Jason June, Jay’s Gay Agenda (HarperCollins)ĭavid Valdes, Spin Me Right Round (Bloomsbury) Sonia Hartl, The Lost Girls: A Vampire Revenge Story (Page Street) Moderator: Shelley Diaz, Reviews Editor, SLJĩ:45 AM - 10: 15 PM ET Live Creator Chat - Emma Kubert (Image Comicsġ 0:00 AM - 10:30 AM ET Tyler Chin-Tanner, The Orphan King (Diamond Distributors)Ī little humor goes a long way, and these titles are sure to keep young readers laughing until the last page. Their latest project? Launching a YA romance imprint that will showcase the love stories of people of color-because they are deserving of their own happily-ever-afters. Powerhouse YA authors (and spouses) Nicola and David Yoon have brought readers stunning and sigh-inducing novels like The Sun Is Also a Star and Frankly in Love. If you have any questions, email us at AM - 9:30 AM ET | Exhibit Hall Opens / Welcome Message by Michelle Obamaĩ:30 AM - 10:00 AM ET | Opening Keynote Conversation The event platform does not support IE11 + Windows 7 or older versions.īy registering for this event or webcast, you are agreeing to the School Library Journal Privacy Policy and Code of Conduct Policy and agreeing that School Library Journal may share your registration information with current and future sponsors of this event. Please make sure your computer and browser are up to date. If on the day of the event you find that you are unable to access the environment or join a session, please know that sessions will be available for on-demand viewing within 24hrs, and the entire event will be accessible for three months from the event date. Please note that the event environment and the sessions have attendance capacity limits. The conference’s author panels and library programming sessions will help you support and engage teens in this new moment and beyond. As teens consider what comes after childhood, we all must think about what the future holds for students and storytelling. Through it all, books reflect and illuminate our lives, telling boundary-pushing stories that take publishing to the next level. After a pandemic and amid continued tragedies of racist violence, teens and adults alike are called to heal and grow, to learn more, and to further conversations about history and justice. As we adjust to a new normal, we must move forward while remembering where we’ve come from. So much of adolescence is preparing for the future-college, careers, adulthood, the next grade-and that's even tougher when no one knows what the future will look like. With hope on the horizon of an unprecedented, traumatic year, educators, librarians, and students are wondering: Where do we go from here? Join us Thursday, Augfor our tenth annual SLJTeen Live! virtual event!
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