I’ve had an amazing reading year this year (mostly due to the super-boost I got last January from starting my reread of The Saddle Club) so I wanted to highlight some of the best books I had the pleasure of reading. Feel free to ask me questions about any of these books or you can find my reviews of them by searching the title or author on my blog 😊
I’ve listed the titles below in the order they appear in the collage above (which is no particular order lol) and I’ll mark them with rainbow flags and wheelchair symbols to denote queer and disability rep!
The Other Side of Perfect by Mariko Turk ♿️
Social Queue by Kay Kerr ♿️ #LoveOzYA
The Bone Houses by Emily Lloyd-Jones ♿️
The Boy From the Mish by Gary Lonesborough 🏳️🌈 #LoveOzYA
(US release March 2022, also titled “Ready When You Are”)
Stars in Their Eyes by Jessica Walton & Aśka ♿️🏳️🌈 #LoveOzYA
Near the Bone by Christina Henry
Growing Up Disabled in Australia (ed.) by Carly Findlay ♿️🏳️🌈
The Monster of Her Age by Danielle Binks 🏳️🌈 #LoveOzYA
Do You Dream of Terra-Two? by Temi Oh
Every Single Lie by Rachel Vincent
The Degenerates by J Albert Mann ♿️🏳️🌈
How It All Blew Up by Arvin Ahmadi 🏳️🌈
Burden Falls by Kat Ellis (also titled “Wicked Little Deeds)
The Iron Raven by Julie Kagawa
Stay Another Day by Juno Dawson ♿️🏳️🌈
Meddling Kids by Edgar Cantero 🏳️🌈
Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare 🏳️🌈
Ghost Bird by Lisa Fuller #LoveOzYA
Echo After Echo by AR Capetta 🏳️🌈
Girls on the Verge by Sharon Biggs-Waller
Tell Me Again How A Crush Should Feel by Sara Farizan 🏳️🌈
Out of the Blue by Sophie Cameron ♿️🏳️🌈
These Witches Don’t Burn by Isabel Sterling 🏳️🌈
This Is Not A Ghost Story by Andrea Portes
I Kissed A Girl by Jennet Alexander 🏳️🌈
"Your mind will never lose anything forever that's worth keeping."
'A Certain Slant of Light' by Laura Whitcomb
This is the story of what happened after we all came home, sort of like Dorothy & Co. after Oz. I'm betting you thought everything was peachy for Dorothy once she got home. We forget that Kansas is no safer than Oz. After all, that's where the tornado hit.
'Blood Lines' by Eileen Wilks
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At least if you were ignorant, you could do what you wanted, you had no idea what had been achieved in the past. You were free, instead of chewed at by bleeding impotence, dissolved away like a pearl in acid.
'Paint it Black' by Janet Fitch
And even if you hate her, can't stand her, even if she's ruining your life, there's something about her, some romance, some power. She's absolutely herself. No matter how hard you try, you'll never get to her. And when she dies, the world will be flat, too simple, reasonable, fair.
'Anywhere But Here' by Mona Simpson
In a neo-Gothic mansion in a city at the end of the world, Ellie finds there's room enough for art, family, forgiveness and love. A coming-of-age story about embracing the things that scare us from the author of ‘The Year the Maps Changed.’
How do you ruin someone's childhood? You let them make-believe that they are a monster. But sooner or later, the mask must come off...
Ellie Marsden was born into the legendary Lovinger acting dynasty. Granddaughter of the infamous Lottie Lovinger, as a child Ellie shared the silver screen with Lottie in her one-and-only role playing the child monster in a cult horror movie. The experience left Ellie deeply traumatised and estranged from people she loved.
Now seventeen, Ellie has returned home to Hobart for the first time in years. Lottie is dying and Ellie wants to make peace with her before it's too late. But forgiveness feels like playing make-believe, and memories are like ghosts.
When a chance encounter with a young film buff leads her to a feminist horror film collective, Ellie meets Riya, a girl who she might be able to show her real self to, and last comes to understand her family's legacy - and her own part in it.
A story of love, loss, family and film - a stirring, insightful novel about letting go of anger and learning to forgive without forgetting. And about embracing the things that scare us, in order to be braver.
"Words offer the means to meaning, and for those who will listen, the enunciation of truth."
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