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Genres

Black Led YA Horror

January 1, 2024      1 Comment

Read more: Black Led YA Horror

Last summer I saw this tweet:

The row of books with brown-skinned 3C girls (mainly in distress) stood out to me. I’m a big scaredy cat who can’t do horror films but I love a good horror book and decided to leap in and explore what this microtrend had to offer.

I think the rise of Black YA horror overall has to do with the legacy of Jordan Peele’s Get Out. It’s sparked a  renewed interest in playing around with the horror tropes Black characters fall into–mainly that they die first. 

There’s No Way I’d Die First by Lisa Springer

 The prologue of this book states what I think is behind the majority of YA black horror:

“I don’t want to feature movies that focus on racial terror for entertainment, but movies where Black experiences are at the forefront and where we explore the things that scare us, ya know? And where we even make it out alive!” — There’s No Way I’d Die First by Lisa Springer

This debut novel is a genre-savvy send-up to the 90s slasher movies. Our protagonist is 17-year-old film enthusiast Noelle Layne, who runs a Black horror movie club. 

For Halloween, Noelle invites 12 of her prep school’s top influencers (none of whom are Black…) to a Halloween Party that will put Noelle on the map. But when the creepy clown she hired goes off script, the teens find themselves running around her family’s isolated mansion for their lives. 

I  thought this book was, as the kids says, mid. It’s your basic horror where you watch people run around and get killed in different ways. 

My biggest gripe with this book was the clunky virtue signaling that feels incongruous to the motivation of the killer. It also did not feel tailored to a book about people born in 2006.  It’s referenced offhand that Noelle has a pink pussyhat she wore to an End To Inequality march and I just don’t think pink pussyhats mean anything to a 17-year-old.  It’s a very 2016 white woman millennial thing.

And like I’m not going to nitpick pop culture references too much because they go away as the book progresses but I do think there is a craft to YA pop culture references. The media cycle just moves too fast for the meaning of a  reference to stay. This book came out in 2023 but the phrase  ‘Megan Fox-and-MGK outfit synchronization’ either hits differently now that they are broken up (They got back together since I originally read this book, this what I mean.)….or not at all if you have no idea they are a couple.

Narrator Nekia Renee Martin, who appears to have only done Middle Grade before, is an excellent narrator. 

The Black Queen by Juamata Emill

I didn’t investigate these books too much and turns out this is not a horror book, it’s a mystery thriller. I was like 20% in before I realized.

The marketing makes it seem like this is about Duchess Simmons, a black girl who solving the murder of her best friend– who was killed and dumped in the slave cemetery after becoming their town’s first Black homecoming queen.

But actually, this book is about Tinsley, the white girl who would have been homecoming queen if not for the school’s efforts to be more inclusive. She is accused of the murder because a video of her saying she would do exactly what happens goes viral and she finds herself on a journey of discovery as she searches for the truth.

The writing was good but the decisions about voice had me like 😒

The book switches between Tinsley and Duchess but really it’s Tinsley’s book. She has significantly more chapters and character development while Duchess, whose father is on the case as the town’s only black cop, is basically there to give polemics about race in America. It was so jarring to me that she was not allowed to be a full character and Tinsley is written with so much empathy.

I’ll also note that Duchess has a Black girlfriend, I only mention it because I’ve noticed most YA books have multicultural or interracial lesbian couples.

I truly believe Emill wrote this for the check because I went searching and he has pitched multiple books in Twitter pitch contests that were not this. I think there is some strong writing here and I’ll be curious what he writes next. 

Angel Pean and Erin Spencer are great on the audiobook. I was a little worried for Spencer because she has to do A LOT of different black voices as Tinsley starts showing up in Black spaces but she pulled it off and  I feel like only one came off as a little too stereotypical.

Also, considering the actual content of this book ion like the way it’s covered. A sexually abused dead Black girl on the cover of a book about a wealthy white girl? I see they changed it for the paperback.

*spoiler*…savvy readers will be able to figure out the reveals of this book fairly early. The cover is a HUGE hint.

This is the pettiest nitpick I’ve ever had but Tinsley’s sister and niece are named Rachel and Lindsay and she references them a lot in that order and it kept sending me because Rachel Lindsay is the name of the first Black lead on ABC’s Bachelorette.

You’re Not Supposed to Die Tonight by Kalynn Bayron

I’ve been sleeping on Bayron because this was my favorite out of all the books I read. I don’t want to get into too many details but this book is a great YA  horror novel that is not as genre-savvy as it appears.

Teenaged horror movie fanatic Charity gets to spend all summer playing the final girl for the guests of the Camp Mirror Lake horror night simulation. But when odd occurrences start happening, her final girl status is put to the test.

This was a  masterful, bone-chilling read with a strong sense of place and supernatural elements that leave you questioning everything. It seems to be heavily inspired by the Bohemian Grove conspiracy theories but I can’t find conclusive proof.

I think  Bayron accomplished alot of what Springer lays out in the prologue of There’s No Way I’d Die First. Charity is Black lesbian in a relationship with another Black girl (which, again…is kinda rare in popular books) and while it’s a part of her and features heavily it’s not the whole book.

This appears to be the first book narrated by Hewot Tedla, and while her narration is good she makes a lot of mouth sounds that might bother some readers. 

Kat’s Nonfiction Era: Pop Culture, Identity and Lies

December 31, 2023      Leave a Comment

Late summer/early fall always seems to be my nonfiction season and last fall I was inhaling them. I think what interests me about nonfiction is the opportunity to see life through other people’s perspectives and understand lived experiences I haven’t had. 

Wannabe: Reckonings with the Pop Culture that Shaped My by Aisha Harris

The more I think about this book the more I like it. I know Harris best as the co-host* of NPR’s Pop Culture Happy Hour Podcast. In this essay collection with a dash of memoir, Harris offers a succinct snapshot of millennial popular culture through her lens as a staunchly child-free millennial black girl from the suburbs. I was kind of afraid this book would dip into “not like the other Black girls”** but Harris deftly avoids this and makes a point to deconstruct this idea in the opening essay, Isn’t She Lovely, where she discusses how early 90s media portrayal of women with ‘black names’ messed with her identity.

If you are someone who pays attention to modern-day pop culture criticism you likely won’t find anything revelatory in here but I enjoyed hearing Harris’ perspective. Essays  I enjoyed included ‘Parents Just Don’t Understand’ about themes of generational trauma in media like Turning Red and Russian Doll and Santa Claus is a Black Man about how her satirical essay about turning Santa into a penguin made Megyn Kelly get up on TV and say Jesus was white. I especially related to her mention of growing up in a house where only black dolls were allowed–cause my parents were just like that, lol. I even had the book Amazing Grace about a black girl who wants to be Peter Pan in her school play.

Harris, a former theatre kid with a  musical theater degree from Northwestern University, is a great narrator and I can’t recommend this enough on audio.

*I will forever side-eye NPR for only bringing in a Black host after the Summer of 2020, but  I have appreciated how they’ve made an effort to bring in new diverse voices. It’s made the show much better IMO.

**I wrote this note before I realized that Harris’ sister wrote The Other Black Girl. Which I think is a terrible book about suburban Black girls.

Pageboy: A Memoir by Elliot Page

In this memoir, Page examines his journey from a happy Canadian kid with an enormous imagination to an overnight Hollywood star at the age of 20 . It’s a melancholy story filled with Page’s regrets, the harm done to him and the harm he may have done to others. 

There are some positive and fun stories in here too. I was happy to hear that Page enjoyed his work on Juno and mentioned that he still watched it. I remember when that movie came out –it was the second film I’d ever seen that was directed and written by a woman (the other was Something New). I was also tickled when he mentioned how he spent most of X-Men Days of Future Past standing at Hugh Jackman’s head because lol, true. His character was robbed by that series.

It’s well well-written memoir, Page is a reader and lifelong learner. His voice and unique perspective comes through in the writing. The book is told out of order, which I found confusing but I saw in an interview Page did it intentionally to mimic how memories come to him.

Page’s journey feels very much still in progress. The book kind of ends with him alone in a cabin in the woods figuring out what is next. I could definitely see another book coming.  

To Tell The Bigger Lie by Sarah Viren

I went into this book knowing absolutely nothing.  I was browsing through Libby and the cover caught my eye. I immediately wanted to know what ‘a memoir in two stories’ meant. Also, the snake suggested there would be some betrayal and I’m obsessed with stories of people telling extravagant lies. 

Viren’s memoir begins with her experience in a high school magnet program where her highly revered philosophy teacher converts to Catholicism and begins to show signs of being a Holocaust denier. The second part of her memoir takes place 20 years later, when her wife is accused of sexual harassment just as Viren is offered a faculty job at a university.

Now, Viren is an academic from a family of academics and a graduate of Iowa’s Writers Workshop. It’s clear she’s very interested in how her highly educated, PHD- holding, liberal-leaning teacher could suddenly become a holocaust denier…. but I found that part meh. 

But the story of the false sexual harassment claims against her wife? Oh, I was seated for that part.  I completely missed the story when it happened , so I was transfixed as Viren and her wife try to figure out who was making the false accusations and why. It was like reading a thriller.

I love some good creative nonfiction but there is a little bit of weird navel-gazey stuff that didn’t work for me. At one point Viren created elaborate scenes of made-up conversations between herself, the people in her memoirs and ancient Greek philosophers. She also has a whole bit about a talking tortoise. Maybe the MFA types like that but it was cringey and felt like filler to me.

Natalie Naudus was great on the audiobook, I always like it when a professional narrator or actor reads an audiobook.

Girl on Trial by Kathleen Fine

December 30, 2023      Leave a Comment

Trigger Warning : Sexual assault

I binged the first season of Freeform’s Cruel Summer because of its nostalgia, fast-pace, and intense storytelling that moves back and forth through time. Girl On Trial has a lot of the same elements. In the late 2010s, teenaged Emily is accused of causing the death of a young family. The story flashes between the trial and events from earlier that Fall when Emily befriends Hannah, a troubled girl with a wild streak.

Emily lives in a small Maryland town where everyone is trying their best to get by. The events that unfold involve class, peer pressure and the need to belong. Some painful truths are revealed towards the end that are shocking and hard to read about. It sort of caught me off guard. Overall, I thought it was a solid blend of contemporary YA and crime fiction.

This book was published by the small press CamCat Books. I’m curious to read more of their work.

Give Me a Sign by Anna Sortino

December 30, 2023      1 Comment

This is a YA book that feels like a YA Book.

Lilah is hard of hearing and often feels stuck between the hearing and Deaf world. The one place she always feels at home is Camp Gray Wolf, a summer camp for the Deaf and blind community. This year she is returning as a camp counselor. Lilah quickly finds her place among the counselor’s warm (and sometimes contentious) tight-knit community and prepares for a summer of new friendships, self-discovery, and her first big romance.

This is a perfect summer read. If I had read this as a teen I would have been obsessed with the idea of going to camp. This book felt like it was squarely aimed at teenagers. The characters thrive in the insular world of camp where older adults and parents play a very small. I hope Sortino dives back into this world one day.

I’m a little annoyed that the cover of the book has a couple on it because this book is about SO MUCH MORE than the romance and I don’t think the cover reflects that. It seems like all publishers want to push is romance. Feels like a disservice.

A Song of Salvation by Alechia Dow

December 28, 2023      Leave a Comment

Young Adult/ Sci Fi Fantasy | 7/11/2023 | Inkyard Press

The story is fun, quippy, action-packed journey across the stars. It’s an easy rec for fans of Cinder. It also reminded me of Star Wars but with more emphasis on lore and mythology.

This book is the big finale in a series of books about overthrowing the Ilori, a ruthless alien empire but can 100% be read as a standalone. That said I get the feeling you get way more emotional satisfaction if you’ve read the entire series.

Dow’s worldbuilding is expansive as we follow Zaira, a reincarnated god, as she reluctantly begins her journey to destroy the Ilorian empire. She is soon joined by Wesley Daniels, an expert pilot running from his destiny. Rounding out the group is Rubin Rima, a famous podcaster whom Wesley is charged with bringing to Earth for the final battle. The trio makes a few adventurous pit stops along the way but are determined to make it to Earth.


This book has what some call the ‘Champagne Problem’ . This book takes place in a universe where Earth has just been discovered, yet Rubin Rema is a famous Podcaster. Podcast is a portmanteau of iPod and broadcast. You can’t have a podcast without Apple or iPods existing. I get that podcast has become like Band-Aid where the brand name is synonymous with the object– but this really stuck out to me. Maybe this is explained in the other books ?

While I was reading this book it was announced that Inkyard Press would be closing. It’s sad to see an imprint that had so many diverse YA books close its doors.

Pritty by Keith F. Miller Jr.

December 20, 2023      Leave a Comment

Pritty is a queer YA contemporary is an early 2000’s contemporary romance/urban fiction. Jay is a romantic but he’s never felt seen until he literally collides with Leroy.

This book confounded me. It has a lot of good ideas but the plot and pacing didn’t 100% work for me. Jay starts the book getting pulled into a scheme to write love letters for boys in his school,  but that plot disappears and then randomly comes back at the very end. The book then sort of focuses on Jay meeting Leroy and their insta-love/attraction….but it’s mostly about Leory’s family’s ties to an activist organization.

Jay and Leroy meet (what seems like) two times and instantly decide they are in love. Their desire to be together plays a big part in the book…but the relationship doesn’t feel developed. It’s hinted that Leroy knew of Jay growing up—but other parts of the story seem to contradict that. It doesn’t help that they spend most of the book apart. Honestly, Jay and Leroy’s relationships with their friends and family are way more developed than the main romance.


Another odd thing is Jay’s older brother, Jacob, suddenly shows up as a love interest for Leroy’s older brother, Taj.  Except Jacob goes by Jacboee ?  ‘Jacobee’ becomes a fixture in Leroy’s life and yet never mentions that Jay is his brother ? It took me a while to pick up that Jacob and Jacboee were even supposed to be the same character. 

That said,

This book does leave a lot of room for compassion, vulnerability and empathy between Black male characters that I would love to see more of. The young men are allowed to cry, hold each other, and love openly.

This book is based on a manuscript and has a forthcoming animation. The Pritty animation doesn’t seem to include Leory and instead focuses on Jay and a side character. I’m curious how much of  Leroy’s story was in the original manuscript.

Side Note

This book does not explicitly state it takes place in the mid-00s. I was ready to light this book up because they kept mentioning Aliyah, Outkast, boom boxes, and insinuated that teenagers could read cursive. Then a character pulls out a Motoraloa Razar and I settled down.

I’m sure this would have stood out more as a ‘period piece’ to younger readers but it felt so normal to me. TAKE ME BACK 👵🏾

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