Showing posts with label STEM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label STEM. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 26, 2023

Unexpecting

 


Unexpecting by Jen Bailey

 

Ben Morrison is definitely gay.  He’s also 16 years old, a robotics enthusiast…and about to be a dad.

 

Wait, what?

 

Maxie’s pregnancy is the result of an experiment at science camp, and she just wishes it was all over, but Ben wants to raise the child himself.  With support from his mom, his new stepdad and his longtime crush, Ben puts together a plan to prepare for fatherhood…but even before the baby is born, Ben is exhausted and questioning his choices.

 

This sweet story has many characters to love:  Ben’s best friends, the guy he’s crushed on for years, his mom and his (adorable) stepdad, and even his new boss.  There are a few less-lovable characters (looking at you, Maxie’s parents) but they get very little time on the page.  The end is predictable but still adorable.

 

Recommended for ages 12 and up.

 

Cussing (mild), diversity, friendship, kissing, high school, gay friends, straight friends, off-page intimacy, parents, pregnancy, rainbow+, STEM, neurodivergence.

Wednesday, August 22, 2018

What Goes Up



What Goes Up  by Katie Kennedy


200 teen scientists vie for two positions with NASA's Interworlds Agency.  The tests cover math, science, problem-solving...and a lot more.  Rosa Hayashi is an obvious choice.  Eddie Toivonen is not.

Then gravity flutters, which it definitely should not do.  Immediately after, alternate-dimension aliens show up, and they look human.  In fact, the alternate-dimension aliens look exactly like the astronauts who just left Earth, only these astronauts are carrying a very dangerous cargo.

What could possibly go wrong?

Part Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, part Ender's Game and part literary roller coaster.  Put it all together for a fast-moving, fun book with an intriguing premise and appealing characters who make nerdy the new cool.  Highly recommended!

Ages 12 to adult.  Some cussing, some kissing and some unbelievably corny knock-knock jokes.