Road Trip to Love: A Review of Amelia, If Only 

Amelia, If Only 
Written by Becky Albertalli 
Published by HarperCollins Publishers/Harper 
Ages 14-18 
Available June 10, 2025 

Amelia can’t believe her luck when she finds out that her favorite YouTuber, Walter Holland, is hosting a meet and greet just a few hours away from her hometown. Eager to spend one last weekend with her best friends, Zora, Natalie, and Mark, before graduation, Amelia plans a road trip to meet Walter and distract Natalie from her toxic ex-girlfriend, who dumped her at prom. When they get to the meet and greet and become friends with Walter, Amelia is beyond excited. Her parasocial crush on Walter often leaves butterflies in her stomach, but after developing a genuine friendship with him, Amelia begins to wonder if she’s misjudging her feelings for Walter…and for Natalie.    

Becky Albertalli combines her hallmark wit and humor with tender emotion to create a fast-paced story with an endearing cast of characters. Amelia’s adventurous spirit mixes well with her more grounded friends, resulting in a fun road trip comedy. Albertalli deepens the story by thoughtfully discussing the journey of self-discovery when it comes to queer identity by showing different coming out stories; for example, Amelia questioned her sexuality for years before coming out, whereas Zora and Natalie knew early on in life that they were lesbians. This nuanced conversation brings realistic and well-developed queer representation to Amelia’s story. Albertalli also uses Walter’s character and his own queer identity to introduce young readers to the concept of parasocial relationships and the role that queer celebrities play as a space of comfort and representation online. By incorporating Internet posts from Walter and his fans, she develops his character enough to allow readers to instantly connect with him when he becomes friends with Amelia. At once funny and heartwarming, Amelia, If Only will provide valuable queer representation to teen collections across public and classroom libraries. 

Butler Bookshelf

Even though it’s only April, we here at the Butler Center have received countless fantastic books for teens! From fantasy to romance, we want to share some great new teen fiction, like Love on Paper by Danielle Parker. When Macy Descanso is accepted to attend Penovation, a high-profile writing workshop program, she knows she has some big shoes to fill from her writer parents. However, when the workshop’s theme is romance and Macy’s critique partner is the (irresistably cute) son of her parents’ writing rivals, Caleb, she feels the pressure rachet up. Soon, when a classmate reveals a mystery left behind by a romantic literary giant, she knows it will be the perfect thing to distract her from her imposter syndrome. Plus, would it really be so bad to bond with Caleb, who is growing more charming by the second, over solving this mystery? Parker presents a fun summer romance, building Macy and Caleb’s relationship incrementally until they finally admit their feelings for each other. The mystery element adds an entertaining touch, propelling the story forward as the characters explore Berkeley and the surrounding area to find the prolific writer Betty Quinn’s last unfinished manuscript. Parker doesn’t shy away from heavier topics, discussing grief, complicated parental relationships, and imposter syndrome. Using thoughtful and humorous prose, Parker explores what it means to make a name for yourself, even when escaping your parents’ shadow feels impossible. Joyful, funny, and intriguing, Love on Paper is a wonderful young adult rom-com to add to any personal or public library collection!

Check out more teen fiction below!

A Bird in the Air Means We Can Still Breathe
Written by Mahogany L. Browne
Published by Crowne Books for Young Readers
Available now!

Camila Nunez’s Year of Disasters
Written by Miriam Zoila Perez
Published by Page Street Publishing
Available now!

Love on Paper
Written by Danielle Parker
Published by Joy Revolution
Available now!

On the Wings of la Noche
Written by Vanessa L. Torres
Published by Alfred A. Knopf
Available now!

True Life in Uncanny Valley
Written by Deb Caletti
Published by Labyrinth Road
Available now!

#shopindie: It’s (Almost) Independent Bookstore Day

From most any perspective, a community bookstore is an asset without compare. Need a personalized recommendation? Ask a professional bookseller! A local space to hang out and read? A venue to meet other bookish folks? Looking for a book signing/book club/story time? A business committed to hyper local perspectives? A way to keep your hard-earned money in your community? Indies do all that and more!

Saturday, April 26th is Independent Bookstore Day. Why not show your appreciation by supporting your local (I’ll list some of my favorites below)? If you’re to busy to stop in, try checking out Bookshop.org where you can still buy online, but designate a local book shop to receive the profit from your purchase or let your money go to a general profit pool distributed to participating indies nationwide. You get to pick your next great read from the comfort of your living room (or backyard or bedroom, no judgement!), and a local store still benefits–it’s a WIN/WIN situation!

If you are out and about in the Chicago area, why not check out one of these wonderful shops?

Anderson’s Bookshop (Naperville and Downers Grove)
Dandelion Bookshop (Oak Park)
Pilsen Community Books (Chicago/Pilsen)
Passages Wine and Books (Chicago/West Town)
Swallow Stories Bookshop (Lisle)
¡Viva! Los Libros (Chicago/Pilsen located in Plisen Arts and Community House or at Popups around the city)

It just so happens that this year, the online book seller that everyone loves to hate has scheduled their yearly book sale this weekend too (coincidence? probably not!), giving you the perfect opportunity to vote with your dollars for the kind of community you value. Hopefully that’s one with an indie bookstore–happy shopping!

Butler Bookshelf

For this week’s Butler Bookshelf, we’re looking at picture books about family. Our feature pick is Hilwa’s Gifts by Safa Suleiman, illustrated by Anait Semirdzhyan. When Ali visits his family in Palestine, he’s excited to visit Hilwa, his favorite tree in their olive grove, but is concerned to see his family hitting the olive trees with sticks. His grandfather assures him they would never hurt the trees, which provide precious gifts. Together, they harvest the olives from Hilwa’s branches and discover the many gifts the fruits yield. A wonderful celebration of tradition and family, this is a book well-suited to discussing family history and traditions.

Check out more books about family below!

At Night, They Danced
Victoria Scott-Miller
Illustrated by Toni D. Chambers
Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing/Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
Available now!

Family: A Peek-Through Picture Book
Patricia Hegarty
Illustrated by Britta Teckentrup
Random House Children’s Books/Doubleday
Available now!

Faruq and the Wiri Wiri: A Celebration of Family and Food
Sophia Payne
Illustrated by Sandhya Prabhat
Candlewick Press/Templar Books
Available now!

Hilwa’s Gifts
Safa Suleiman
Illustrated by Anait Semirdzhyan
Candlewick Press
Available now!

Nearly Exactly Almost Like Me
Jennifer Bradbury
Illustrated by Pearl Auyeung
Candlewick Press/Atheneum Books for Young Readers
Available now!

Computerized Companionship: A Review of Zed Moonstein Makes a Friend

Zed Moonstein Makes a Friend
Lance Rubin
HarperCollins Publishers/Clarion Books
Ages 8-12
Available August 26. 2025

Zed Moonstein isn’t very good at making friends. He and his best friend Rishti used to be attached at the hip, but now that the two of them are in sixth grade they don’t have a single class together. While Rishti is busy making new friends and going viral online, Zed is stuck feeling neglected and alone. It looks like he’s found the perfect solution in the top-secret project his mom has been busy developing at work — an app which promises to create the perfect AI friend, someone who knows you better than anyone else and is always there for you. When he manages to download the app for himself, it seems like Zed’s friendship troubles are over. But soon, his digital friend starts to act strangely. Before he knows it, Zed’s new best friend has become his worst enemy. How can he hide from someone who lives inside his phone?

In today’s world, where AI chatbots are at our fingertips to write our emails, do our schoolwork, and maybe even be our friends, Zed’s life in tech-filled MonoTown doesn’t seem so far fetched. Rubin grapples with the increasingly dominance of technology in daily life — the way it effects jobs, schooling, and social lives. As Zed faces down his digital friend-turned-foe, he begins to realize just how much of his life is dependent on the tech produced by MonoLyth, the company which owns his town, school, and new companion app. His universal middle school troubles like friendship and fitting in are augmented by 21st-century struggles with tech, particularly the ways it both encourages and thwarts human connection. These struggles (both mundane and technological) are sure to be recognizable to young readers.

Zed Moonstein Makes a Friend is a tech thriller with something for everyone — Zed’s high-tech life will be appealing to readers especially interested in computers or artificial intelligence, while his friendship troubles serve as a story that young readers can relate to themselves and their lives.

Butler Bookshelf

Some days you just can’t catch a break. This week, the Butler Bookshelf is full of misfortune, misadventure, and plain old mistakes. From body swaps to mixed-up stories to crash landing houses, these middle grade novels are all about the times where everything seems to be going wrong. Our feature pick is The Magician Next Door by Rachel Chivers Khoo, illustrated by Alice McKinley. 10-year-old Callie isn’t happy about moving to Northern Ireland. All of her friends, and all of her memories of her late mom, are back in London, the only home she’s ever known. But when a house crashes upside down in her yard, she’s forced to ally with her new next door neighbor Sam to save the Wanderdust which powers the magical house and keeps its eccentric inhabitant alive. Along the way, she discovers that home is more than a place, it’s people, too. Perfect for adventurous fantasy lovers, The Magician Next Door is sure to excite young readers while allowing them to explore what “home” really means.

Check out more goes-wrong fiction below!

Montgomery Bonbon: Murder at the Museum
Alasdair Beckett-King
Illustrated by Claire Powell
Candlewick Press
Available now!

The Magician Next Door
Rachel Chivers Khoo
Illustrated by Alice McKinley
Candlewick Press
Available April 22nd, 2025

Skylar and the K-Pop Principal
Luan Goldie
Candlewick Press/Walker Books US
Available now!

Snow White and the Dragon (or, Sleeping Beauty and the Seven Dwarfs)
Kim Bussing
Random House Children’s Books
Available now!

The Unfortunate Wishes of Nelly Young
Beth Garrod
Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing/Simon & Schuster Books For Young Readers
Available now!

How To Release Your Grumbles: A Review of Grumble Boats 

Grumble Boats 
Written by Susannah McFarlane 
Illustrated by Tamsin Ainslie 
Published by Charlesbridge 
Ages 3-6 
Available April 15, 2025 

Who helps you release your grumpy feelings? Emma doesn’t know how to release her grumbles when her parents don’t let her go to the pirate party with her brother. After Emma is dropped off at her grandma’s house, Grandma sees how upset Emma is and quickly comes up with a solution. Together, they walk to the beach, draw their grumbly and grumpy feelings, and watch them sail away after folding them into paper boats. After they say goodbye to their grumbles, Emma feels much better and is ready for a fun day of playing and eating grilled cheese with Grandma. 

Susannah McFarlane presents readers with a simple yet well-written story about a young girl coping with her grumpy feelings. With straightforward text, she shows why Emma is upset and the effort that Grandma puts into cheering her up. Through Grandma’s character, McFarlane writes about an easy way to release your feelings: by drawing them out and releasing them to sea. She thoughtfully shows Grandma helping Emma move on from her grumpiness without invalidating her feelings by reassuring her that she would have been an excellent pirate as they watch their grumbles float away. There are also instructions at the end that show readers how to make their own grumble boats so they can participate in this practice in mindfulness. Ainslie’s watercolor and pencil illustrations pair well with the text to bring Emma’s world to life, illustrating Emma’s grumpy facial expressions especially well. The illustrations are detailed, and Ainslie utilizes a muted full-color palette, which has the same calming effect that Grandma’s grumble boats have on Emma’s feelings. Grumble Boats is a lovely addition to any classroom library or program to give young readers a chance to learn about healthy emotional regulation. 

Butler Bookshelf

Graphic novels are a great way to escape into a different world and go on an adventure. You can go on an adventure in outer space, revisit a classic Dr. Seuss story, or explore a cozy new world with flying horses like in this week’s feature, A Song for You & I by K. O’Neill. In this fantasy graphic novel, O’Neill explores themes of self-discovery and bravery. Rose is a ranger-in-training who is disappointed by their final assignment before the graduation-like Name Carving ceremony that will allow them to be a ranger to protect all people. They are tasked with protecting Lamb’s Ear Meadow, an idyllic, sleepy region that is nothing like the danger and excitement they were hoping for. Soon, they develop a friendship with the shepherd Leone, who helps Rose to discover who they really are and be brave enough to show it to the world. O’Neill’s writing, though sparse, is touching and offers readers a connection to the characters, but their illustrations are the star of the show. The digital sketch-style drawings, made in Procreate, are crafted with a pleasing, full-color palette that beautifully builds the world and expertly shows the emotions that Rose and Leone feel over the course of the story. The vibrancy allows readers to smell the sea-salty air, hear Leone’s fiddle playing, and see the inner turmoil Rose is going through, as well as the triumph when they comes out as Rowan in the Name Carving ceremony. A sweet, delightful book for readers of all ages, A Song for You & I is a wonderful addition to a library looking for stories with themes of identity and acceptance. 

Check out more graphic novel titles below! 

A Copycat Conundrum (The Misfits 2) 
Written by Lisa Yee 
Illustrated by Dan Santat
Published by Random House Children’s Books
Available now!

Great Space Iguana (Hilo 11) 
Written and illustrated by Judd Winick 
Published by RH Graphic
Available now!

Green Eggs and Ham Take a Hike 
Written and illustrated by James Kochalka
Published by RH Graphic
Available now!  

Steve L. McEvil and the Twisted Sister (Steve L. McEvil 3) 
Written and illustrated by Lucas Turnbloom 
Colors by Marc La Pierre and Lucas Turnbloom 
Published by Crown Books for Young Readers 
Available now! 

A Song for You & I 
Written and illustrated by K. O’Neill 
Published by RH Graphic 
Available now! 

Butler Bookshelf

For this week’s Butler Bookshelf, we’re sharing books all about animals! From the timeless-ness of super-agers like tortoises to the unique qualities of different animal poop, these books hold interesting information for animal lovers of all ages. In this week’s feature, In the Desert, readers travel to the Sahara Desert through author David Elliott’s playful poems and Gordy Wright’s rich illustrations. Elliott uses creative poetry to place readers in the viewpoint of different animals that live in the Sahara Desert, like the Saharan cheetah, the Anubis baboon, and the dung beetle. The short poems entertain kids as they learn about what Saharan animals eat and how they spend their time through natural rhythm and fun rhymes. At the end, Elliot includes a few sentences that further explain the unique characteristics of these animals. Wright’s paintings beautifully illustrate the environment in the Sahara Desert with a full-color palette. Wright utilizes a realistic art style that gives young readers an accurate portrayal of how these animals look. Paired together, Elliott’s poems and Wright’s paintings are sure to fascinate and educate readers of all ages.

Check out more books about animals below!

In the Desert
Written by David Elliot
Illustrated by Gordy Wright
Published by Candlewick Press
Available now!

Innovative Octopuses, Half-Brained Birds, and More Animals With Magnificent Minds
Written by Christina Couch
Illustrated by Daniel Duncan
Published by MIT Kids Press
Available now!

Meet the Mini-Mammals: A Night at the National History Museum
Written by Melissa Stewart
Illustrated by Brian Lies
Published by Beach Lane Books
Available now!

Small World: Meet 30 of Earth’s Tiniest Creatures
Written by Nick Crumpton
Illustrated by Rosie Dore
Published by Wide Eyed Editions
Available now!

Whose Poop Is That? (Board Book Edition)
Written by Darrin Lunde
Illustrated by Kelsey Oseid
Published by Charlesbridge
Available now!

Native Joy: A Review of Legendary Frybread Drive-In: Intertribal Stories

Legendary Frybread Drive-In: Intertribal Stories
Edited by Cynthia Leitich Smith
HarperCollins Children’s Books/Heartdrum
Ages 13+
Available August 26. 2025

Sandy June’s Legendary Frybread Drive-In is everywhere and nowhere all at once. It appears to anyone who needs it, regardless of where they are, bringing together Indigenous people from a variety of places and backgrounds. Each piece of this anthology takes place against the backdrop of Sandy June’s, as teenagers from everywhere from Alaska to Hawai’i visit and grow. The short stories and poetry in the collection brush up against each other, creating a picture of the people and places which make up Sandy June’s.

Published by Heartdrum, a Native-focused imprint of HarperCollins Children’s Books for which Leitich Smith serves as author-curator, and in partnership with We Need Diverse Books, Native joy and the centering of Indigenous voices is at the heart of Legendary Frybread Drive-In. The teenage characters come from a wide variety of tribal backgrounds, with which they have varied and complex relationships. As they deal with hallmark challenges of young adulthood such as grief, love, jealousy, friendship, and family, they make connections with, beyond, and between Indigenous cultures.

The relatable struggles of the characters in this anthology will appeal to any young reader who wishes to read about teens facing challenges similar to their own. For Indigenous readers, it will provide a mirror of their own experiences, while for nonindigenous readers, it provides a window to others’. Cynthia Leitich Smith, in her end note, encourages readers who are unfamiliar with Indigenous literature to use this book as a jumping-off point to explore more. With contributors both established and new, it provides a variety of authors for curious readers to look into, should they want to read further.