Middle Grade
Splinter & Ash 2: City of Secrets by Marieke Nijkamp
Continue reading New Releases: October 7, 2025
Continue reading New Releases: October 7, 2025
Mooncakes by Suzanne Walker and Wendy Xu (YA GN, Mid-Autumn Festival and Sukkot)
Higher by Roz Alexander (Rosh HaShanah)
Take Me Home by Lorelei Brown (Thanksgiving)
The Lone Wolf Cafe by Sydney Wilder (Halloween)
Hating a Witch by Brigid Hunt (Samhain)

The Faceless Thing We Adore by Hester Steel
We Are Always Tender With Our Dead by Eric LaRocca
Moonflow by Bitter Karella
You Weren’t Meant to Be Human by Andrew Joseph White
Blood on Her Tongue by Johanna van Veen

Bonus: These are all novels, but for short stories, check out Teenage Girls Can Be Demons by Hailey Piper
Shoot the Moon by Isa Arsén
A Single Man by Christopher Isherwood
The Salvage by Anbara Salam
These Heathens by Mia McKenzie
The Safekeep by Yael van der Wouden

Bonus: Coming in 2026, Heap Earth Upon It by Chloe Michelle Howarth
Happy LGBT History Month! We are, of course, celebrating as we celebrate everything over here – with books! Specifically, with both fiction and nonfiction that pay tribute to LGBT history.
Sam is very in touch with their own queer identity. They’re nonbinary, and their best friend, TJ, is nonbinary as well. Sam’s family is very cool with it… as long as Sam remembers that nonbinary kids are also required to clean their rooms, do their homework, and try not to antagonize their teachers too much.
The teacher-respect thing is hard when it comes to Sam’s history class, because their teacher seems to believe that only Dead Straight Cis White Men are responsible for history. When Sam’s home borough of Staten Island opens up a contest for a new statue, Sam finds the perfect non-DSCWM subject: photographer Alice Austen, whose house has been turned into a museum, and who lived with a female partner for decades.
Soon, Sam’s project isn’t just about winning the contest. It’s about discovering a rich queer history that Sam’s a part of — a queer history that no longer needs to be quiet, as long as there are kids like Sam and TJ to stand up for it.