A new student helps a grieving bookworm face his fears—and they fall for each other in the process.
Eleventh grader Jordan is struggling in the wake of his mother’s death from cancer. He’s also being bullied at school for being a small, quiet boy. His father sold their old house and moved them into an apartment after their loss, a change Jordan has found upsetting and destabilizing. He copes by reading his mother’s old science-fiction novels and focusing on order and routine, helped by boisterous friend Emma and sympathetic school caretaker Mr. Jenkins, with whom he eats lunch most days to avoid the minefield that is the cafeteria. When brave, bold Nathan moves to Toronto from Montreal after his parents’ divorce, he pushes back against the bullies and joins Jordan’s book club at school. The two become friends, and as they grow closer and even work together on a class presentation, Jordan explores the deeper feelings he’s developing for Nathan. But can he find his inner reserves of courage? The personable characters and their relatable struggles mean that this romance for reluctant readers should find fans both within and outside its intended audience, making it a good choice for any teens who find it challenging to fit in. Jordan, Nathan, and Emma are cued white; there’s racial diversity among the secondary characters.
An engaging opposites-attract queer romance.
(Romance. 12-18)