Marilyn Reynolds
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CSLA 2020, Booklist

2/10/2020

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This past weekend was the annual California School Library Association conference. It was a delight to be there among so many librarians who are crucial to the education of our youth. Reading for pleasure, finding reliable sources of information, developing critical thinking skills, all enabled in school libraries by teacher/librarians. Included below is a reading list developed in our "Healing Power of YA Books" workshop, according to subjects that teens may find to be helpful as they work their way through personal issues:

CSLA 2020 Book List/Healing Power of YA Fiction
Abuse
A Child Called It, also A Man Named Dave, Dave Pelzer
Baby Help, Marilyn Reynolds
Bullying
Yaqui Delgado Wants to Kick Your Ass, Meg Medina. Piddy Sanchez becomes the focus of bullying because she isn’t Latina enough to suit Yaqui Delgado.
Cultural/Racial Diversity
Does My Head Look Big in This?, Rand Abdel-Fatah. When sixteen-year-old Amal decides to wear the hijab full-time, her entire world changes.
A Very Large Expanse of Sea. Tahereh Mafi. Cultural, “own voice text” of Muslim experience
I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter. Erika Sanchez Stargazing, Jen Wang. Asian American friends. Graphic novel
Gun Violence/Gangs
Long Way Down, Jason Reynolds. Fifteen-year-old Will, gun in his waistband, rides the elevator down to street level, determined to get revenge for his brother’s murder. At each stop he’s confronted by the ghost of someone from his past, dead from gunfire.
Dear Martin. Nic Stone. MLK, gun violence
La Vida Loca, Luis Rodriguez. Published over 20 years ago, it’s still highly relevant to those in gangs, or affected by gang life.
The Hate You Give, Angie Thomas. As she straddles two worlds, her poor neighborhood and an upper/middle class prep school, Starr Carter witnesses the unwarranted killing of her longtime good friend, Khalil, a killing that results in violent demonstrations and puts her life in danger.

Health/Physical Challenges

The Fault in Our Stars, John Green. A love story with cancer in the foreground.

Wonder, RJ Palacio. Facially disfigured since birth, August Pullman struggles to find
friendship and a place for himself at school among “normal” kids. Realistic and also positive.
Positive: A Memoir, Paige Rawl with Ali Benjamin. A midwestern American girl who was born HIV-positive. When her HIV status is revealed in middle school, she becomes the focus of intense bullying.
Eddie’s Choice, Marilyn Reynolds. Born with a deformed hand, Eddie long ago learned to cope with humor and self-acceptance.
Immigration
The Secret Side of Empty. Maria E Andreu. Immigrant experiences, DREAM Act

I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter. Erika Sanchez. Immigrant experiences; grief, loss.
The Border, Steve Schafer. Americanized, undocumented teen works frantically to get a green card while struggling with the usual emotionally fraught issues of teen life.
LGBTQ
What If It’s Us. Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera. LGBT--male

Carry On. Rainbow Rowell. LGBT romance, male, also with magic

Boy Meets Boy. David Levithan. Gay romance--male

Two Boys Kissing. David Levithan. Based on true story, AIDS, gay romance--male

Love Rules, Marilyn Reynolds. High school senior comes out as lesbian.

No More Sad Goodbyes, Marilyn Reynolds. Autumn is rescued from foster care by lesbian teachers, who also help her place her baby in an open adoption.

Aristotle & Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, Benjamin Alire Saenz. LGBT romance
--male

October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard, Lesléa Newman. A tribute in 68 poems. Although Matthew was beaten to death 20 years ago for being perceived as gay, the issues are, unfortunately, still current.

Love Rules, Marilyn Reynolds. T
he story of a high school senior who reveals that she’s lesbian, as told from her straight best friend’s point of view.

Mental Illness
Small Spaces, Katherine Arden

Turtles All The Way Down, John Green. A main character dealing with OCD and a love
interest, wrapped up in a mystery.
All The Bright Places, Jennifer Niven. Two teens save each other from jumping off the edge.
Eddie’s Choice, Marilyn Reynolds. Pressures of school have Eddie’s girlfriend, Rosie, experiencing extreme anxiety.
Guts. Raina Telegemeier. Graphic novel, anxiety
Outsider
Born a Crime. Trevor Noah. Memoir
Hey, Kiddo, Jarrett J. Krosoczka. Addict mom, unknown dad, Jarrett tries to fit in, finds ways to express himself through art. Personal memoir, graphic novel
Mexican White Boy. Matt de la Peña Overcoming Adversity
It Calls You Back: An Odyssey through Love, Addiction, Revolutions, and Healing, Luis J. Rodriguez
If You Loved Me, Marilyn Reynolds. High school senior struggles to manage anger resulting from incidents of early childhood neglect--incidents of which she has no conscious memory. Also struggling with her decision to remain a virgin until marriage.
PTSD
The Impossible Knife of Memory, Laurie Halse Anderson. Hayley must deal with her father’s PTSD as she navigates the challenges of a new school, a love interest, and her desire to escape it all through suicide. 
How Dare the Sun Rise: Memoirs of a War Child, Sandra Uwiringiyimana with Abigail Pesta. A girl from the Democratic Republic of the Congo tells the tale of how she survived a massacre, immigrated to America, and overcame her trauma through art and activism.
Shut Up, Marilyn Reynolds. Mother returns, wounded, from Irag, with horrifying memories and nightmares. Son is suffering from PTSD due to sexual molestation.
Purpose
The Great Work of Your Life, Steven Cope. Finding your life purpose. Be Here Now, Ram Dass. Following a spiritual path

Racism
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angelou
To Kill a Mockingbird, Harper Lee
Dear Martin, Nic Stone. The social injustice of racial stereotypes.
Eddie’s Choice, Marilyn Reynolds. Mexican-American Eddie Barajas paints over racist graffiti and is targeted by white supremacists.
The Hate You Give, Angie Thomas. As she straddles two worlds, her poor neighborhood and an upper/middle class prep school, Starr Carter witnesses the unwarranted killing of her longtime good friend, Khalil, a killing that results in violent demonstrations and puts her life in danger.
On the Come Up, Angie Thomas. A budding rapper is caught in a controversy that labels her a menace. Also caught between upholding her own values or doing what she can to help her mother pay the rent.
Rape/Molestation
Speak, Laurie Halse Anderson Boy Toy. Barry Lyga
Shut Up, Marilyn Reynolds. Sexual molestation of nine-year-old boy and his brother’s determination to save him. 
Telling, Marilyn Reynolds. Sexual molestation of twelve-year-old girl by the father of children for whom she babysits.
But What About Me, Marilyn Reynolds. Erica, a high school senior, struggles to get her life back on track after a brutal rape.
Everything I Knew to be True, Rayna York Suicide/Related Issues
The Memory of Light, Francisco Stork. Vicky Cruz wakes up in a mental hospital after a failed suicide attempt. Although fiction, the story is based on Stork’s own battle with depression.
Teen Pregnancy/Parenting
This is All: The Pillow Book of Cordelia Kenn. Aidan Chambers. No More Saturday Nights, Norma Klein
Baby Help, Marilyn Reynolds

Detour for Emmy, Marilyn Reynolds
Too Soon for Jeff. Marilyn Reynolds. Teen pregnancy from a boy’s perspective

No More Sad Goodbyes, Marilyn Reynolds; Autumn is rescued from foster care by lesbian teachers, who also help her place her baby in an open adoption.
Resources:
Dear Author: Letters of Hope. Joan Kaywell, editor. Top young adult authors respond to kids’ toughest issues.
Joan F. Kaywell Books Save Lives Award, University of South Florida, given annually to the book that best represents an adolescent overcoming a situation in such a way as to provide significant insight and hope to a reader.
​
https://lib.usf.edu/special-collections/childrens-young-adult-literature/hipple/kaywell- award/
www.TeachingBooks.net


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Spanish Translation

1/3/2020

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I’m often asked if any of my books have been translated into Spanish and am always sad to say that they’re not. But now, through the generosity of a native Spanish speaking friend, “What If” from Beyond Dreams has been translated, is now being transcribed, and within the next few months will be available to e-book readers. This is something of an experiment, to see what response a Spanish translation receives, and to consider whether or not there’s a significant market for other Spanish translations in the Hamilton High Series. Stay tuned!
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Now What??

12/5/2019

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Now that Eddie’s Choice is launched, I’m playing around with ideas for the next book. I know it won’t be another Hamilton High story, not that there aren’t plenty of teen issues to explore in fiction: a homeless teen struggling to stay in school, maybe a transgender person who’s been kicked out of their house? But no, I’ll leave that to someone younger and better versed in the ways of social media than I am. I’ll jump ahead and write about life in the 80s. Not the 1980s. Life in the 80s age group. Should it be a sequel to collection of personal essays titled Over 70 and I Don’t Mean MPH? Or should it be a novel featuring a woman in her late eighties. If it’s Over 80 and I Don’t Mean MPH, I’ll have to stick to the truth—close to the truth, anyway. If it’s fiction I can give the old lady adventures and trials beyond anything I care to personally experience. As my born-in-the-late-1890s, quilt making Arkansas aunt would say when faced with a challenging decision, “I’m piecin’ on it."
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Book Launch!

11/6/2019

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Long Time No Blog

11/6/2019

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With the publication of Eddie's Choice, the 11th book in my "True-to-Life Series from Hamilton High, it seems time I should stop neglecting my website and get current. So, for starters, November 3, 2019, was Book Launch day, and I'm thrilled to finally have Eddie's story available for readers. Some of you will remember Eddie Barajas from my previous book, Shut Up. Told from his older brother Mario's point of view, it is the story of the love of two brothers, and of the older brother's struggle to rescue nine-year-old Eddie from the clutches of a sexual predator.  
    The reason several characters from early books show up again when they're older is that I sometimes wonder how they're getting along after having been through hard times. And for the past several years I found myself sometimes wondering about Eddie. How did his earlier molestation affect his later years? Had he managed to get past the severe anxiety that so often goes with such trauma?
     I also found myself wondering how the increased hatred and animosity exhibited in our present political climate might be affecting teens. The only way to discover how growing hatred and division affects young people, or to learn how Eddie's doing as an older teen, is to write the story. So I did. More about that soon.
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E-BOOKS!

9/13/2017

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Southern California School Visits

3/24/2017

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I'm pleased to be headed south on Highway 99 next week, and to be visiting schools in Fresno, Alhambra, San Gabriel, and Santa Barbara. I always love talking with teen readers about books, mine and others, and leaning what's currently popular. This time, in addition to book talks, I'll be gathering information and background to help me get started on Book #11 in the Hamilton High Series. After writing two books for adult readers, I'm very eager to get back to Hamilton High.
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Hamilton High 1000 Books Campaign

12/14/2016

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New Wind Publishing set an ambitious goal for the 2016-17 school year: to reach 1,000 readers by giving 100 sets of each of the ten titles to schools, youth programs, libraries and juvenile detention centers. Details are available at http://newwindpublishing.com/?page_id=607, but here's the progress to date.:
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Noepe Center for the Literary Arts

9/4/2016

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I'm so happy to be on a two week writing retreat at the Noepe Center in Edgartown on Martha's Vineyard. It is, I think/hope, the perfect place to finish a book that is in desperate need of being finished.
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MORE BOOKS FROM INCARCERATED YOUTH

4/22/2016

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I'm so happy to learn that 916 Ink, a Sacramento non-profit dedicated to increasing youth literacy through creative writing,  just won $33000 in grants to work with over 260 incarcerated youth and low-income kids in Sacramento in fall 2016! 
Over the past three years, I've  been fortunate to be involved with 916 Ink programs at the Sacramento County Youth Detention Facility. It's important and, sometimes, life-changing, for Incarcerated youth to become published authors. It's also important that their stories reach a range of readers. Below are books from detention facility writers. The $33,000 grant money means soon there will be many more such books, many more such published writers. 
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