March 2018 list by L. Buehler
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All the Crooked Saints
by Maggie Stiefvater
Three cousins who are members of an unusual family that possesses the ability to perform miracles are repeatedly sought out for their gifts while they struggle to establish free lives for themselves and navigate the fallout from miracles that happen in ways other than anticipated.
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Midnight at the Electric
by Jodi Lynn Anderson
A teen from the latter half of the 21st century, having been chosen to travel to Mars, investigates the fates of a girl whose prospects for immortality were ended by the Dust Bowl and a girl from World War I who attempted to rescue a childhood friend.
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Railhead
by Philip Reeve
When petty thief and railhead Zen Starling is hired to steal a small box from the Emperor's train, it soon becomes clear that the box may be the key to the secrets and danger that lurk within the Great Network of trains.
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The Rains
by Gregg Andrew Hurwitz
When the adults in Creek's Cause turn into ferocious, inhuman beings, Chance Rain and his older brother, Patrick, take refuge with other kids at the school, where they work to find the source of the plague.
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The Rule of Mirrors
by Caragh M O'Brien
After Althea Flores wakes from a coma, she only has memories of another girl, Rosie Sinclair, while Rosie, locked in a vault as doctors mine her dreams, only has thoughts of getting revenge on Dean Berg, the man responsible for her predicament.
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Strange the Dreamer
by Laini Taylor
War orphan and junior librarian Lazlo Strange gets an unexpected opportunity to follow his dream of seeking the mythic lost city of Weep with the Godslayer and his band of legendary warriors.
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The Thing with Feathers
by McCall Hoyle
A homeschooled girl with epilepsy reconsiders her beliefs about playing it safe during a first year in public school, where she hides her medical condition from her basketball athlete partner during a research project.
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We Can Be Mended: A Divergent Story
by Veronica Roth
As Tobias struggles to understand and move past his fears, the world he once knew has changed beyond recognition. Fringe-dwellers, ex-faction members, Bureau dropouts, and migrants now coexist in the rebuilt streets of Chicago.
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