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ancestor-approved
Cynthia Leitich Smith

Ancestor Approved: Intertribal Stories for Kids

Genre:
Fiction
Age Level:
Middle Grade

An intertribal powwow connects the short stories of 16 Indigenous authors that explore Native culture, ethnic identity, and ancestry.

 

And No Birds Sang
Farley Mowat

And No Birds Sang

Genre:
Autobiography and Memoir, Nonfiction
Age Level:
YA

Mowat retells his own experiences as a young soldier during World War II. At first he was very idealistic and romanticized the war effort but after exposure to many atrocities, Farley grows and learns painfully to see war as it is.

Teenage girl standing in the snow without a coat with her arms crossed.
Jenny Hubbard

And We Stay

Genre:
Fiction
Age Level:
YA

When high school senior Paul Wagoner walks into his school library with a stolen gun, he threatens his girlfriend Emily Beam, then takes his own life. In the wake of the tragedy, an angry and guilt-ridden Emily is shipped off to boarding school in Amherst, Massachusetts, where she encounters a ghostly presence who shares her name. The spirit of Emily Dickinson and two quirky girls offer helping hands, but it is up to Emily to heal her own damaged self.

This inventive story, told in verse and in prose, paints the aftermath of tragedy as a landscape where there is good behind the bad, hope inside the despair, and springtime under the snow.

Andy Warhol: Prince of Pop
Jan Greenberg, Sandra Jordan

Andy Warhol: Prince of Pop

Genre:
Biography, Nonfiction
Age Level:
Middle Grade, YA

The Campbell’s Soup Cans. The Marilyns. The Electric Chairs. The Flowers. The work created by Andy Warhol elevated everyday images to art, ensuring Warhol a fame that has far outlasted the 15 minutes he predicted for everyone else. His very name is synonymous with the 1960s American art movement known as Pop. Warhol’s rise, from poverty to wealth, from obscurity to status as a Pop icon, is an absorbing tale—one in which the American dream of fame and fortune is played out in all of its success and its excess. No artist of the late 20th century took the pulse of his time—and ours—better than Andy Warhol.