I recently was a guest blogger on Teen Librarian Toolbox. The site is creating posts by authors and bibliographies all about mental health awareness. May is Mental Health Awareness Month, so I will post my three bibliographies that I made for the site each week and create another one for the last week of May.
The first bibliography is about Anxiety. In these novels, the main character either has anxiety disorder or is living with a parent with the disorder.
Caletti, Deb. The Nature of Jade. Simon &
Schuster Book for Young Readers, 2007.
Seattle high school senior Jade's life is defined by her
anxiety disorder and dysfunctional family, until she spies a mysterious boy
with a baby who seems to share her fascination with the elephants at a nearby
zoo.
Colasanti, Susanne. Waiting for You. Viking
Children’s Book, 2009.
Fifteen-year-old high school sophomore Marisa, who has an
anxiety disorder, decides that this is the year she will get what she wants--a
boyfriend and a social life--but things do not turn out exactly the way she
expects them to.
Halpern, Julie. Get Well Soon. Feiwel & Friends,
2007.
When her parents confine her to a mental hospital, an
overweight teenage girl, who suffers from panic attacks, describes her
experiences in a series of letters to a friend.
Halpern. Julie. Have a Nice Day. Feiwel &
Friends, 2012.
When Anna returns from a three-week stay in a mental
hospital she struggles to resume a normal life in the face of her parents'
arguments and peers who are afraid to ask her what happened.
Jones, Patrick. Barrier. Darby Creek, 2014.
A new, alternative high school, psychotherapy, a romantic
interest, and a manga club help tenth-grader Jessica cope with her social
anxiety disorder.
Kaplan, Isabel. Hancock Park. HarperTeen, 2009.
While attending an exclusive prep school in Los Angeles, a
smart but anxiety-ridden high school junior tries to deal with boys,
popularity, and her parents' divorce.
Kinsella, Sophie. Finding Audrey. Delacorte Press,
2015.
Fourteen-year-old Audrey is making slow but steady progress
dealing with her anxiety disorder when Linus comes into the picture and her
recovery gains momentum.
Lockhart, E. The Boyfriend List. Delacorte Press,
2006.
A Seattle fifteen-year-old explains some of the reasons for
her recent panic attacks, including breaking up with her boyfriend, losing all
her girlfriends, tensions between her performance-artist mother and her father,
and more.
Martinez, Jessica. Virtuosity. Simon Pulse, 2011.
Just before the most important violin competition of her
career, seventeen-year-old prodigy Carmen faces critical decisions about her
anti-anxiety drug addiction, her controlling mother, and a potential romance
with her most talented rival.
Reichardt, Marisa. Underwater. Farrar Straus &
Giroux, 2016.
Morgan hasn’t left her apartment in months, not since the
terrible thing. She takes online classes, receives house calls from her
therapist, gazes at the pool in her apartment complex, and tries to avoid
succumbing to crushing panic. When cute Evan moves in next door, however,
Morgan starts to consider stepping outside.
Sugg, Zoe. Girl Online. Keywords Press, 2014.
Penny has a secret. Under the alias GirlOnline, Penny blogs
her hidden feelings about friendship, boys, high school drama, her crazy
family, and the panic attacks that have begun to take over her life.
Wilson, Rachel M. Don’t Touch. HarperTeen, 2014.
16-year-old Caddie struggles with OCD, anxiety, and a
powerful fear of touching another person's skin, which threatens her dreams of
being an actress--until the boy playing Hamlet opposite her Ophelia gives her a
reason to overcome her fears.
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