Category: Young Adult Fiction Book Reviews

  • Trouble

    Trouble

    Trouble from UK author Non Pratt is a powerfully brilliant new YA novel. Refreshingly honest, with realistic dialogue and scenes Trouble is a novel that I thoroughly enjoyed reading this week. The narrative focuses on the lives of fifteen year old Hannah and Aaron – with their respective social groups becoming a key focus too. The narrative switches…

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  • Half Bad

    Half Bad

    There’s an overwhelming uniqueness to Sally Green’s writing that sets her apart. Her protagonist Nathan is one of the siblings in a family of white witches. With the exception of his eldest sister Jessica, there’s a closeness amongst his family and an overwhelming desire to protect Nathan. Nathan’s father wasn’t a white witch, but a…

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  • The Isobel Journal

    The Isobel Journal

    Totally amusing, quirky and down right enjoyable in every way, The Isobel Journal from Isobel Harrop is a fresh and honest take on the teenage years. The perfect addition to any teenager’s bookshelf for sure! Organised around three central themes; Me; Friends, Otters, College & Art, plus Love, Isobel keeps her readers amused with her…

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  • Noble Conflict

    Noble Conflict

    Malorie Blackman’s reputation as an author who ‘gets’ children’s literature is very well established. And for good reason. Her writing is not afraid to delve deep, very deep, into powerful issues. Strong themes that will get her loyal audience thinking and questioning. With issues of surveillance so prevalent in today’s society – who is listening…

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  • That Burning Summer

    That Burning Summer

    That Burning Summer is the 2nd release from exciting new novelist Lydia Syson. Her first was the award winning A World Between Us, gaining much positive critical attention. That Burning Summer, set in England during the summer of 1940, sees Syson successfully delving back into the genre of historical fiction. Living close to the English Channel, Peggy and…

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  • The Rig

    The Rig

    It’s here – the novel that attracted the attention of The Guardian’s Julia Eccleshare, author Elen Caldecott AND Hot Key Books publisher Emily Thomas. Joe Ducie won the 2012 Guardian Hot Key Books Young Writers Prize for The Rig. A page turner of a novel, The Rig features fifteen year old Will Drake who has been sent…

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  • Creepy and Maud

    Creepy and Maud

    Creepy & Maud is a YA novel which is both awkward and intriguing. Looking for a YA novel which is quirky? Delve in … Creepy & Maud is both amusing and heartfelt, strange yet familiar and unlike anything I’ve ever read before … and yes, that most definitely is a good thing! Creepy and Maud…

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  • The Fault In Our Stars

    The Fault In Our Stars

    The Fault In Our Stars from John Green, is a sensitive yet gutsy portrayal of Hazel, a sixteen year old with terminal cancer. Yep, he’s tackled, head on, this most awful illness through the character of Hazel, and her developing friendship with Augustus. Where The Fault In Our Stars wins through is via its multi…

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  • Sea Hearts

    Sea Hearts

    Sea Hearts by Margo Lanagan is a hauntingly beautiful novel. Totally unique with a compelling storyline, it’s an absorbing piece of speculative fiction. Misskaella is the youngest in her family. Plagued by the belief that she is unfavourably different, ‘all the world seemed intent on pointing out what I lacked.’ Misskaella suffers a lonely childhood, in…

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  • Too Flash

    Too Flash

    Too Flash is an engrossing chapter book for older readers. Penned by Melissa Lucashenko, an Australian writer of mixed European and Murri heritage she articulates the trials and tribulations of Zo, a fifteen year old who is forced to move across country when her career focused mum is relocated by her employer. Too Flash is a…

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  • Black Spring

    Black Spring

    Combine the classic Wuthering Heights – full of lust, betrayal, longing and tragedy – with the talented mind of fantasy writer Alison Croggon, and what emerges is a rich and complex novel taking familiar themes to a whole new level. Black Spring is mesmerising. Hammel has been advised by his physician to ‘take a rest cure.’…

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  • A Straight Line To My Heart

    A Straight Line To My Heart

    “There’s nothing quite as good as folding up into a book and shutting the world outside. If I pick up the right one I can be beautiful, or fall in love, or live happily ever after. Maybe even all three.” One of the best opening lines It literally pulls you in to the folds of…

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  • Being Here

    Being Here

    “Reading is partly the weight of the book in your hand, the feel of a page as you turn it. It is not an experience you can approximate.” When I start by telling you that Being Here begins with a teenage girl interviewing an elderly lady as part of school project – do not judge. A…

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  • Cinnamon Rain

    Cinnamon Rain

    This stunning début novel from Australian author Emma Cameron is perfect for the YA audience. Cinnamon Rain didn’t take me long to read as I couldn’t put it down! Intriguing, heartfelt and eloquently written, I loved it. Beautifully told in verse which achieves the effect of minimalism, of making each line, each word, count. This sits so well…

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  • Maybe Tomorrow

    Maybe Tomorrow

      Reading Maybe Tomorrow feels like Boori is talking to you – as a reader you gain a real sense of who he is and what he thinks – and this feels like a real privilege. Maybe Tomorrow is about Boori’s life, his experiences, his thoughts and his feelings – it is a truly inspiring read.…

    Read more: Maybe Tomorrow

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My Book Corner consists of a team of published authors, budding authors, TV script writers, teachers, journalists and all-round book enthusiasts offering you a carefully curated list of books that we love, and more often than not, absolutely adore.

Books to make you laugh, cry, cringe and shriek. Books that fire the imagination and will ultimately shape the childhood of generations of children to come.

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