After her parents go on the run, a teenage girl placed in the care of a cousin she barely knows learns to trust and open up in The Melancholy of Summer, a lyrical YA contemporary coming-of-age story by Louisa Onomé
Doesn't she see? I can do this on my own.
Summer Uzoma is fine. Sure, her parents went on the run after they were accused of committing a crime, leaving her behind. Sure, she's been alternating stays with her friends' families. Sure, she sometimes still secretly visits her old home. And sure, she has trouble talking about any of this. But she's fine. She has her skateboard and her bus pass. She just has to turn eighteen in a few weeks and then she'll really and truly be free.
So it's extra annoying when a nosy social worker gets involved. Summer doesn't expect any relative to be able to take her in, so she's very surprised to hear that she'll now be living with her cousin Olu—someone she hasn't seen in years, who's a famous singer in Japan last she heard, and who's not much older than Summer.
Life with Olu is awkward for many reasons—not least of all because Olu has her own drama to deal with. But with her cousin and friends' efforts, maybe Summer can learn to trust people enough to let them in again?
- New eBooks
- Fantasy Fiction
- Mysteries
- Graphic Novels for Adults and Teens
- YALSA Great Graphic Novels for Teens
- New eBooks for Teens
- Comics and Graphic Books for High School Students
- Always Available Teen eBooks
- 100 Most Popular Teen Fiction eBooks 2025
- 100 Most Popular Teen Nonfiction eBooks 2025
- See all ebooks collections
- New Audiobooks for Teens
- Top 100 Teen Fiction Audiobooks 2024
- Fantasy
- 100 Most Popular Teen Fiction Audiobooks 2025
- See all audiobooks collections
