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Home > Diverse Families > Family Relationships > Family Member Death

Family Member Death
 

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Family Member Death

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  • Hooper by Geoff Herbach

    Hooper

    Geoff Herbach

    For Adam Reed, basketball is a passport. Adam’s basketball skills have taken him from an orphanage in Poland to a loving adoptive mother in Minnesota. When he’s tapped to play on a select AAU team along with some of the best players in the state, it just confirms that basketball is his ticket to the good life: to new friendships, to the girl of his dreams, to a better future. But life is more complicated off the court. When an incident with the police threatens to break apart the bonds Adam’s finally formed after a lifetime of struggle, he must make an impossible choice between his new family and the sport that’s given him everything.

  • How It Feels to Float by Helen Fox

    How It Feels to Float

    Helen Fox

    A gutting, profound, deeply hopeful portrayal of living with mental illness and grief, this modern-day Bell Jar marks the arrival of an exceptional new talent in the YA space. Biz knows how to float. She has her people, her posse, her mom and the twins. She has Grace. And she has her dad, who tells her about the little kid she was, who loves her so hard, and who shouldn't be here but is. So Biz doesn't tell anyone anything. Not about her dark, runaway thoughts, not about kissing Grace or noticing Jasper, the new boy. And she doesn't tell anyone about her dad. Because her dad died when she was six. And Biz knows how to float, right there on the surface--normal okay regular fine. But after what happens on the beach--first in the ocean, and then in the sand--the tethers that hold Biz steady come undone. Dad disappears, and with him, all comfort. It might be easier, better, sweeter to float all the way away? Or maybe stay a little longer, find her father, bring him back to her. Or maybe--maybe maybe maybe--there's a third way Biz just can't see yet. In this mesmerizing, radiant debut, Helena Fox tells a story about love and grief and family and friendship, about inter-generational mental illness, and how living with it is both a bridge to someone loved and lost and also a chasm. She explores the hard, bewildering, and beautiful places loss can take us, and honors those who hold us tightly when the current wants to tug us out to sea.

  • How to Save a Life by Sara Zarr

    How to Save a Life

    Sara Zarr

    Told from their own viewpoints, seventeen-year-old Jill, in grief over the loss of her father, and Mandy, nearly nineteen, are thrown together when Jill's mother agrees to adopt Mandy's unborn child but nothing turns out as they had anticipated.

  • Hurricane Heat by Steve Barwin

    Hurricane Heat

    Steve Barwin

    Years after Travis's parents die in a car crash and he and his younger sister, Amanda, are separated, Travis sets out to search for her at the risk of losing an opportunity for a future baseball career.

  • Hush Puppy by Lisa Cresswell

    Hush Puppy

    Lisa Cresswell

    Intelligent Corrine, abandoned by her mother, and artsy Jamie, forced to play football by a redneck father, both dream of leaving their podunk town and never looking back. Their shared love of literature and a dream of a better life bring them together and a romance blossoms between them in a secret place of their own in the steamy North Carolina woods. When Jamie is involved in the accidental death of a white girl, he's terrified of his abusive father. Corrine takes the blame to protect Jaime, with dire consequences for herself and her dreams of the future. Her life in danger, Corrine's left wondering if Jamie ever cared about her at all.

  • I Am Nuchu by Brenda Stanley

    I Am Nuchu

    Brenda Stanley

    Upon his parents' 1981 divorce, Cal Burton goes from being a popular, comfortable Spokane basketball all-star to a resident of a Ute Indian reservation in Utah, where apathy, poor living conditions, racism, and bitterness over a decades-old family tragedy change his life.

  • I Felt a Funeral, in My Brain by Will Walton

    I Felt a Funeral, in My Brain

    Will Walton

    For most of his young life Avery has dealt with his alcoholic mother with the help of his grandfather Pal--he immerses himself in poetry and popular music, and now that high school is over for the summer, he makes out with his best friend Luca (who understands about alcoholic mothers), but the death of his grandfather creates a hole in his life that he can not seem to crawl out of.

  • I Funny: A Middle School Story by James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    I Funny: A Middle School Story

    James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    Resolving to become the world's greatest stand-up comedian despite less-than-funny challenges in his life, wheelchair-bound middle school student Jamie Grimm endures bullying from his mean-spirited cousin and hopes he will be fairly judged when he enters a local comedy contest.

  • I Funny: School of Laughs (I Funny #5) by James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    I Funny: School of Laughs (I Funny #5)

    James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    When a new principal threatens to close the school library, Jamie Grimm tries to save the day by teaching a comedy class for his fellow students.

  • I Funny TV: A Middle School Story (I Funny #4) by James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    I Funny TV: A Middle School Story (I Funny #4)

    James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    Jamie Grimm has finally accomplished his dream of proving himself the Planet's Funniest Kid Comic, and the sky's the limit from there. Enter a couple of TV executives with a huge plan for Jamie: a new show about Jamie and his oddball friends!

  • If You Could be Mine: A Novel by Sara Farizan

    If You Could be Mine: A Novel

    Sara Farizan

    In Iran, where homosexuality is punishable by death, seventeen-year-olds Sahar and Nasrin love each other in secret until Nasrin's parents announce their daughter's arranged marriage and Sahar proposes a drastic solution.

  • I Have Lost My Way by Gayle Forman

    I Have Lost My Way

    Gayle Forman

    A fateful accident draws three strangers together over the course of a single day: Freya who has lost her voice while recording her debut album. Harun who is making plans to run away from everyone he has ever loved. Nathaniel who has just arrived in New York City with a backpack, a desperate plan, and nothing left to lose. As the day progresses, their secrets start to unravel and they begin to understand that the way out of their own loss might just lie in help­ing the others out of theirs.

  • I’ll Give You the Sun by Jandy Nelson

    I’ll Give You the Sun

    Jandy Nelson

    A story of first love, family, loss, and betrayal told from different points in time, and in separate voices, by artists Jude and her twin brother Noah.

  • I'll Meet You There by Heather Demetrios

    I'll Meet You There

    Heather Demetrios

    Skylar Evans, seventeen, yearns to escape Creek View by attending art school, but after her mother's job loss puts her dream at risk, a rekindled friendship with Josh, who joined the Marines to get away then lost a leg in Afghanistan, and her job at the Paradise motel lead her to appreciate her home town.

  • In Search of Us by Ava Dellaira

    In Search of Us

    Ava Dellaira

    Relates the stories of Marilyn who, at age seventeen, fell in love with James, left her stage-mother, and set out on her own and Angie, her now seventeen-year-old daughter, who returns to Hollywood seeking her father.

  • I See Reality: Twelve Short Stories About Real Life by Grace Kendall

    I See Reality: Twelve Short Stories About Real Life

    Grace Kendall

    Popular young-adult authors weave together questions of identity, loss, and redemption into poignant tales for today's teens.

  • Itch by Michelle D. Kwasney

    Itch

    Michelle D. Kwasney

    In 1968, after the death of her beloved Gramps, Delores "Itch" Colchester and her grandmother move from Florida to an Ohio trailer park, where she meets new people and, when she learns that a friend is being abused by her mother, tries her best to emulate her plain-spoken grandfather.

  • I Totally Funniest: A Middle School Story (I Funny #3) by James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    I Totally Funniest: A Middle School Story (I Funny #3)

    James Patterson and Chris Grabenstein

    Jamie Grimm is back and better than ever. After scoring big on national TV in the semifinals contest, everyone back home is jumping on the Jamie Grimm bandwagon, and all the attention might be going to his head. Not only are his friendships starting to suffer, but the pressure of coming up with his best material ever for the ultimate standup act to snag the final win in Hollywood is pushing Jamie to the brink. Suddenly, life isn't looking very funny anymore. Can Jamie take the grand prize without pushing away his fans, friends and family?

  • Jimi & Me by Jaime Adolf

    Jimi & Me

    Jaime Adolf

    After his father's tragic death, twelve-year-old Keith James moves from Brooklyn to a small midwestern town where his mixed race heritage is not accepted, but he finds comfort in the music of Jimi Hendrix and the friendship of a white classmate.

  • Kids of Appetite by David Arnold

    Kids of Appetite

    David Arnold

    Teens Victor Benucci and Madeline Falco sit in separate police interrogation rooms telling about the misfits who brought them together and their journey sparked by a message in an urn.

  • Kiss Number 8 by Colleen AF Venable

    Kiss Number 8

    Colleen AF Venable

    Mads is pretty happy with her life. She goes to church with her family, and minor league baseball games with her dad. She goofs off with her best friend Cat, and has thus far managed to avoid getting kissed by Adam, the boy next door. It's everything she hoped high school would be... until all of a sudden, it's not. Her dad is hiding something big--so big it could tear her family apart. And that's just the beginning of her problems: Mads is starting to figure out that she doesn't want to kiss Adam... because the only person she wants to kiss is Cat. Just like that, Mad's tidy little life has gotten epically messy--and epically heartbreaking. And when your heart is broken, it takes more than an awkward, uncomfortable, tooth-clashing, friendship-ending kiss to put things right again. It takes a whole bunch of them.

  • Knife Edge (Noughts & Crosses, #2) by Malorie Blackman

    Knife Edge (Noughts & Crosses, #2)

    Malorie Blackman

    Following Callum's death, the people who loved him relate how their lives have been changed, especially in reference to his girlfriend, Sephy, and their mixed-race child.

  • Ladder to the Moon by Maya Soetoro-Ng

    Ladder to the Moon

    Maya Soetoro-Ng

    Suhaila's wish to know her deceased grandmother is granted when a golden ladder appears at her window and Grandma Annie invites her on a journey to the moon, where they welcome people who are facing tragedy. Includes facts about the painting and the woman who inspired the story.

  • Locomotion by Jacqueline Woodson

    Locomotion

    Jacqueline Woodson

    In a series of poems, eleven-year-old Lonnie writes about his life, after the death of his parents, separated from his younger sister, living in a foster home, and finding his poetic voice at school.

  • Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds

    Long Way Down

    Jason Reynolds

    In Long Way Down, a young boy's brother has just died from a gunshot wound and through brief, powerful poems the reader gets the story of the brothers, the story of urban families, the story of a neighborhood, and the story of the impulse for revenge and the strength it takes to resist that. Terrifically powerful and searingly sad, this is Jason Reynolds continuing to explore some deep truths for young people.

 

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