Good Books to Read for Teens 2016

Readers of YA fiction had all-time clear a shelf — or detect a new ane — because in 2016, the must-read titles are almost too numerous to count. For teen readers (and wannabe-kids at heart), the new twelvemonth offers exciting new serial from some honey YA authors and debuts destined to create lifelong fans. Read on for some (but non virtually all!) of the most exciting titles for 2016.

  • The Love That Split the World

    The Love That Divide the World

    by Emily Henry

    In a debut that'south being described as a mix of "Friday Night Lights" and The Time Traveler'south Married woman, writer Henry crafts something advance readers are calling "beautiful" and "profound." Filled with folklore and mystery, this one is destined to be the yr's YA volume that adults and teens autumn for.
    (Bachelor: January 26, 2016)

  • Riders

    Riders

    by Veronica Rossi

    Don't fault author Rossi'south new series for a take on horses or horse lovers. It's zippo so benign. Instead, the saga follows Gideon Blake, whose life goal is to become a U.Due south. Army Ranger, but who wakes from an accident to larn he's at present one of the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. How's that for teen drama with an affect?
    (Bachelor: February 16, 2016)

  • The Girl From Everywhere

    The Girl From Everywhere

    by Heidi Heilig

    This first-in-a-trilogy tale takes the reader from present-day New York to 19th Century Hawaii to every place and time in between. Early on reviews attest that though the "fourth dimension-traveling pirate" premise sounds outlandish, the tale's middle and wit and strong main graphic symbol, 16-twelvemonth-old Nix, are enchantingly perfect.
    (Bachelor: February xvi, 2016)

  • A Study in Charlotte

    A Study in Charlotte

    by Brittany Cavallaro

    This debut recasts Sherlock Holmes in high school, with the dandy-great-grandchildren of, yes, Watson and Holmes. The tense pairing and witty writing — not to mention the oh-then-compelling Charlotte Holmes, who shares some of her antecedent Sherlock's volatile ways — launch this trilogy quite nicely. It'south elementary that teens are going to love it.
    (Available: March 1, 2016)

  • The Lifeboat Clique

    The Lifeboat Clique

    by Kathy Parks

    The premise is John Hughes-ian. A girl named Denver sneaks into a Malibu beach party attended past her enemies (merely likewise her tempting vanquish, who has finally asked her out) when a tsunami hits the California coast. She escapes decease just to be stuck in a lifeboat with the very people she's dying to avert. The darkly comic story is picking upward every superlative — weirdest, wittiest, you get the idea — and though the premise is surreal, word is the characters feel very real.
    (Bachelor: March 1, 2016)

  • The Great American Whatever

    The Great American Whatever

    by Tim Federle

    The prolific Federle (whose center class series Better Nate Than Always is an award-winner) makes his YA debut with this very funny and realistic novel. Book-loving teens will connect with creative Quinn Roberts, who used to make movies with his sis Annabeth until she was killed in a car crash. He's all but a shut-in (and in the closet) until his best friend drags him to a college party and into the circle of a very attractive guy.
    (Bachelor: March 29, 2016)

  • Don't Get Caught

    Don't Get Caught

    past Kurt Dinan

    If anyone can resist a volume billed "Ocean'due south Eleven" meets "The Breakfast Gild," well, nosotros don't desire to know them. This book stars the aggressively average Max Cobb — owner of a C-level GPA and lover of heist films. He's sick of his mediocre being, and then when he gets an invite to join something called "The Chaos Club," he jumps at the chance. When the invite proves a setup, Max and four others who were duped plot a great revenge.
    (Available: April five, 2016)

  • My Kind of Crazy

    My Kind of Crazy

    by Robin Reul

    Reul's contemporary debut is already pulling in early raves from fans of John Green and Jennifer Niven. The story follows Hank Kirby, who can't grab a interruption — he tries to ask a daughter to prom with sparklers on her lawn and almost burns her business firm down. (Take that, Lloyd Dobler.) The added not-bonus? He picks upwardly a fan in the course of aspiring pyromaniac Peyton Breedlove, launching a strange and challenging friendship.
    (Available: Apr 5, 2016)

  • Tell Me Three Things

    Tell Me Three Things

    by Julie Buxbaum

    Early reviews on this one are so glowing that the April 2016 release engagement seems Style as well far abroad. Recommended for fans of YA powerhouses Rainbow Rowell and East. Lockhart, Buxbaum'south debut mingles the comic and the tragic in a story most fish-out-of-water Jessie, navigating a complicated new life in Los Angeles with only a mysterious email entity named Somebody/Nobody to guide her.
    (Available: April v, 2016)

  • The Glittering Court

    The Glittering Court

    by Richelle Mead

    The showtime in a new series from Vampire Academy author Mead, this fantasy melds the Elizabethan and frontier worlds, and oozes with romance. The story follows Adelaide, a countess who escapes her arranged marriage simply must begin lessons at The Glittering Court, a business venture-slash-finishing school, to survive in her new earth.
    (Available: April 5, 2016)

  • Girl Against the Universe

    Girl Against the Universe

    past Paula Stokes

    Wherever Maguire goes, bad things happen. Roller coasters jump their tracks, houses take hold of fire. Just worst is, she carries around the guilt of surviving the car accident that claimed her brother, father, and uncle. And so, she avoids everything. Until she meets Jordy, a confident tennis star who is, yeah, very hard to avoid. This debut should be great for fans of Everything, Everything.
    (Available: May 17, 2016)

  • Learning to Swear in America

    by Katie Kennedy

    Catchy title, no? An asteroid is hurtling toward world and Yuri, a Russian teen-genius-turned-NASA-prodigy, is existence tapped to avert disaster. Too bad none of the old NASA codgers are listening, and Yuri feels lonelier than ever. Who wouldn't be? Then he meets Dovie, a girl who'southward oblivious to their impending doom, and might be the fundamental to showing him what's worth fighting for.
    (Available: July 5, 2016)

  • Enter Title Here

    Enter Title Here

    by Rahul Kanakia

    This book-within-a-book past debut author Kanakia is narrated past its "writer," overachiever Reshma Kapoor, who machinates her own book deal in order to appeal to the Stanford admissions department. The problem comes when Reshma realizes she needs to be more "story-worthy" than her written report addict ways allow for; sly hilarity ensues when she decides how far she'll go to make the read worthwhile.
    (Available: August 2, 2016)

  • Tales of the Peculiar

    Tales of the Peculiar

    by Bribe Riggs

    Surely, there's no YA author working who's ameliorate equipped to deliver on all things peculiar. With this book, Riggs gives his fans illustrated fairy tales from his bestselling Miss Peregrine series — peradventure the best style for hungry readers to hold tight for Tim Burton'south moving-picture show adaptation of Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children, which demands patience until it emerges in December 2016.
    (Available: Autumn 2016)

  • I'm Not Your Manic Pixie Dream Girl

    I'm Not Your Manic Pixie Dream Girl

    by Gretchen McNeil

    When math brainiac Beatrice Maria Estrella Giovannini's boyfriend throws her over for the loveable and quirky Toile, the paradigm of the manic pixie dream girl archetype, Bea decides to take activeness. Using The Formula, a mathematic path to social success, Bea sets out to become just like Toile in order to win him back. Just things don't go according to plan, and the casualties of The Formula may be too numerous to count. A funny and subversive tale, this is horror genius McNeil's first contemporary YA book.
    (Available: September 2016)

  • Strange the Dreamer

    Foreign the Dreamer

    by Laini Taylor

    The first book in a new series from Taylor, writer of the Daughter of Fume & Bone trilogy, Strange the Dreamer is under something of a tight lid, but her fans are all over the new tale. Here are a few choice nuggets that take been revealed: it'southward the story of "the backwash of a state of war between gods and men"; features "a mythic hero with claret on his hands, a young librarian with a atypical dream, and a girl every bit as perilous equally she is imperiled"; and we should expect "alchemy and blood candy, nightmares and godspawn, moths and monsters, friendship and treachery, beloved and carnage." Yes, please.
    (Available: September 27, 2016)

  • smythbeesic57.blogspot.com

    Source: https://www.readbrightly.com/the-most-exciting-ya-books-to-read-in-2016/

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