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CHILDREN S: Books for teens 11+: Books: Bloomsbury Publishing (US)

CHILDREN S: Books for teens 11+: Books: Bloomsbury Publishing (US)
bloomsbury.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bloomsbury.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

CHILDREN S: Young Adult: Books: Bloomsbury Publishing (US)

CHILDREN S: Young Adult: Books: Bloomsbury Publishing (US)
bloomsbury.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from bloomsbury.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Guide to the 2021 Virtual Gaithersburg Book Festival | Montgomery Community Media

Guide to the 2021 Virtual Gaithersburg Book Festival Another year, another Gaithersburg Book Festival (GBF). But for the second year in a row, the festival will operate virtually. Gaithersburg Mayor Jud Ashman, the founder of the popular event, spoke to MyMCM about what to expect at this year’s Virtual Gaithersburg Book Festival: The Virtual Gaithersburg Book Festival begins Saturday, May 1 and there will be activities for four consecutive weeks. All author discussions (listed below) will premiere on the GBF’s YouTube page. Most programs are prerecorded, but authors will participate in the YouTube Premiere chat discussions. The first two weeks of programming will be geared toward adults and the final two weeks of programming are aimed at children and young adults.

At Wi16, a Romance Panel with Love for YA

At Wi16, a Romance Panel with Love for YA By Alex Green | Feb 23, 2021 The American Booksellers Association’s 16th Winter Institute was a streamlined affair this year, with booksellers logging in digitally to the three-day gathering. But the conference’s single track of sessions opened with momentum a keynote by former President Barack Obama and that spirit carried throughout in events rich with energy, from presenters and attendees alike. “I knew that we could easily talk for three hours and the fact that we only have 40 minutes, it’s just not fair,” Scholastic v-p and editorial director David Levithan joked while moderating the LGBTQ+ romance panel. Like many of the sessions, the free-roving conversation took its own shape, with authors emphasizing young adult romance as a particularly well-suited genre for stories with expansive LGBTQ+ representation.

Year End Review by Colleen Mondor

While reading for Locus this year, I kept an unof­ficial list of notes about things I wanted to mention in my end-of-the-year es­say. The biggest word on the list is “WITCHES,” which cropped up in more than one memorable title to cross my desk. From the field hockey team that takes a solemn oath within an Emilio Este­vez notebook in Quan Bar­ry’s We Ride Upon Sticks to the mill workers who cast a life-saving spell for union solidarity in C.S. Malerich’s Factory Witches of Lowell, witches factored largely in 2020 fantasy fiction. The wide variety of class, ethnicity, and circumstance that showed up in all of these titles was dazzling, and I enjoyed each and every one immensely.

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