fox and the Mystery Letter by Alex G. Griffiths

If We Were Dogs by Sophie Blackall

Seven Ways Through the Woods by Jenn Reese, illustrated by Devin Elle Kurtz

A Snow Day for Amos McGee by Philip C. Stead, illustrated by Erin E. Stead

Zombie and Brain Are Friends by Stephie V.W. Lucianovic, illustrated by Laan Cham

MIDDLE GRADE

Cabin Head and Tree Head by Scott Campbell

Ghost Circus by Adrienne Kress and Jade Zhang

The Last Resort by Erin Entrada Kelly

The Library of Unruly Treasures by Jeanne Birdsall

Lost on Doll Island by Cassandra Ramos-Gomez

The Nine Moons of Han Yu and Luli by Karina Yan Glaser

Scarlet Morning by N.D. Stevenson

Troubling Tonsils by Aaron Reynolds, illustrated by Peter Brown

Witchycakes: Sweet Magic by Kara LaReau, illustrated by Ariane Moreira

Zeyna Lost and Found by Shafaq Khan

YOUNG ADULT

All the Tomorrows After by Joanne Yi

Blood Moon by Britney S. Lewis

The Dead of Summer by Ryan La Sala

An Embroidery of Souls by Ruby Martinez

The Executioners Tree by Susan Dennard

Legendary Frybread Drive-In edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith

Morgana and Oz, Vol. 3 by Miyuli

Reasons to Hate Me by Susan Metallo

Sisters in the Wind by Angeline Boulley

A Spell to Wake the Dead by Nicole Lesperance

Seven Ways Through the Woods by Jenn Reese – Book Recommendation

Seven Ways Through the Woods by Jenn Reese, illustrated by Devin Elle Kurtz (9780063356269)

When you come to a dark forest, you have several ways to enter it. First, you can simply follow the path where others have walked before you. It’s not exciting, but it’s an option. There are six other choices that are a lot more fun. Perhaps riding a griffin? Or taking the sprite tunnels? Or finding a portal flower. The seventh way is only for the bravest explorers. That way is to leave the path and stay in the magical forest, not seeing it as an obstacle but a destination. 

I didn’t know much about this picture book when I started reading that thought that it might be focused on nature and hiking. I was overjoyed to find that it took a magical turn into sprites, moss giants, griffins and more. The text keeps the tone of a guide narrator, much like a regular hiking book, which adds to the charm. The illustrations from the beginning are rich and colorful, using the digital format to create saturated tones that glow. 

Pure forest magic. Appropriate for ages 4-7. 

Reviewed from e-galley provided by Greenwillow.