A Sea of Lemon Trees: The Corrido of Roberto Alvarez by María Dolores Águila – Book Recommendation

A Sea of Lemon Trees: The Corrido of Roberto Alvarez by María Dolores Águila

Publisher: Roaring Brook Press

Publication Date: September 16, 2025

Reviewed from library copy

ISBN: 9781250342614

Based on a true story, this verse novel set in the 1930s tells the story of a community that refuses to be silent in the face of racism. In San Diego, Roberto is the youngest of the children in his family. When the local school board decides that the Mexican-American children must attend a different school than the white children, they build a school in a barn for them. But the majority of the families refuse to send their children there. The families form a group and stand up for themselves in court, raising money by selling goods and food items. Roberto, at age 12, is selected to be the face of the children impacted by the decision. Despite losing friends to deportation and being expelled himself, he must find the courage to give voice to his community.

Incredibly timely and impactful, this book uses poetry as a vehicle for readers to understand Roberto and his point of view. From the beauty of his community to the hatred spewed at them to the threats they endured, his emotions are bared on the page. Written with immense restraint and simplicity, Águila shares the full story of the history while humanizing it with Roberto’s voice.

Powerful and heart-wrenching. Appropriate for ages 8-12.

YALSA Finalists for 2026 Morris Award

The five finalists for YALSA’s 2026 William C. Morris Award have been announced. The award is given to best book written for young adults by a debut author. Here are the five finalists:

All the Noise at Once by DeAndra Davis

First Love Language by Stefany Valentine

Love, Misha by Askel Aden

Red Flags and Butterflies by Sheryl Azzam

You and Me on Repeat by Mary Shyne

On Starlit Shores by Bex Glendining – Book Recommendation

On Starlit Shores by Bex Glendining 

Publisher: Abrams Fanfare

Publication Date: September 30, 2025

Reviewed from library copy

ISBN: 9781419765049

Alex hasn’t been back to Indigo Harbour where her grandmother lived in years. Now her grandmother has died and Alex offers to help pack up her house. Her best friend Grim comes with her and the two explore Indigo Harbour, meeting the people who were close to Alex’s grandmother. When Alex discovers that her grandmother had a beloved girlfriend that she never knew about, she sets out to meet her. But Indigo Harbour has a certain magic about it. It’s a magic that makes people who leave forget it, that protects those who live there and that offers sanctuary to resident witches. Alex must remember her own memories and build new ones to discover who her grandmother was. 

This YA graphic novel uses magical realism to grapple with loss. It takes a magical place, offering solace to those who may not have visited relatives as much as they would have liked in retrospect and giving space for grief. The beautiful town is a mix of warm acceptance for the queer characters as well as being a space for magical beings. The use of metaphor throughout is thoughtfully done, supporting the Alex through her journey. 

A beautiful graphic novel about loss and love. Appropriate for ages 13+.

2026 Australian Indie Book Awards Longlist

The 2026 Indie Book Awards longlist has been announced by Australian independent booksellers for their favorite books of 2025. The shortlist will be announced in January with the winners awarded in March. The awards cover a wide variety of books for all ages. Here are the longlisted titles for the youth categories:

CHILDREN’S LONGLIST

If We Were Dogs by Sophie Blackall (available in US)

Dear Broccoli by Jo Dabrowski, illustrated by Cate James

Dropbear by Philip Bunting (available in US)

Harry and Gran Bake a Cake by Fiona McIntosh, illustrated by Sara Acton

Ningaloo by Tim Winton, illustrated by Cindy Lane

Ninja Girl by Anh Do, illustrated by James Hart

Once I Was a Giant by Zeno Sworder

Runt and the Diabolical Dognapping by Craig Silvey, illustrated by Sara Acton

Silverborn by Jessica Townsend (available in US)

There’s a Prawn in the Parliament House: The Kids’ Guide to Australia’s Amazing Democracy by Annabel Crabb, illustrated by First Dog on the Moon

YOUNG ADULT LONGLIST

Catch by Sarah Brill

Cruel Is the Light by Sophie Clark (available in US)

Darkest Night, Brightest Star by Barry Jonsberg (released in US in June 2026)

Drift by Pip Harry

The Foal in the Wire by Robbie Coburn

Eleanor Jones Is Playing with Fire by Amy Doak

Sonny & Tess by Nova Weetman

This Season’s Draft by Jason Gent

Unhallowed Halls by Lili Wilkinson (available in US)

Wandering Wild by Lynette Noni (available in US)

Wake Your Friday Brain Cells – December 12 Edition

CHILDREN’S LIT

2025 Children’s Lit: The Year in Miscellanea – 100 Scope Notes

The best Canadian children’s books of 2025 – CBC

Let it snow with these 4 picture books – BookPage

Most Anticipated LGBTQ+ Middle Grade: January-June 2026 – LGBTQ Reads

ND Stevenson on Picking Back Up the Pirate Fantasy Project He Started as a Teen – Autostraddle

New and Noteworthy Children’s and YA Books: December 2025 – Publishers Weekly

Our 2026 Mock Caldecott Results! – 100 Scope Notes

Pippi Longstocking turns 80 and still teaches kids how to be free – YNet

Reading Rainbow Host Mychal Threets Is Sparking Joy, One Story at a Time – Readers Digest

LIBRARIES

Creating a Welcoming Culture for Caregivers at Storytime – ALSC

Public libraries in TX, LA, and MS are no longer protected by the First Amendment. – Lit Hub

YA LIT

2026 Great Graphic Novels for Teens Fall Round-Up – YALSA

A ‘Hugely Valuable’ Resource: Author Bill Konigsberg Explains Why Queer Teens Need Books About Sex and Sexuality – PEN America

NSTA Outstanding Science Trade Books

The National Science Teaching Association (NSTA) has announced their picks for the best Science Trade Books for Students K-12. Here are the chosen titles:

3 Weeks in the Rainforest: A Rapid Inventory in the Amazon by Jennifer Swanson

Alberto Salas Plays Paka Paka con la Papa by Sara Andrea Fajardo, illustrated by Juana Martinez-Neal

The Big Empty: A Sagebrush Survival Story by Kirbi Fagan

The Black Mambas: The World’s First All-Woman Anti-Poaching Unit by Kelly Crull

The Blue Jays That Grew a Forest by Lynn Street, illustrated by Anne Hunter

Detective Dogs: How Working Dogs Sniff Out Invasive Species by Alison Pearce Stevens

The Doomsday Detectives: How Walter and Luis Alvarez Solved the Mystery of Dinosaur Extinction by Cindy Jenson-Elliott, illustrated by Theo Nicole Lorenz

Firefly Song: Lynn Frierson Faust and the Great Smoky Mountain Discovery by Colleen Paeff, illustrated by Ji-Hyuk Kim

Forests by Nell Cross Beckerman, illustrated by Kalen Chock

The Girl Who Tested the Waters: Ellen Swallow, Environmental Scientist by Patricia Daniele, illustrated by Junyi Wu

If You Like Butterflies by Lola M. Schaefer, illustrated by Gabi Swiatkowska

Jellyfish Scientist: Maude Delap and Her Mesmerizing Medusas by Michelle Cusolito, illustrated by Ellen Rooney

Jeremy, the English Garden Snail: Heredity, Citizen Science, and #snaillove by Darcy Pattison, illustrated by Olga Gonina

Just in Case: Saving Seeds in the Svalbard Global Seed Vault by Megan Clendenan, illustrated by Brittany Cicchese

The Little Lobster: A Lobster Tale by W. Thomas Hotz, illustrated by Estelle Corke

Magic in a Drop of Water: How Ruth Patrick Taught the World about Water Pollution by Julie Winterbottom, illustrated by Susan Reagan

Marjory’s River of Grass: Marjory Stoneman Douglas, Fierce Protector of the Everglades by Josie James

Mud to the Rescue!: How Animals Use Mud to Thrive and Survive by Tanya Konerman and Melanie Cataldo

Nature Explained: A Family Guide to 20 Nature Cycles by Helen Brown, illustrated by Claire Scully

Next Time You See a Snowflake by Emily Morgan

Our Plastic Problem: A Call for Global Solutions by Megan Durnford

Pearls in the Sand: Protecting Sea Turtles in Oaxaca by Beatriz Gutiérrez Hernández

Rachel Carson’s Wonder-Filled World: How the Scientist, Writer, and Nature Lover Changed the Environmental Movement by Kate Hannigan, illustrated by Katie Hickey

Rewriting the Rules: How Dr. Kathleen Friel Created New Possibilities for Brain Research and Disability by Danna Zeiger, illustrated by Josée Bisaillon

Safe Crossing by Kari Percival

Salmon Run: An Epic Journey to the Ocean and Back by Annie Chen

The Secret Life of a Sea Turtle by Maddalena Bearzi, illustrated by Alex Boersma

The Six: The Untold Story of America’s First Women Astronauts by Loren Grush, illustrated by Rebecca Stefoff

Spark: Jim West’s Electrifying Adventures in Creating the Microphone by Ainissa Ramirez, illustrated by Setor Fiadzigbey

The Spider Lady: Nan Songer and Her Arachnid World War II Army by Penny Parker Klostermann, illustrated by Anne Lambelet

Stuck! The Story of La Brea Tar Pits by Joyce Uglow, illustrated by Valerya Milovanova

Sun Bird: The Amazing Journey of the Arctic Tern by Lindsay Moore

The True and Lucky Life of a Turtle by Sy Montgomery, illustrated by Matt Patterson

Wanda Hears the Stars: A Blind Astronomer Listens to the Universe by Amy S. Hansen and Wanda Díaz Merced, illustrated by Rocío Arreola Mendoza

Wonderfully Wild: Rewilding a School and Community by Jessica Stremer, illustrated by Josée Masse

Truth Is by Hannah V. Sawyerr – Book Recommendation

Truth Is by Hannah V. Sawyerr 

Publisher: Amulet Books

Publication Date: September 23, 2025

Reviewed from library copy

ISBN: 9781419776830

Truth is 17 and not sure what she wants to do after she graduates this year. When she finds out that she is pregnant, she has one more choice to make. Her best friend assumes that Truth will have the baby, but Truth isn’t sure. She can’t tell her verbally abusive mother about being pregnant, since her mother has made it clear that her own teenage pregnancy that resulted in Truth being born ruined her life. She doesn’t want to let the baby’s father know either. Luckily, Truth finds a space in which she can start to process her own decisions and find a way forward: slam poetry. As Truth struggles to make slam practice while dealing with her pregnancy and her decision, she continues to lie until one of her poems gets released online and people learn what her decision was. It’s time for truth.

Brilliantly written in verse, this story of a teenage Black girl finding her voice in slam poetry and standing on her own despite the many critical people around her is triumphant. It is one of the few YA novels about choosing to have an abortion that shares that as a valid choice without ongoing emotional trauma. Truth is such a real person, making mistakes, dealing with consequences and still dreaming of a different future than others see for her. Her relationship with her best friend and her mother are rendered with complexity and a deep understanding for Truth herself. 

A great verse novel that speaks to the power of choice and voice. Appropriate for ages 15+.

Take a Ride in These 3 New Picture Books

Diggers, Dozers & Dumpers: Small Stories about Big Machines by Ole Könnecke, translated by Melody Shaw

Publisher: Gecko Press

Publication Date: May 6, 2025

Reviewed from library copy

ISBN: 9798765667552

Opening this book, readers are greeted by a staring cow, a blue duck with a wand, and an alligator driving a dozer. In very short stories that cover just a few pages at most, readers are introduced to a different sort of large machine and the characters show how they can be used. The characters range from farm animals to giraffe to moose, each depicted in a merry and playful way. Best of all, this is a book about big machinery that can actually be shared aloud and enjoyed by kids who like the machines and those who aren’t entirely enamored. 

Whimsical and heavy machinery have never gone together better. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

Mama Car by Lucy Catchpole, illustrated by Karen George

Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Publication Date: November 4, 2025

Reviewed from Edelweiss e-galley

ISBN: 9780316578035

A little girl has her own tricycle. Her father has a car. And her mother drives a wheelchair. The two of them go on expeditions together from the snuggly bed to the kitchen for snacks after making a list. They take the Mama Car together. The little girl helps a lot with moving toys, reaching things, and holding stuff. She also helps decorate Mama Car. When she has a little accident riding her tricycle, Mama Car is there to pick her up, keep her cozy and make her feel safe. 

Written by an author who uses a wheelchair, this story is based on what one of her daughters used to call her wheelchair. The book is a merry and loving look at a parent using a wheelchair and the adventures they have together that use the chair. I love that the story is entirely positive and told from the point of view of a small child who simply sees the chair as part of life and nothing to be worried about. The illustrations are friendly and large format, adding to the child appeal of the story. 

Wheel this one onto your library shelves. Appropriate for ages 2-4.

Sleeper Train by Mick Jackson, illustrated by Baljinder Kaur

Publisher: Candlewick

Publication Date: July 15, 2025

Reviewed from library copy

ISBN: 9781536238983

A little girl goes on an overnight train with her parents. They have their own compartment, but she just can’t fall asleep easily. So she starts to think about all the various places she has slept before. There is her parents’ bed at home, a hotel near the sea, on a beach, in a tent, in the hospital, and staying over at her grandparents’ home. Soon she had fallen asleep on the train. In the morning, there was breakfast on the train and soon they arrived at their destination. 

This picture book shares a way of travel that many children may not have experienced themselves and makes it approachable. I enjoyed that it focused on the variety of places a child may have slept, inviting the reader to see their own experiences alongside the character’s. The illustrations show a Sikh family traveling the train in India. The pictures use spicy colors of saffron and chili with cool teals to create a vibrant experience.

An engaging trip on the train. Appropriate for ages 3-5.

The Horn Book Fanfare 2025

Horn Book has announced the 2025 Fanfare, their picks for the best books of the year by their editors and reviewers. Here are the selected titles:

PICTURE BOOKS

Afloat by Kirli Saunders, illus. by Freya Blackwood

Anything by Rebecca Stead, illus. by Gracey Zhang

Cat Nap by Brian Lies

Fireworks by Matthew Burgess, illus. by Cátia Chien

The House That Floated by Guojing

How to Reach the Moon by Nicolás Schuff, illus. by Ana Sender

Island Storm by Brian Floca, illus. by Sydney Smith

Moon Song by Michaela Goade

The Moving Book by Lisa Brown

Our Lake by Angie Kang

A Place for Us by James E. Ransome

Sato the Rabbit: Morning Light by Yuki Ainoya

When I Hear Spirituals by Cheryl Willis Hudson, illus. by London Ladd

Your Farm, Your Forest, Your Island by Jon Klassen (three titles)

FICTION

All the Blues in the Sky by Renée Watson

Beasts by Ingvild Bjerkeland

Everyday Bean by Stephanie Graegin

Everything Is Poison by Joy McCullough

The Forest of a Thousand Eyes by Frances Hardinge, illus. by Emily Gravett

How to Say Goodbye in Cuban by Daniel Miyares

I Am the Swarm by Hayley Chewins

If Looks Could Kill by Julie Berry

Night Light by Michael Emberley

Oasis by Guojing

Rebellion 1776 by Laurie Halse Anderson

The Rose Field by Philip Pullman

Run Away with Me by Brian Selznick

Sisters in the Wind by Angeline Boulley

Somadina by Akwaeke Emezi

Song of a Blackbird by Maria van Lieshout

The Strongest Heart by Saadia Faruqi

Titan of the Stars by E. K. Johnston

Truth Is by Hannah V. Sawyerr

The Winter of the Dollhouse by Laura Amy Schlitz

Your Turn Marisol Rainey by Erin Entrada Kelly

POETRY

Dear Acorn (Love, Oak): Letter Poems to Friends by Joyce Sidman, illus. by Melissa Sweet

How Elegant the Elephant: Poems about Animals and Insects by Mary Ann Hoberman, illus. by Marla Frazee

NONFICTION

Death in the Jungle: Murder, Betrayal, and the Lost Dream of Jonestown by Candace Fleming

The Endless Sea by Chi Thai, illus. by Linh Dao

The History of We by Nikkolas Smith

How Sweet the Sound by Kwame Alexander, illus. by Charly Palmer

Hurricane by Jason Chin

I Wish I Didn’t Have to Tell You This by Eugene Yelchin

Imogen: The Life and Work of Imogen Cunningham by Elizabeth Partridge, illus. by Yuko Shimizu

Outside In and Inside Out: A Story about Arnold Lobel by Emmy Kastner

This Is Orange: A Field Trip through Color by Rachel Poliquin, illus. by Julie Morstad

We Carry the Sun by Tae Keller, illus. by Rachel Wada

White Lies: How the South Lost the Civil War, Then Rewrote the History by Ann Bausum

A World Without Summer: A Volcano Erupts, a Creature Awakens, and the Sun Goes Out by Nicholas Day, illus. by Yas ­Imamura