Wednesday, April 8, 2015

April 2015 Young Adult Fantasy Releases

Hello, Travelers!

Today we are compiling a list of Young Adult Fantasy titles that are releasing this month. To make your search easier, we're picking out the books that look the most appealing to us. Please note that this short list does not (at all) encompass the many various YA fantasy books that will be released this month. These are the select few we've stumbled across. So, if you know of any others, please comment below with the title and the description!

April 11, 2015:

Dragonfriend by Marc Secchia - Stabbed. Burned by a dragon. Abandoned for the windrocs to pick over. The traitor Ra'aba tried to silence Hualiama forever. But he reckoned without the strength of a dragonet's paw, and the courage of a girl who refused to die.
           Only an extraordinary friendship will save Hualiama's beloved kingdom of Fra'anior and restore the King to the Onyx Throne. Flicker, the valiant dragonet. Hualiama, a foundling, adopted into the royal family. The power of a friendship which paid the ultimate price.
           This is the tale of Hualiama Dragonfriend, and a love which became legend.

April 21, 2015:

Becoming Jinn by Lori Goldstein - Wishing doesn't make it so, Azra does.
          Azra has just turned sixteen, and overnight her body lengthens, her olive skin deepens, and her eyes glisten gold thanks to the brand-new silver bangle that locks around her wrist. As she always knew it would, her Jinn ancestry brings not just magical powers but the reality of a life of servitude, as her wish granting is controlled by a remote ruling class of Jinn known as the Afrit. To the humans she lives among, she's just the girl working at the snack bar at the beach, navigating the fryer and her first crush. But behind closed doors, she's learning how to harness her powers and fulfill the obligations of her destiny. Mentored by her mother and her Zar "sisters," Azra discovers she may not be quite like the rest of her circle of female Jinn...and that her powers could endanger them all.

April 28, 2015:

The Girl at Midnight by Melissa Grey - For fans of Cassandra Clare's City of Bones or Laini Taylor's Daughter of Smoke and Bone, The Girl at Midnight is the story of a modern girl caught in an ancient war.
          Beneath the streets of New York City live the Avicen, an ancient race of people with feathers for hair and magic running through their veins. Age-old enchantments keep them hidden from humans. All but one. Echo is a runaway pickpocket who survives by selling stolen treasures on the black market, and the Avicen are the only family she's ever known.
          Echo is clever and daring, and at times she can be brash, but above all else she's fiercely loyal. So when a centuries-old war crests on the borders of her home, she decides it's time to act.
          Legend has it that there is a way to end the conflict once and for all: find the Firebird, a mythical entity believed to possess power the likes of which the world has never seen. I will be no easy task, though if life as a thief has taught Echo anything, it's how to hunt down what she wants...and how to take it.
          But some jobs aren't as straightforward as they seem. And this one might just set the world on fire.

An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir - Laia is a slave.
                                                                 Elias is a soldier.
                                                                 Neither is free.
          Under the Martial Empire, defiance is met with death. Those who do not vow their blood and bodies to the Emperor risk the execution of their loved ones and the destruction of all they hold dear.
          It is in this brutal world, inspired by ancient Rome, that Laia lives with her grandparents and older brother. The family ekes out an existence in the Empire's impoverished backstreets. They do not challenge the Empire. They've seen what happens to those who do.
          But when Laia's brother is arrested for treason, Laia is forced to make a decision. In exchange for help from rebels who promise to rescue her brother, she will risk her life to spy for them from within the Empire's greatest military academy.
          There, Laia meets Elias, the school's finest soldier––and secretly, its most unwilling. Elias wants only to be free of the tyranny he's being trained to enforce. He and Laia will soon realize that their destinies are intertwined––and that their choices will change the fate of the Empire itself.

Magonia by Maria Dahvana Headley - [This] soaring YA debut is a fiercely intelligent, multilayered fantasy where Neil Gaiman's Stardust meets John Green's The Fault in Our Stars in a story about a girl caught between two worlds...two races...and two destines.
          Aza Ray Boyle is drowning in thin air. Since she was a baby, Aza has suffered from a mysterious lung disease that makes it ever harder for her to breathe, to speak––to live. So when Aza catches a glimpse of a ship in the sky, her family chalks it up to a cruel side effect of her medication. But Aza doesn't think this is a hallucination. She can hear someone on the ship calling her name.
          Only her best friend, Jason, listens. Jason, who's always been there. Jason, for whom she might have more-than-friendly feelings. But before Aza can consider that thrilling idea, something goes terribly wrong. Aza is lost to our world––and found, by another. Magonia.
          Above the clouds, in a land of trading ships, Aza is not the weak and dying thing she was. In Magonia, she can breathe for the first time. Better, she has immense power––but as she navigates her new life, she discovers that war between Magonia and Earth is coming. In Aza's hands lies fate of the whole of humanity––including the boy who loves her. Where do her loyalties lie?

If you know any YA Fantasy titles you're psyched about this April, share them with us!

Realms

*All descriptions were provided on Amazon.

No comments:

Post a Comment