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Though this could be read just as a story of a bat wanting to be a butterfly, it’s also a gender-affirming conversation starter that should be supported by books with human characters such as Kyle Lukoff’s When Aidan Became a Brother or Jessica Herthel and Jazz Jennings’s I Am Jazz.
A spellbinding tale, though perhaps not one with mass teen appeal. Share this title with young bibliophiles looking for eerie, atmospheric reads like Kat Ellis’s Harrow Lake or Claire Legrand’s Sawkill Girls.
A heartwrenching story about a 1960s aspiring artist trying to find her place in world as those closest to her let her down repeatedly, this novel in verse may fail to connect with modern readers.
A thrilling and engaging novel that will draw readers in from the first line, and a first purchase for YA collections. Pair with Karen M. McManus’s One of Us Is Lying.