WARRIOR GIRL DUG UP, by Angeline Bouley. (Holt, $19.99.) Boulley’s latest YA novel returns to the world of her best-selling debut, “Firekeeper’s Daughter,” this time following a Native teen who coordinates a heist to recover the stolen remains of her ancestors.
I HAVE SOMETHING TO TELL YOU—FOR YOUNG ADULTS: A memoir, by Chasten Buttigieg. (Atheneum Books for Young Readers, $18.99.) Buttigieg adapts his 2020 memoir for teens, focusing on his younger years as he struggled with his sexuality and found the courage to live proudly as himself.
THE PRINCESS AND THE TOASTED CHEESE SANDWICH, by Deya Muniz. (Little, Brown Ink, cloth, $24.99; paperback, $17.99.) Muniz’s playful cheese-themed graphic novel follows a young princess who reinvents herself as an earl, only to fall in love with another princess as she is disguised.
BORDERLESS, by Jennifer DeLeon. (Atheneum/Caitlyn Dlouhy Books, $19.99.) This young adult novel explores issues of migration and violence by following a Guatemalan teenage fashion designer who flees her home to the United States to escape the encroaching threat of gangs.
THE GREAT AMERICAN EVERYTHING, by Scott Gloden. (Hub City, paperback, $16.95.) The 10 stories in this wry collection explore the concept of family in the modern day, from brothers discussing bomb threats at the post office where they work to a woman caught between her senior accuser and her girlfriend is drawn.
CLASS WAR: A Literary History, by Mark Steven. (Verso, paperback, $29.95.) Literature and politics go hand in hand in this survey of revolutionary literature from the Haitian Revolution to Black Lives Matter, including the writing of Che Guevara, Frantz Fanon, and Assata Shakur.
THE POWER, from Dino Buzzati. Translated by Lawrence Venuti. (New York Review Books, paperback, $17.95.) Buzzati’s most famous novel, about a soldier’s simultaneous fear and determination as he watches for an absent enemy, is here re-translated from the Italian.
RED REMINDER: The aftermath of China’s Cultural Revolution, by Tania Branigan. (Norton, $29.95.) A former China correspondent examines the people and ideologies at the center of the Cultural Revolution of 1966-76, the decade that “split modern China in half.”