All We Can Do Is Wait by Richard Lawson (6th)
In the hours after a bridge collapse rocks their city, a group of Boston teenagers meet in the waiting room of Massachusetts General Hospital:
Siblings Jason and Alexa have already experienced enough grief for a lifetime, so in this moment of confusion and despair, Alexa hopes that she can look to her brother for support. But a secret Jason has been keeping from his sister threatens to tear the siblings apartā¦right when they need each other most.
Scott is waiting to hear about his girlfriend, Aimee, who was on a bus with her theater group when the bridge went down. Their relationship has been rocky, but Scott knows that if he can just see Aimee one more time, if she can just make it through this ordeal and he can tell her he loves her, everything will be all right.
And then thereās Skyler, whose sister Kateāthe sister who is more like a mother, the sister who is basically Skylerās everythingāwas crossing the bridge when it collapsed. As the minutes tick by without a word from the hospital staff, Skyler is left to wonder how she can possibly move through life without the one person who makes her feel strong when sheās at her weakest.
In his riveting, achingly beautiful debut, Richard Lawson guides readers through an emotional and life-changing night as these teens are forced to face the reality of their pastsā¦and the prospect of very different futures.
The Last To Let Go by Amber Smith (6th)
How do you let go of something youāve never had?
Junior year for Brooke Winters is supposed to be about change. Sheās transferring schools, starting fresh, and making plans for college so she can finally leave her hometown, her family, and her past behind.
But all of her dreams are shattered one hot summer afternoon when her mother is arrested for killing Brookeās abusive father. No one really knows what happened that day, if it was premeditated or self-defense, whether it was right or wrong. And now Brooke and her siblings are on their own.
In a year of firstsāthe first year without parents, first love, first heartbreak, and her first taste of freedomāBrooke must confront the shadow of her familyās violence and dysfunction, as she struggles to embrace her identity, finds her true place in the world, and learns how to let go.
Buy it: B&N * Amazon * iBooks * IndieBound
The Apocalypse of Elena Mendoza by Shaun David Hutchinson (6th)
Sixteen-year-old Elena Mendoza is the product of a virgin birth.
This can be scientifically explained (itās called parthenogenesis), but what canāt be explained is how Elena is able to heal Freddie, the girl sheās had a crush on for years, from a gunshot wound in a Starbucks parking lot. Or why the boy who shot Freddie, David Combs, disappeared from the same parking lot minutes later after getting sucked up into the clouds. What also canāt be explained are the talking girl on the front of a tampon box, or the reasons that David Combs shot Freddie in the first place.
As more unbelievable things occur, and Elena continues to perform miracles, the only remaining explanation is the least logical of allāthat the world is actually coming to an end, and Elena is possibly the only one who can do something about it.
Fire on the Ice by Tamsen Parker (6th)
Blaze Bellamy is the bad girl of the short track speed skating world. Looking like a roller derby bruiser when sheās not in her Team USA uniform, sheās an unlikely American heroine. Sheās got a punk attitude to match her provocative dress and her dyed hair, and sheās determined to get onto the front pages of the papers regardless of how she has to do it.
Maisy Harper is the workhorse of the Canadian womenās figure skating team. Serious, modest, and above all, polite, Maisy would prefer to win her victory on the ice rather than in the press, and is exasperated by Blazeās antics. When sheās not lusting after her anyway. After they both failed to make the medal podium at the last Snow and Ice Games, they drowned themselves in gināand each other.
Despite their hookup being drunken, they both harbor fond memories of their night together and are keen for a repeat. But theyāve got different ways of going about getting what they want, and Blazeās willingness to go to any lengths for the spotlight could ruin any chance she has with Maisy.
Buy it: Amazon
The Last Beginning by Lauren James (13th)
The epic conclusion to Lauren James’s debut The Next Together about true love and reincarnation.
Sixteen years ago, after a scandal that rocked the world, teenagers Katherine and Matthew vanished without a trace. Now Clove Sutcliffe is determined to find her long lost relatives.
But where do you start looking for a couple who seem to have been reincarnated at every key moment in history? Who were Kate and Matt? Why were they born again and again? And who is the mysterious Ella, who keeps appearing at every turn in Clove’s investigation?
For Clove, there is a mystery to solve in the past and a love to find in the future, and failure could cost the world everything.
Snowsisters by Tom Wilinsky and Jen Sternick (15th)
High school studentsāSoph, who attends private school in Manhattan, and Tess, a public school student who lives on a dairy farm in New Hampshireāare thrown together as roommates at a week-long writing conference. As they get to know each other and the other young women, both Soph and Tess discover unexpected truths and about friendship, their craft, and how to hold fast to their convictions while opening their hearts to love.
Hold Fast by Kris Ripper (20th)
Zack Scherzo likes his notebooks. And his pens. And, okay, he really loves to organize stuff. Heās organized his whole life into the ideal trajectory for his ten year plan, at which point his career will be solid and heāll be ready for a husband and family. Everything makes perfect sense.
Until he meets Isaiah.
Driven entrepreneur Isaiah Carlin generally doesnāt get involved with lost causes, like the climbing gym Zackās trying to keep afloat. But thereās something about the gymāand thereās definitely something about Zackāthat intrigues him. He wants to help. He also wants to see what happens when Zack shakes loose some of his rules and allows himself to feel.
When passion collides with Zackās regimented life path, somethingās gotta give. And it looks like that thing is going to be Isaiah, unless he can convince Zack that sometimes real life is even better than the best laid plans.
Buy it:Ā Ā Amazon
One True Way by Shannon Hitchcock (27th)
Welcome to Daniel Boone Middle School in the 1970s, where teachers and coaches must hide who they are, and girls who like girls are forced to question their own choices. Presented in the voice of a premier storyteller, One True Way sheds exquisite light on what it means to be different, while at the same time being wholly true to oneself. Through the lives and influences of two girls, readers come to see that love is love is love. Set against the backdrop of history and politics that surrounded gay rights in the 1970s South, this novel is a thoughtful, eye-opening, look at tolerance, acceptance, and change, and will widen the hearts of all readers.
People Like Us by Dana Mele (27th)
Kay Donovan may have skeletons in her closet, but the past is past, and she’s reinvented herself entirely. Now she’s a star soccer player whose group of gorgeous friends run their private school with effortless popularity and acerbic wit. But when a girl’s body is found in the lake, Kay’s carefully constructed life begins to topple.
The dead girl has left Kay a computer-coded scavenger hunt, which, as it unravels, begins to implicate suspect after suspect, until Kay herself is in the crosshairs of a murder investigation. But if Kay’s finally backed into a corner, she’ll do what it takes to survive. Because at Bates Academy, the truth is something you make…not something that happened.
All Out: The No-Longer-Secret Stories of Queer Teens throughout the Ages ed. by Saundra Mitchell (27th)
Take a journey through time and genres and discover a past where queer figures live, love and shape the world around them. Seventeen of the best young adult authors across the queer spectrum have come together to create a collection of beautifully written diverse historical fiction for teens.
From a retelling ofĀ Little Red Riding HoodĀ set in war-torn 1870s Mexico featuring a transgender soldier, to two girls falling in love while mourning the death of Kurt Cobain, forbidden love in a sixteenth-century Spanish convent or an asexual girl discovering her identity amid the 1970s roller-disco scene,Ā All OutĀ tells a diverse range of stories across cultures, time periods and identities, shedding light on an area of history often ignored or forgotten.