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We love small presses — and these 21 new books show why.
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For Your Reading List Credit: Knopf Books for Young Readers; Chris Ritter Quinn Ryan fell in love hard and fast with her best friend, Jaimie, and the two had an incredible relationship... until they didn’t. In Girl Crushed, Katie Heaney perfectly captures the pain and confusion of heartbreak, especially for teenagers — but with a breakup that happens off the page, Girl Crushed follows the aftermath, exploring how a teen copes with the loss of first love. Though there are several bouts of crying to Celine Dion and awkward moments at the lunch table, Quinn grows in a way that she didn’t think possible and didn’t know she needed. For example, she pursues a relationship with the coolest girl in school, not out of revenge, but as an opportunity to take a risk and see herself through someone else’s eyes.
The book is so refreshing because unlike several queer stories, the focus doesn’t fall on the discovery of the character’s sexual identity, or their coming out experience. Although being a lesbian is central to her identity, and queer culture is prominently explored throughout, Quinn knows herself from the start, and is accepted and loved for who she is by everyone around her, freeing up the story to focus on characters so well-defined and real that they jump off the page. Heaney’s writing is fun, witty, and honest in a way that will transplant you right back to your own high school days. Girl Crushed is a story of first love, expectations, and bittersweet endings that will leave you feeling hopeful for the characters, but also yourself. Get your copy now. —Shyla Watson How'd I Miss This Book? A series about catching up on older reads. Credit: hazydazyreading The Secret History by Donna Tartt I knew of Donna Tartt — her alleged reclusiveness, her immaculately tailored men’s suits and elegant bob — but I must confess that I had never read any of her novels before finally deciding to rectify this error during lockdown. A former colleague recently tweeted that 1992’s The Secret History (published when Tartt was just 28) was the “perfect” Donna Tartt novel, and since the New York Public Library has a robust digital collection, I was able to check it out within minutes and greedily read it on my Kindle in the span of a few days.
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