Foreword INDIE
2022 Finalist for Juvenile Fiction
Book Review
Owlish
In Dorothy Tse’s novel "Owlish", a bizarre love affair upends a respectable man’s dull but orderly life in a city that is anything but ordinary. Perhaps it was inevitable that Professor Q, a middle-aged man caught in a dead-end job...
Book Review
Carag's Transformation
In Katja Brandis’s imaginative novel Carag’s Transformation, a shapeshifter leaves his family to live in the human world. Carag is a shapeshifter, or a woodwalker, who lives as a puma with his family outside of Jackson Hole. At...
Book Review
Halfway from Home
Sarah Fawn Montgomery’s essay collection "Halfway from Home" is careful in its considerations of home, family, the natural world, and how the three intersect. Beginning in Montgomery’s childhood in a dusty California town, “Dig”...
Book Review
Kibogo
Two outcasts from a troubled Rwandan village try to save their country in Scholastique Mukasonga’s novel "Kibogo". In the 1940s and 1950s, Rwanda faced numerous tragedies, including drought, famine, war, and continuing repression by...
Book Review
Fallout Shelter
by Mari Carlson
Set during a turbulent era, "Fallout Shelter" follows as three Catholic men come of age—and as their friendships change. In Steven Schindler’s novel "Fallout Shelter", three boys from the Bronx stick together through their Catholic...
Book Review
Tallstone and the City
by Aimee Jodoin
The etiological historical novel "Tallstone and the City" re-imagines the emergence of human civilization via four ambitious young hunter-gatherers. A tribe of hunter-gatherers starts an agricultural civilization in Dennis Wammack’s...
Book Review
Ask the Brindled
Truth spoken by poets matters more simply because the poet settles for nothing but the truth, so help her Veritas, daughter of Saturn. Such vigilance is arduous, and as a queer, Indigenous Hawaiian, No’u Revilla is as singular a voice...