Posts Tagged #middlegradebooks

New Releases for July 2025

So many BOOKS, so little time. That’s an appropriate mantra for New Releases this month. Below you’ll find a large and varied collection of novels to look for this July.

Blood in the Water  by Tiffany D. Jackson. July 1. 272 pp. New Releases July 2025

Brooklyn girl Kaylani McKinnon feels like a fish out of water. She’s spending the summer with family friends in their huge house on Martha’s Vineyard, and the vibe is definitely snooty. Still, there are beautiful beaches, lots of ice cream, and a town full of fascinating Black history. Plus a few kids her age who seem friendly.

Until the shocking death of a popular teenage boy rocks the community to its core. Was it a drowning? A shark attack? Or the unthinkable — murder?

Kaylani is determined to solve the mystery. But her investigation leads her to uncover shocking secrets that could change her own life as she knows it … if she survives.

The Extremely Embarrassing Life of Lottie Brooks  by Katie Kirby. July 1. 432 pp.

New Releases July 2025 A Warning to Future Readers:

Hi, I’m Lottie Brooks! I’m 11 (and 3/4) years old and this is my diary. Before you read, though, you should be warned. This book is going to include mortifying moments like bra shopping with your mom and your seven-year-old brother, showing up to class with cereal in your hair, watching your dad sing horrible karaoke, standing awkwardly at your first school dance, and so many more humiliating occurrences.

Turn away now if you’d rather not read about such excruciating experiences. It would be entirely understandable and highly recommended!

Free Piano (Not Haunted)  by Whitney Gardner. July 1. 256 pp. New Releases July 2025

The piano is free, but fame has a price.

On the sleepy streets of Cascade Cove, lonely Margot knows that when she stumbles across a discarded synthesizer with a “not haunted” sign, she’s discovered the key to realizing her dreams. Determined to become a real songwriter and earn her absent father’s admiration, Margot dives headfirst into trying to gain followers and fans online. But her musical journey takes an unexpected turn when she realizes the (not haunted) piano is very much haunted.

Enter Vision, teen pop sensation of 1979 whose untimely demise left her spirit intertwined with the keys of her synthesizer. Though Margot and Vision couldn’t be more different, the girls form an unlikely bond fueled by their shared passion for music. But as Margot’s obsession with fame and recognition grows, she comes dangerously close to losing what she loves about music and herself.

Graciela in the Abyss  by Meg Medina. July 1. 256 pp.

New Releases July 2025In the deepest recesses of the ocean, Graciela—once an ordinary girl—now makes sea glass and assists her friend, Amina, in welcoming newly awakened sea ghosts from their death sleep. Though Graciela’s spirit is young, she has lived at the bottom of the ocean for more than a hundred years.

Meanwhile, in the mortal world on land, twelve-year-old Jorge Leon works in his family’s forge. He’s heard of the supernatural spirits living beneath the ocean’s waves—tales that do nothing to quell his fear of the water. But when Jorge discovers a hand-wrought harpoon with the power to spear a sea ghost, he knows he must destroy it any way he can.

When the harpoon is accidentally reunited with its vengeful creator, unlikely allies Graciela and Jorge have no choice but to work together to keep evil spirits from wreaking havoc on both the living and the dead.

Mooncussers  by Eli Brown. July 1. 288 pp. New Releases July 2025

Despite Clover’s victory over the destructive Seamstress, war continues to rage between the fledgling Unified States and Napoléon Bonaparte.

Clover and Nessa, a former snake-oil salesgirl, join the Women’s Service League expecting to dole out soup and socks to invalids and orphans. Instead, under the direction of the wealthy and mysterious Miss Yamada, they’re tasked with rooting out the last of the pestilential Vermin—vicious creatures animated by magic— who terrorize the countryside. But when a new kind of monster, a sharp-toothed harehound with bloodshot eyes, attacks the group, they discover a much greater threat — the grotesque Underking and his army of twisted creatures. With the help of several strange allies, Clover and Nessa must defeat the Underking before he conquers the whole land.

Peachaloo in Bloom  by Chris Raschka. July 1. 304 pp.

New Releases July 2025Two very major things have just happened to Peachaloo Piccolozampa. First, she discovered a plot to ruin her favorite swimming hole and replace it with a golf course. Second, a wasp sting has given her the superpower to understand the truth behind what people say.

Peachaloo knows a golf course is the wrong destiny for the grounds of the Ajax Mansion, a former monastery whose jump-roping denizens proclaimed it freely open to all. But the mansion’s new owner has other ideas and buried the evidence of the Brothers and Sisters’ true wishes. Now it’s up to Peachaloo to use her superpower to prove this villain a liar, star in the annual pageant, and somehow get her town back the way it’s supposed to be.

Snoop  by Gordon Korman. July 1. 208 pp. New Releases July 2025

If Carter hadn’t been checking his phone, he might have seen his brother coming down the ski slopes in his direction. And if Carter had seen his brother in time and avoided the crash, he might not have two broken legs right now.

Oops. Now Carter’s stuck at home for weeks, with both his legs in casts. Bored, he starts checking out the live feeds from police cams around his town. Before he knows it, he’s obsessed — watching his classmates when they don’t know he’s looking and discovering some other VERY STRANGE things going on that no one else notices.

But what happens when Carter is found out … and the people he’s watching know where he lives?

The Dog Who Made It Better  by Katherin Nolte. July 8. 240 pp.

New Releases July 2025Dr. Blob has the best life a dog could ask for. He eats and he sleeps and he plays. He loves his family and they love him back. Life is pretty perfect.

Then the Very Bad Thing happens. Suddenly life doesn’t seem so perfect and Dr. Blob is more afraid than he ever remembers being. How can he help his family get past the tragedy when what’s hurting them can’t be bitten or growled at? To make matters worse, there’s a new pet in the house and a growing threat outside the house in the form of an animal-hating neighbor with a sinister plan. Will Dr. Blob be able to protect all he loves and save his family from grief?

An Encantadora’s Guide to Monstros and Magic  by Sarah J. Mendonca. July 8. 368 pp. New Releases July 2025

Rosa Coelho spent her whole life hunting monstros, wandering the city streets with her best friend Tiago, and dreaming of a better life for herself and her grandmother. And in a society that favors the rich and educated, even the most basic books that Rosa’s family needs to trap monstrous come with a hefty price.

So when the powerful Ministério dos Monstros threatens her family’s struggling Encantadora shop, Rosa only has two weeks to scrape together the money for their debts. It seems like an impossible task…until Rosa tricks her way onto an infamous thief crew as their magical safecracker.

Thrust into the world of high class luxury and betrayal, Rosa enters into a scheme with the highest possible stakes: stealing from the Ministry itself. She must learn to trust her magical abilities and her crew—for if the heist goes wrong, everything she loves is forfeit.

The Kids in Mrs. Z’s Class: Olive Little Gets Crafty  by Linda Urban. July 8. 128 pp.

New Releases July 2025Olive Little loves making things, but she’s still working out how to make friends. After she spies some other kids checking out crafting books from the school library, Olive gets a brilliant idea — she’ll start a crafting club!

With a super-extraordinarily crafty invitation, everyone will surely want to join Olive’s new club. And she knows just the invitation to make. All she needs is a perfect poem, some colorful confetti, a dozen eggshells, and some crafty know-how. Easy peasy!

Until Olive discovers a local skunk has made its home in her family’s backyard henhouse! Can she craft a solution to the stinky situation in time to save her club?

The Thread of Destiny  by Aimee Lim. July 8. 288 pp. New Releases July 2025

Evie Mei Huang has literally been to hell and back alongside her friend Kevin. And while the trip to Dìyù, the Chinese underworld, was a grueling journey filled with endless horrors, nothing compares to the fact that she was unable to bring her mother back. It’s now her responsibility to assume the role her mother once held: head of the Weavers Guild, But spinning people’s fates is easier said than done, and Evie finds herself buried in Guild duties while trying to maintain a strained relationship with her best friend.

What could make a twelve-year-old’s life even more complicated? Escaped monsters from the underworld that broke through when she returned to Earth. A mysterious yellow fog that seems to be turning their city upside down, hinting at an approaching massive force they aren’t prepared to fight. Not to mention the looming threat of the man who sent her mom to the underworld in the first place (who’s also her aunt’s fiancé). Can’t a girl catch a break?

Way Off Base (The Area 51 Files)  by Julie Buxbaum. July 8. 256 pp.

New Releases July 2025For the first time since Sky arrived at Area 51, things seem to be under control. No bunker hideouts, no incoming space toilets, and no kidnappings of beloved relatives. In fact, everyone is in a celebratory mood because a special government visitor is coming to Area 51!

But on the morning of the visit, a UFO goes missing from the science lab. And then a mysterious whistleblower goes to the media saying they have evidence of a UFO landing! Did someone steal the UFO in order to reveal it to the whole wide world? Sky and her friends have less than a week to solve the mystery of the missing UFO, or all of Area 51’s secrets will be at risk. Guess things aren’t so calm after all!

Jazzy the Witch in Broom Doom  by Jessixa Bagley. July 15. 232 pp. New Releases July 2025

In her town full of witches, Jazzy’s always been a little bit different. She’s not excited about magic. She forgets the steps to spells. And even though her parents run the town’s broom shop, she doesn’t want to fly.

Then, one day, she discovers what she was born to do — cycling! Now she just has to find a way to get a bicycle and, of course, learn how to ride it. But will her new passion come between her and her best friend? And possibly get her in big trouble?

Another  by Paul Tremblay. July 22. 256 pp.

New Releases July 2025When Casey Wilson’s parents tell him that his friend is coming for a sleepover, he has no idea who that might be. Ever since the Zoom Incident, everyone treats him like a pariah, and his tics are worse than ever.

Then Morel appears and he’s not like any friend Casey has ever met. His skin is like clay, and he doesn’t speak. But Casey’s parents are charmed by the strange kid. Plus, it’s nice to have someone to talk to besides his sister, Ally, who’s away at college.

But his normally loving parents grow distant from Casey as they gush and fawn over Morel. Casey knows something is wrong  but with no end in sight to the sleepover, he’s exhausted. And in the dark, out of the corner of his eye, Morel doesn’t look like a kid at all.

The Library of Curiosities  by Jenny Lundquist. July 22. 256 pp. New Releases July 2025

After being expelled from boarding school—again—Rowan isn’t sure what to expect upon arriving at Fitzgerald Manor. The estate is opulent. Lush. Grand. Mind-boggling. And at the heart of it all is her grandfather, Cillian Fitzgerald, and his pride and joy — the Library of Curiosities.

The Library of Curiosities is the best of the best, because it contains a vast trove of magical objects that lucky patrons can borrow to fix their everyday problems. Stuck on that language arts assignment? Try writing it on the enchanted typewriter and see if that doesn’t get the words flowing. Hoping to land the lead in the school musical? Check out a wishing sock. It doesn’t take long for Rowan to realize that in this wondrous place, her own heart-wrenching problems might actually be solved for the first time in her life.

The trouble is … library curiosities have started going missing, and suspicion is falling squarely on Rowan’s shoulders. And, Cillian’s dangerous archenemy, the vengeful Silverjack, has Rowan in his sights, too. Plus, there’s the ongoing matter of the Everhart curiosity (which hasn’t been seen in years) but if found could help Rowan unsnarl her family’s strange, tangled history.

To clear her name, to avoid capture, and to locate the Everhart, Rowan will have to fight forces that threaten everything she now holds dear.

The Metamorphosis of Bunny Baxter  by Barbara Carroll Roberts. July 22. 240 pp.

New Releases July 2025If Bunny Baxter were an insect, she’d have so many ways to slip through seventh grade unnoticed. But she’s tall instead of tiny, has flaming red Medusa hair instead of camouflage, and she suffers from social anxiety, which makes it hard to be part of a swarm. Worst of all, she has to switch to a new middle school away from her best friend who she could always hide behind when her anxiety got the best of her.

The first day at E.D. Britt Middle School does not go well. Bunny trips on the steps, falls into the cutest boy in the school, and causes a kid domino pile-up. At lunch, she unintentionally causes an uproar in the cafeteria, which lands her and another girl in the principal’s office. Bunny decides there is only one option — to get expelled so she can transfer back to the school her best friend attends.

Bunny soon discovers that it’s easy to get in trouble, but not so easy to live with a reputation as a troublemaker. And even more confusing, when it looks like her plan to get expelled might work, she’s no longer sure what to do.

The Scott Fenwick Diaries: A Novel  by Kristin Nilsen. July 22. 272 pp. New Releases July 2025

Is Millie ready to graduate from posters on the wall to a living, breathing boy who sits next to her in Social Studies? By herself, absolutely not. But with a little help from her friends—maybe! Feeling comically unprepared for this next phase of middle school, Millie calls on an adorkable cast of characters for instructions and support: Shauna, her wise bestie who uses her Magic 8 Ball for advice; her two cranky grandmas who call cute boys “foxes”; Pringles, her beloved bulldog; and her bunny-loving neighbor, Tibbs, who dedicates herself to getting Millie an invite to the bar mitzvah of her dreams.

But when a secret game of Truth or Dare at the bar mitzvah leads to her ultimate fantasy—Millie and Scott swaying together on the dance floor—the moment is ruined in humiliating fashion. Millie doubts she’ll ever be ready for real-world middle school love after all.

The Blossoming Summer  by Anna Rose Johnson. July 29. 288 pp.

New Releases July 2025Life in England is all Rosemary knows, but as WWII changes the world, no one’s life is left unscathed. Suddenly, she’s sent away to escape the devastation of London. Her grandmother’s house on Lake Superior is safe, but unfamiliar, especially as she discovers her parents have kept a tremendous secret.

Rosemary and her family are Anishinaabe—a group of Indigenous peoples in the Great Lakes region—and no one is supposed to know.

Far from home but newly connected to a once-hidden part of her family, Rosemary develops a warm, close relationship with her grandmother and a local boy whose love of gardening helps her see the beauty in her unexpected circumstances. As Rosemary grows into her new life like a flower in bloom, she realizes that maybe she’s not as far from home as she thought.

The Haunting of Bellington Cottage  by Laura Parnum. July 29. 272 pp. New Releases July 2025

The last time Iris’s and Violet’s families went on a trip together, the girls turned their rental home into an epic haunted house. Now Iris has brought all her spookiest supplies to the cottage they’re calling home for the next week, ready to re-create the magic they shared. But in the years since, Vee (don’t call her Violet) has become closed off and short-tempered and wants nothing to do with anyone, especially not her mom’s new boyfriend.

Vee’s bad mood casts a cloud over the cottage. Strange things start happening that make it seem like the house itself is angry, too. Doors slamming. Tidy rooms turning into complete messes in seconds. The sound of pacing footsteps long after everyone’s gone to sleep. Iris and Vee soon discover that the cottage has a secret history and that there’s no need to stage a haunted house after all . . . because they’re already in one.

Here are even more new titles for the month of July.

New Releases July 2025

May is National Foster Care Month

May is National Foster Care Month, a time to reflect on how important it is to support children and families in our communities. Just as the flowers are blossoming in May, all children should have a home where they can blossom. Here is a list of novels that feature either a foster child as a prominent character or a foster home as a prominent setting. Enjoy!

All the Impossible Things  by Lindsay Lackey. 384 pp. (2022)May Foster Care Month

Red’s inexplicable power over the wind comes from her mother. Whenever Ruby “Red” Byrd is scared or angry, the wind picks up. And being placed in foster care, moving from family to family, tends to keep her skies stormy. Red knows she has to learn to control it but can’t figure out how.

This time, the wind blows Red into the home of the Grooves, a quirky couple who run a petting zoo, complete with a dancing donkey and a giant tortoise. With their own curious gifts, Celine and Jackson Groove seem to fit like a puzzle piece into Red’s heart.

But just when Red starts to settle into her new life, a fresh storm rolls in, one she knows all too well: her mother. For so long, Red has longed to have her mom back in her life, and she’s quickly swept up in the vortex of her mother’s chaos. Now Red must discover the possible in the impossible if she wants to overcome her own tornadoes and find the family she needs.

Anna Casey’s Place in the World  by Adrian Fogelin. 207 pp. (2021)

May Foster Care MonthHow do you face life without a place to call home?

Anna Casey is learning to deal with the loss of her family and adjust to living in a foster home with Miss Dupree. Feeling abandoned and alone, Anna turns to her closest companion, her explorer journal filled with drawn maps of her earlier neighborhoods and all the places that she has called home.

Anna is determined to become part of a real family, and with the help of a scrawny new friend named Eb, an unconventional biology teacher in cowboy boots, a homeless Vietnam vet, and a motley crew of kids from the neighborhood, Anna discovers a sense of belonging … and her own place in the world.

 Boy 2.0  by Tracey Baptiste. 304 pp. (2024)May Foster Care Month

Win “Coal” Keegan has just landed in his latest foster home, with a big, noisy, slightly nosy family named the McKays. They seem eager to welcome Coal, but he’s wary of trusting them. So, he doesn’t tell them that he went for a walk with chalk in his pocket to cover a nearby street with his art. He doesn’t tell them that a neighbor found Coal drawing, pulled a gun on him, and fired it. He doesn’t tell them the police chased him. And he definitely doesn’t tell them that when everything went down, Coal somehow turned invisible.

But he did.

Now he has to figure out how. Is he a superhero? Some kind of mutant? A science experiment? Is that why he has no family of his own? As Coal searches for answers and slowly learns to control his invisibility, he turns to the McKay kids and friends both new and old for help. But they soon discover they’re not the only ones looking for a Black boy with superpowers, and the situation is far stranger—and more dangerous—than they ever could have expected.

If you like this book, click here to read an interview with Tracey Baptiste.

Extraordinary Birds  by Sandy Stark-McGinnis. 240 pp. (2020)

May Foster Care MonthDecember believes she is a bird. The scar on her back is where her wings will sprout, and one day soon, she will soar away. It will not matter that she has no permanent home. Her destiny is in the sky.

But then she’s placed with foster mom Eleanor, a kind woman who volunteers at an animal rescue and has secrets of her own. December begins to see that her story could end a different way – but could she ever be happy down on the ground?

Forever or a Long, Long Time  by Caela Carter. 320 pp. (2017)May Foster Care Month

Flora and her brother, Julian, don’t believe they were born. They’ve lived in so many foster homes, they can’t remember where they came from. And even now that they’ve been adopted, Flora still struggles to believe that they’ve found their forever home. Though Flora is trying her best to trust two new people, when she finds out that there will be a new baby, she’s worried there won’t be enough love for everyone.

So along with their new mother, Flora and Julian begin a journey to go back and discover their past—for only then can they really begin to build their future.

Give and Take  by Elly Swartz. 320 pp. (2019)

May Foster Care MonthFamily has always been important to twelve-year-old Maggie: a trapshooter, she is coached by her dad and cheered on by her mom. But her grandmother’s recent death leaves a giant hole in Maggie’s life, one which she begins to fill with an assortment of things: candy wrappers, pieces of tassel from Nana’s favorite scarf, milk cartons, sticks . . . all stuffed in cardboard boxes under her bed.

Then her parents decide to take in a foster infant. But anxiety over the new baby’s departure only worsens Maggie’s hoarding, and soon she finds herself taking and taking until she spirals out of control. Ultimately, with some help from family, friends, and experts, Maggie learns that sometimes love means letting go.

The Great Gilly Hopkins  by Katherine Paterson. 256 pp. (1978) May Foster Care Month

A classic and one of my favorites.

Eleven-year-old Gilly has been stuck in more foster families than she can remember, and she’s hated them all. She has a reputation for being brash, brilliant, and completely unmanageable, and that’s the way she likes it. So when she’s sent to live with the Trotters—by far the strangest family yet—she knows it’s only a temporary problem.

Gilly decides to put her sharp mind to work and get out of there fast. She’s determined to no longer be a foster kid. Before long she’s devised an elaborate scheme to get her real mother to come rescue her. Unfortunately, the plan doesn’t work out quite as she hoped it would …

One for the Murphys  by Lynda Mullaly Hunt. 256 pp. (2013)

May Foster Care MonthCarley uses humor and street smarts to keep her emotional walls high and thick. But the day she becomes a foster child, and moves in with the Murphys, she’s blindsided. This loving, bustling family shows Carley the stable family life she never thought existed, and she feels like an alien in their cookie-cutter-perfect household. Despite her resistance, the Murphys eventually show her what it feels like to belong — until her mother wants her back and Carley has to decide where and how to live. She’s not really a Murphy, but the gifts they’ve given her have opened up a new future.

Pavi Sharma’s Guide to Going Home  by Bridget Farr.  272 pp. (2020) May Foster Care Month

Twelve-year-old Pavi Sharma is an expert at the Front Door Face: the perfect mix of puppy dog eyes and a lemonade smile, the exact combination to put foster parents at ease as they open their front door to welcome you in. After being bounced around between foster families and shelter stays, Pavi is a foster care expert, and she runs a “business” teaching other foster kids all she has learned. With a wonderful foster family in mom Marjorie and brother Hamilton, things are looking up for Pavi.

Then Pavi meets Meridee: a new five-year-old foster kid, who gets placed at Pavi’s first horrendous foster home. Pavi knows no one will trust a kid about what happened on Lovely Lane, even one as mature as she is, so it’s up to her to save Meridee.

Pictures of Hollis Woods  by Patricia Reilly Giff. 176 pp. (2004)

May Foster Care MonthWhen Hollis is sent to Josie, an elderly artist who is quirky and affectionate, she wants to stay. But Josie is growing more forgetful every day. If Social Services finds out, they’ll take Hollis away and move Josie into a home. Well, Hollis Woods won’t let anyone separate them. She escaped the system before and this time, she’s taking Josie with her. Still, even as she plans her future with Josie, Hollis dreams of the past summer with the Regans, fixing each special moment of her days with them in pictures she’ll never forget.

The Pinballs  by Betsy Byars. 144 pp. (2004) May Foster Care Month

You can’t always decide where life will take you—especially when you’re a kid.

Carlie knows she’s got no say in what happens to her. Stuck in a foster home with two other kids, Harvey and Thomas J, she’s just a pinball being bounced from bumper to bumper. As soon as you get settled, somebody puts another coin in the machine and off you go again.

But against her will and her better judgment, Carlie and the boys become friends. And all three of them start to see that they can take control of their own lives.

Planet Earth is Blue  by Nicole Panteleakos. 240 pp. (2020)

May Foster Care MonthTwelve-year-old Nova is eagerly awaiting the launch of the space shuttle Challenger — it’s the first time a teacher is going into space, and kids across America will watch the event on live TV in their classrooms. Nova and her big sister, Bridget, share a love of astronomy and the space program. They planned to watch the launch together. But Bridget has disappeared, and Nova is in a new foster home.

While foster families and teachers dismiss Nova as severely autistic and nonverbal, Bridget understands how intelligent and special Nova is, and all that she can’t express. As the liftoff draws closer, Nova’s new foster family and teachers begin to see her potential, and for the first time, she is making friends without Bridget. But every day, she’s counting down to the launch, and to the moment when she’ll see Bridget again. Because as Bridget said, “No matter what, I’ll be there. I promise.”

The Road to Paris  by Nikki Grimes. 160 pp. (2008) May Foster Care Month

Paris just moved in with the Lincoln family, and she isn’t thrilled to be in yet another foster home. It’s tough for her to trust people, and she misses her brother, who’s been sent to a boys’ home. Over time, the Lincolns grow on Paris. But no matter how hard she tries to fit in, she can’t ignore the feeling that she never will, especially in a town that’s mostly white while she is half black. It isn’t long before Paris has a big decision to make about where she truly belongs.

Check out this link to Diversty in Middle-Grade for more books by Nikki Grimes.

Three Pennies  by Melanie Crowder. 208 pp. (2018)

May Foster Care MonthFor a kid bouncing from foster home to foster home, The Book of Changes is the perfect companion. That’s why Marin carries three pennies and a pocket-sized I Ching with her everywhere she goes. Yet when everything in her life suddenly starts changing—like landing in a foster home that feels like somewhere she could stay, maybe forever—the pennies don’t have any answers for her.

Marin is positive that all the wrongs in her life will be made right if only she can find her birth mother and convince her that they belong together. Marin is close, oh so close—until she gets some unwelcome news and her resolve, like the uneasy earth far beneath the city of San Francisco, is shaken.

Touch Blue  by Cynthia Lord. 192 pp. (2012) May Foster Care Month

The state of Maine plans to shut down her island’s schoolhouse, which would force Tess’s family to move to the mainland — and Tess to leave the only home she has ever known. Fortunately, the islanders have a plan too: increase the numbers of students by having several families take in foster children. Tess and her family take a chance on Aaron, a thirteen-year-old trumpet player who has been bounced from home to home. And Tess needs a plan of her own — and all the luck she can muster. Will Tess’s wish come true or will her luck run out?

What I Call Life  by Jill Wolfson. 288 pp. (2008)

May Foster Care MonthSaddled with an unfortunately long name by her eccentric mom, Carolina Agnes London Indiana Florence Ohio Renee Naomi Ida Alabama Lavender just goes by Cal to keep things simple. Cal Lavender is perfectly happy living her anonymous life, even if she does have to play mother to her own mother a whole lot more than an eleven-year-old should. But when Cal’s mom has one of her “unfortunate episodes” in the middle of the public library, authorities whisk her off and escort Cal to a seat in the back of a police car.

On “just a short, temporary detour from what I call life,” Cal finds herself in a group home with four other girls, watched over by a strange old woman everyone refers to as the Knitting Lady. At first Cal can think of nothing but how to get out of this nuthouse. She knows she doesn’t belong there. But it turns out that all the girls, and even the Knitting Lady, may have a lot more in common than they could have imagined.

New Releases for March 2025

This March brings us many new middle-grade books to pore over so stock up on your bookmarks and browse the collection below. You’re sure to find one that sparks your reading interest.

13 Ways to Say Goodbye  by Kate Fussner. March 18. 304 pp. new releases March 2025

Nina always followed her older sister, Lily. But just before her thirteenth birthday, Lily died, leaving Nina behind forever.

In the three years since she lost her sister, Nina completed Lily’s secret “Before Birthday” lists to continue in her footsteps. But now Nina is catching up. When she flies to Paris, France, and completes tasks that Lily never finished, Nina finds herself magically transported inside of her own memories, face-to-face with the ghosts of her past.

With her birthday looming and the last list running out, Nina is torn between visiting her sister in her memories or adventuring in the present, including crushing hard on her art classmate, Sylvie. Should she follow Lily’s instructions or try something new? And what happens when she finishes the list?

Learn more about Paris, the city Nina visited, by clicking here.

Alice Éclair, Spy Extraordinaire: A Recipe for Trouble  by Sarah Todd Taylor.  March 18. 224 pp.

new releases March 2025A fast-paced adventure full of daring action and delicious cakes! Alice Éclair, Spy Extraordinaire, will whisk you away on a glamorous and high-stakes adventure, full of daring action and delicious cakes!

Baker by day, spy by night — Alice Éclair leads an exciting double life!

A mysterious message sends her on a mission aboard France’s most glamorous train, the Sapphire Express. Alice must sneak on board posing as a pastry chef and discover which passenger is an enemy agent before they reach their final stop. But everyone on the train seems to be hiding something. Armed with her whisk, her wits, and her will to succeed, Alice has a spy to catch.

Curious about what a pastry chef does? Click here.

Cincinnati Lee, Curse Breaker  by Heidi Heilig. March 25. 304 pp. new releases March 2025

Cincinnati Lee’s great great (great?) grandfather is famous. His adventures discovering ancient artifacts have been made into movies, and museums around the world respect his work. The thing is, in that line of work, you’re bound to get cursed. And that leaves your great great (great?) granddaughter to break the curse by returning the artifacts you “preserved.”

Cincinnati’s own adventure begins in the Cosmopolitan Museum in New York City, where her mom works. Soon she learns about the ancient Spear of Destiny and its potential to right all the wrongs in her family’s past or …  bring about the end of the world. It all depends on whose hands it falls into. Cincinnati must beat two relic hunters to the spear, and her quest will take her to surprising locations throughout the city and even across the Atlantic Ocean. Along the way, she’ll make a new friend (which is not the easiest thing to do), make some enemies (surprisingly easy to do), and ultimately learn what makes the world worth saving.

The City of Lost Cats  by Tanya Lloyd Kyi .March 4. 288 pp.

new releases March 2025When a stubborn young girl named Fiona stumbles upon an abandoned mansion down by the harbor, she discovers the house is full of stray cats and two chaotic parakeets. Fiona feels sympathetic toward the animals; she understands what it’s like to need a safe home. Ever since her parents died, she’s been struggling to adjust to the tiny apartment where she and her Aunt Tanis now live. And Aunt Tanis has little time to spare for Fiona, between her job at The Municipal Hall and her horrible, hair-gelled boyfriend.

When a demoliltion team threatens the mansion, Fiona’s determined to save it and its residents. But the cats have their own priorities. Cot has lived in the mansion for two years and is the self-proclaimed king. He’s convinced the demolition effort has been organized by the parakeets. Those birds have got to go!

As the demolition team begins tearing down the house next door, Fiona looks for any help she can find — at the library, the butcher shop, and even at The Municipal Hall. Can the efforts of one small girl and an assortment of animals stop a luxury condo development? And can they create something better in its place?

The Ghosts of Pandora Pickwick  by Christina Wolff. March 4. 256 pp. new releases March 2025

Welcome to Pandora’s Antiques, with rarities for every occasion.

Summer vacation in London turns mysterious and exciting when Mia learns that her aunt’s antique shop is actually a ghost placement agency.

Nowhere does Mia feel so at home as in her Aunt Harriet’s antique shop. How wonderful that she can spend her summer vacation there! But something is wrong in the store. Things disappear as if by magic, just cleaned furniture dusts up again in seconds, and there’s an eerie number of clatters at night. However, her aunt acts as if this is completely normal. Mia, on the other hand, suspects that Harriet is hiding something from her—just like the question of who her birth parents are.

The Girl and the Robot  by Oz Rodriguez. March 25. 320 pp.

new releases March 2025Mimi Perez fixes things. Phones, tablets, speakers, printers. She gets it from helping her dad at the family e-repair shop, one of Mimi’s favorite things to do. But ever since Papi was deported, there’s a lot more than electronics that need fixing in Mimi’s world. Things too big for any twelve-year-old to handle on her own.

Mimi hustles around her Brooklyn neighborhood trying to earn enough money to finally fix her family. There’s no time for school or friends, but Mimi knows it will all be worth it the day Papi comes home. Then her ex-friends approach her with a proposition: enter a robotics competition with them and they could win $50,000. This could be her chance.

Then, a mysterious robot, scared, alone, and broken, crashes to earth from space. When federal agents search for it, Mimi does what any street-smart electronics repair person would do: she takes the robot home, fixes her up, and in the process, gains a friend.

Suddenly, Mimi is anything but alone. She’s part of a robotics team. She’s sheltering a robot. She’s dodging federal agents. And keeping all of it a secret from her mom.

Are you interested in robots like Mimi? Build one at this website.

Last Chance Academy: A Study in Secrets  by Debbi Michiko Florence. March 11. 304 pp. new releases March 2025

Ever since her mom passed away, twelve-year-old Megumi “Meg” Mizuno has been spiraling. After too many low grades and cut classes, she’s been expelled from school. Her dad secures her a spot at the prestigious Leland Chase Academy, a boarding school in the middle-of-nowhere New York. If Meg can’t make it work there, she’ll be forced to live with her horrible aunt.

At first, Leland Chase seems like an average, although strict, boarding school, and Meg tentatively warms up to her roommate and some classmates. Then, one night, a mysterious envelope appears under her door, inviting Meg and her roommate to participate in a scavenger hunt. The only rules? Don’t get caught by faculty or staff and no cheating. The grand prize? A luxury stay at a fancy resort in California. And after learning her dad has plans to sell their family home—with all its memories of Mom—Meg knows she has to win the competition and use the trip to convince Dad to stay.

Thanks to her mom, who taught her how to solve ciphers, Meg has a knack for puzzles. She gets ahead in the hunt but quickly learns that her classmates, having their own sets of skills, are tough competitors. And as they get deeper into the game, Meg and her fellow competitors realize the anonymous creator has their own agenda … and LCA isn’t quite what it seems.

Plan your own scavenger hunt here.

The Many Hauntings of the Manning Family  by Lorien Lawrence. March 18. 288 pp.

new releases March 2025Thirteen-year-old twins Gabby and Trent Manning are Connecticut’s youngest paranormal investigators. They both inherited “the gift” from their grandparents whose legendary ghost hunts inspired several books and movies, but whose names have been nearly forgotten since their untimely deaths years ago.

Armed with EMF machines, flashlights, and recording equipment, the twins’ mom drags them all over New England in an attempt to bring their family back into the limelight. Never mind that Gabby is tired of being known as a Ghost Twin, and Trent finds most of the haunts to be pretty frightening. Their mom thinks their latest destination—the abandoned Majestic Theater, site of the late Mannings’ infamous failed exorcism—is exactly what the family needs to go viral.

However, nothing about this investigation goes according to plan. After a terrifying séance-gone-wrong, their mother goes missing, and it’s clear that a powerful demon is haunting the theater. Will the twins be able live up to their grandparents’ legacy and vanquish the demon before it’s too late?

The Peach Thief  by Linda Joan Smith. March 4. 384 pp. new releases March 2025

One night, workhouse orphan Scilla Brown, climbs the Earl of Havermore’s garden wall. She wants only to steal a peach—the best thing she’s ever tasted in her hard, hungry life. But when the earl’s gardener catchers her and mistakes her for a boy, she finds something better: a temporary job scrubbing flowerpots. If she can just keep up her deception, she’ll have a soft bed and food beyond her wildest dreams . . . maybe even peaches.

She soon falls in with Phin, a garden apprentice who sneaks her into the steamy, fruit-filled greenhouses, calls her “Brownie,” and makes her skin prickle. At the same time, the gruff gardener teaches Scilla how to make things grow, and her hope begins to grow with every seed she plants. But as the seasons unfurl, her loyalties become divided, and her secret is harder to keep. How far will Scilla go to have a home at last?

Click here to grow a garden like Scilla.

Octopus Moon  by Bobbie Pyron. March 25. 336 pp.

new releases March 2025Pearl loves watching the majestic loggerhead turtles and octopuses glide through the water at the aquarium. She especially identifies with the octopuses, who have millions of touch receptors all over their bodies. They feel everything. But sometimes, Pearl wishes she was more like a turtle, with a hard outer shell—it hurts too much to feel everything.

And the changes at the start of fifth grade don’t feel good to Pearl at all. New teachers, lockers, and being in different classes than her friends is unsettling. Pearl tries her best to pretend she’s fine, but she’s struggling with things that used to come easy, like schoolwork, laughing and skateboarding with her best friend Rosie, running, and even sleeping.

After a disastrous parent-teacher conference, her parents decide to bring Pearl to Dr. Jill, who diagnoses her with depression. At first Pearl is resistant to Dr. Jill’s help; she doesn’t like feeling different, but she also doesn’t want to continue feeling so bad all the time. When Dr. Jill asks Pearl to try one Impossible Thing each day, like running, skateboarding, or walking her dog Tuck, she decides to try. For each impossible thing she attempts, Pearl puts a bead on a string. Bead by bead, and with the support of family and friends, Pearl finds her way back to herself. She discovers that just like the moon is always there in the sky, even if it isn’t full, she’ll always be herself even when she doesn’t feel whole.

Once for Yes  by Allie Millington. March 25. 272 pp. new releases March 2025

The Odenburgh, an old apartment building made of brick and blunt opinions, is the last of its kind in a swiftly changing neighborhood. After years of putting up with people and their many problems, the Odenburgh knows there’s no point in getting attached. They all just leave eventually. A truth that comes all too soon when the building is sold and marked for demolition, giving tenants a month to move out.

No one is more troubled by the news than eleven-year-old Prue, who refuses to leave her family’s apartment. Not when it was the last place she lived with her sister Lina, before she lost Lina forever. When Prue launches a plan to save their home, the Odenburgh joins in―flickering lights, jamming elevators, triggering fire alarms―all to try and bring a building full of bickering residents together. In the process, Prue meets Lewis, an eccentric boy who lives across the street―and the only one who can help her discover the missing elements of her sister’s story.

One Wrong Step  by Jennifer A. Nielsen. March 4. 336 pp.

new releases March 2025Twelve-year-old Atlas Wade strives to forget the memory of his mother, who died when he was nine, by climbing mountains. When his father signs them up for an expedition group hoping to be the first to ever summit the unconquerable Mount Everest, Atlas has a chance to prove himself to his father, and maybe finally leave his mother’s memory behind him on the mountain.

But this time, Atlas is the one left behind, along with a young girl named Maddie and their sturdy yet injured Sherpa, Chodak. When news breaks out that Europe is at war again, and that Nazis are attempting their own summit dangerously nearby, Atlas and Maddie plead with the expedition to come back down. Unfortunately, their warnings come too late. When an avalanche occurs and they receive no word from the group, Maddie and Chodak join Atlas to begin a dangerous journey up the mountain in the hopes of finding survivors.

Atlas, Maddie, and Chodak will have to rely not just on their own wits for survival, but on each other as well, and Atlas will have to learn how to let go if he wants any chance of finding his father and fixing the rift between them before it’s too late.

Read some fun facts about Mount Everest here.

Starry, Starry Heist  by Karen Briner. March 18. 304 pp.

new releases March 2025Sixth-grader Max has it rough—between tormentors at school and his sick mom at home. But then DZ, a strange, tuxedoed man with one shoe, appears to Max from the future and divulges that Max’s mother’s fate is somehow entwined with that of Vincent van Gogh’s The Starry Night. It’s suddenly clear to Max that any problems he already had on his plate have just gotten bigger.

DZ explains to Max that someone is after The Starry Night. . . and the thief is not bound by the usual laws of time and space. DZ can’t offer too many specifics, but he does provide Max with a cryptic to-do list:

Read The Future Time Traveler’s Guide to the Past. Consider the puffins. Beware the Wretch with obsidian eyes. Befriend Vincent van Gogh.

Max is skeptical but tries his very best. After all, he’ll do anything to help his mom. But he soon discovers that The Future Time Traveler’s Guide to the Past has never been published. And he’s not exactly sure where he’s going to find puffins in LA. He has no idea what a Wretch is. And befriend Vincent van Gogh who’s been dead for over a hundred years? That’s impossible.

Then, one afternoon at the library, Max spots her: Turquoise-haired Maybe Wells, dressed in blue from head to toe, spattered in paint, carrying a skateboard, and sporting a beautiful tattoo of puffins on her right shoulder. Suddenly, achieving the impossible doesn’t seem so farfetched anymore.

Learn more about the artist Vincent van Gogh and view some of his paintings here.

Ticket to Ride: An Unexpected Journey  by Adrienne Kress. March 11. 208 pp.

new releases March 2025To say twelve-year-old Teddy loves trains is an understatement. It’s his obsession. He knows everything there is to know about them, has the most amazing model train setup in the basement, and he carries around a classic caboose, a small model of a 19th century steam engine caboose that he received as a birthday gift. It’s his good luck charm!

So when Teddy wins a Ticket To Ride the Excelsior Express, he can’t wait to go. The Excelsior Express is modeled to look like it’s from the 1920’s but is outfitted with a high-tech locomotive system. This will be the train’s flagship journey, and it’s a dream come true for Teddy. Plus, he’ll get to see his grandparents in Los Angeles, and travel all across North America from his hometown of Toronto, Canada.

But his dream come true becomes a nightmare when the train gets rerouted and, what’s worse, his lucky caboose goes missing. As it turns out, this ticket to ride takes Teddy, his new friend Olivia, a woman always dressed in yellow named Mina, two traveling musicians named Allie and Dex, and their fellow passengers on an unexpected journey and through some pretty hefty corporate corruption.

Are you interested in trains, too? Here’s a great video on the history of trains.

The Trouble With Sunshine  by Yamile Saied Méndez. March 4. 272 pp. new releases March 2025

Dorani’s mom, Isa, taught her to be bold and challenge the rules if they don’t seem fair. People are more important than rules. But she never taught Dorani how to do it all without her. So, when Isa dies on the way to speak with the principal about Dori’s latest revolution, Dori loses her voice. Her grief and guilt become the loudest parts of her.

Moving from vibrant Miami to quiet, middle-of-nowhere Wyoming with her aunt feels like the punishment she deserves. She spends most of her time with their newest horse, Sunshine. An accident left Sunshine skittish and hard to care for. Tia Ivette knows her behavior comes from fear, and she is trying everything to make Sunshine brave again. But Dori knows grief can feel like fear… and grief is just love with no place to go.

Speaking up for Sunshine reminds Dori that the very best parts of her mother live on through her, and so when she starts to notice that the rules at her new school unfairly target specific students, she knows just what her mother would do.

Read a discussion with the author here.

Vanya and the Wild Hunt  by Sangu Mandanna. March 11. 288 pp.

new releases March 2025Eleven-year-old Vanya Vallen has always felt like she doesn’t fit in. She’s British-Indian in a mostly white town in England and she has ADHD.

Oh, and she talks to books. More importantly, the books talk back.

When a monster she believed only existed in fairytales attacks her family, Vanya discovers that her parents have secrets, and that there are a lot more monsters out there. Overnight, her parents whisk her off to the enchanted library and school of Auramere, where she joins the ranks of archwitches and archivists.

Life at Auramere is unexpected, exciting and wonderful. But even here, there’s no escaping monsters. The mysterious, powerful Wild Hunt is on the prowl, and Vanya will need all her creativity and courage to unmask its leader and stop them before they destroy the only place she’s ever truly belonged.

When Sally O’Malley Discovered the Sea  by Karen Cushman. March 25. 240 pp. new releases March 2025

Sally O’Malley is an orphan working at a mineral spring hotel in the woods of central Oregon—that is, until they chuck her out like chewed-on chicken bones, due entirely to an unfortunate incident with a pig and some church ladies.

And so Sally decides to head west to the sea. She’s heard it’s glorious. She’s heard it’s fierce. Why not see for herself? Before long Sally encounters a dangerous bobcat—and that’s just the first day! Safe in the knowledge that she’s fearless, she continues on her journey with no place to belong and no one to depend on. And that’s just fine with her.

Then a lady called Major, an old donkey, a loyal dog, and an abominable brat show Sally that she’s not quite as brave as she thinks. It turns out that counting on someone else is the scariest thing of all.

Learn more about the author Karen Cushman here.

March is a prolific month this year for New Releases. If none of the above are drawing you in, try one from the bookshelf.

new releases March 2025