I just looked back at the post where I listed my favourite young adult books from 2021. When I wrote that, I resolved to read more YA in 2022. And that didn't happen. In fact, I read fewer. Just one of the three books on this list is a YA book; the other two would be classified better as late middle-grade. The reason I include them here rather than on my MG list is that I know I would have enjoyed them more as a young adult than as a middle-grader! Clap When You LandI love it when I chance upon a book that I've never heard of and love it! I was scrolling through recommended reads on Kindle Unlimited, and I came across Clap When You Land. It had nearly 5,000 ratings. That was all I looked at before I downloaded and read it.And I loved it. Verse novels, when well done, are brilliant. I love their sparseness - no beating around the bush, no unnecessary details, just … [Read more...]
The Best At It
Rahul Kapoor wants to be the best at it. The best at what? Honestly, anything. Football, acting ... anything except Maths. He doesn't want to fit into the stereotype of the nerdy American Indian. In fact, he wants as little to do with his Indianness as possible. For instance, he doesn't want to be part of the International Bazaar that his mother's friends, the Auntie Squad, are organising. And he'd like to be a little less brown. Oh, and he finds his father's Bollywood music more than a little embarrassing.The Best At It was a gentle, lovely book. Yes, I did cringe more than once, but isn't adolescence full of cringeworthy moments? Unerringly, The Best At It goes to the heart of each moment, embarrassing or sad, wildly happy or confusing. And that - the authenticity of tone on each page - is what drew me to the story. Who are we? Who do we want to be? How can we fit in? Even when … [Read more...]


