Young Adult Verse Novels

A novel in verse is one of my favorite formats of books. This may be an unusual format to some, but novels in verse convey the emotion and heart of a story in a way that sticks with me for longer. The poetic structures they employ tell captivating and important stories while favoring poetry over prose.

Below you will find a list of new young adult verse novels that have just hit the shelves! As of this writing, all of these titles are owned by the Davenport Public Library. Descriptions are provided by the publishers.


A Bird in the Air Means We Can Still Breathe by Mahogany L. Browne

Grief, pain, hope, and love collide in this short story collection.

In New York City, teens, their families, and their communities feel the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic. Amidst the fear and loss, these teens and the adults around them persevere with love and hope while living in difficult circumstances:

  • Malachi writes an Armageddon short story inspired by his pandemic reality.
  • Tariq helps their ailing grandmother survive during quarantine.
  • Zamira struggles with depression and loneliness after losing her parents.
  • Mohamed tries to help keep his community spirit alive.
  • A social worker reflects on the ways the foster system fails their children.

From award-winning author Mahogany L. Browne comes a poignant collection of interconnected prose, poems, and lists about the humanity and resilience of New Yorkers during the Covid-19 pandemic. – Crown Books for Young Readers


All the Love Under the Vast Sky edited by Kip Wilson

Twelve short stories in verse by bestselling and award-winning authors that explore the highs and lows of love – romantic, platonic, familial, and self-love.

Love can be many things – all-consuming, fleeting, vengeful, selfless, toxic, uplifting, and always, a core part of the teen experience that leaves an indelible mark. This enchanting, genre-crossing anthology delivers something for every reader with unique characters, global settings, and a dazzling mixture of myth, historical, speculative, and contemporary fiction.

With the turn of a page, get swept away by unexpected love blooming between two princes from enemy Mesoamerican nations in the 15th century, who’d rather make music rather than war; cheer for a timid bearded lady who was shunned by her family and runs away to find belonging and safety at the circus during the 1800s experience the heartbreak of saying goodbye to a beloved pet; breathlessly watch a myth unfold as a siren bound to the water falls in love with a winged forest spirit, their love seemingly impossible from the start. Root for a girl who emerges from grief and battles with chronic pain to discover how to love herself and life again.

Love is complicated, and this anthology embraces the messiness and the joy of all kinds of love. Contributors include:

  • Alexandra Alessandri
  • David Bowles
  • Melanie Crowder
  • Margarita Engle
  • Eric Gansworth
  • Robin Gow
  • Mariama J. Lockington
  • Laura Ruby
  • Padma Venkatraman
  • Jasmine Warga
  • Charles Waters
  • Kip Wilson

Nancy Paulsen Books


Everything is Poison by Joy McCullough

This historical novel in prose and verse tells the story of a deadly secret hiding in plain sight and of the women who risk everything to provide care for those with nowhere else to turn, perfect for fans of Blood Water Paint and The Lost Apothecary.

Early Seventeenth-Century Rome
For as long as she can remember, Carmela Tofana has desperately wanted one thing: to be allowed behind the counter of her mother’s apothecary in Campo Marzio, Rome. When she turns sixteen, she’s finally allowed into the inner sanctum: the workroom where her mother, Giulia Tofana, and two assistants craft renowned remedies for their customers. But for every sweet-smelling flower extract in the workroom, there’s another potion requiring darker ingredients. And then there’s Aqua Tofana, the apothecary’s remedy of last resort for husbands who are just as deadly as any disease. In all Carmela’s years of wishing to follow in her mother’s footsteps, she never realized one tiny vial could be the death of them all. – Dutton Books for Young Readers


The House No One Sees by Adina King

Penelope Ross has always felt like a passenger in her mother’s fairytale – until the night of her 17th birthday, when she is forced to enter her own.

After a text from her estranged mother rips her away from a night with friends, Penny is forced into a kaleidoscope of memories locked inside the dark labyrinth of her childhood home. As Penny wanders between present and past—prose and verse—she must confront her mother’s opioid addiction to mend her fractured past. But the house is tricky. The house is impossible. It wants her to dig up the dead to escape. And as Penny walks through herself to find herself, she is not sure she has the courage to free the light she trapped inside. – Feiwel & Friends


One Step Forward by Marcie Flinchum Atkins

One Step Forward is a compelling debut YA historical fiction novel in verse about Matilda Young—the youngest American suffragist imprisoned for picketing the White House to demand women’s right to vote.

Raised in a politically divided family, Matilda wondered if she could be as courageous as her older sister who fought for suffrage. Joining the radical protest movement came with plenty of risk. Women were routinely scorned, harassed, arrested—and worse. And taking a stand for her rights could tear her family apart.

Told in powerful verse, One Step Forward follows Matilda’s coming-of-age journey as she takes her first step into action. Amid the backdrop of World War I, Matilda’s story vividly highlights the extreme mental, physical, and emotional battles faced by the protestors leading up to the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment. It also reveals the bravery, hard work, and spirit of the women who paved the way for future generations to use their voices and votes. – Versify


(S)kin by Ibi Zoboi

From award-winning, New York Times bestselling author Ibi Zoboi comes her groundbreaking contemporary fantasy debut—a novel in verse based on Caribbean folklore—about the power of inherited magic and the price we must pay to live the life we yearn for.

“Our new home with its

thick walls and locked doors

wants me to stay trapped in my skin—

but I am fury and flame.”

Fifteen-year-old Marisol is the daughter of a soucouyant. Every new moon, she sheds her skin like the many women before her, shifting into a fireball witch who must fly into the night and slowly sip from the lives of others to sustain her own. But Brooklyn is no place for fireball witches with all its bright lights, shut windows, and bolt-locked doors.… While Marisol hoped they would leave their old traditions behind when they emigrated from the islands, she knows this will never happen while she remains ensnared by the one person who keeps her chained to her magical past—her mother.

Seventeen-year-old Genevieve is the daughter of a college professor and a newly minted older half sister of twins. Her worsening skin condition and the babies’ constant wailing keep her up at night, when she stares at the dark sky with a deep longing to inhale it all. She hopes to quench the hunger that gnaws at her, one that seems to reach for some memory of her estranged mother. When a new nanny arrives to help with the twins, a family secret connecting her to Marisol is revealed, and Gen begins to find answers to questions she hasn’t even thought to ask.

But the girls soon discover that the very skin keeping their flames locked beneath the surface may be more explosive to the relationships around them than any ancient magic. – Versify

Dear Medusa by Olivia A. Cole

“to have men
in your life
who know
that the battle
we face against
men who are
wolves can only
be won
with the help
of men
who are not.”
― Olivia A. Cole, Dear Medusa

Dear Medusa by Olivia A. Cole is a novel in verse that tackles devastating topics from the point of view of a sixteen-year-old girl. Sixteen-year-old Alicia Rivers has whispers that follow her around school. Insults galore linked to a reputation that all mean she is a girl who has had sex. The vicious rumors and social outcast status she has received all started when she was sexually assaulted by a popular teacher. No one knows that though. All they see is a teenage girl who is promiscuous. Relating to the story of Medusa, readers will see Alicia as being made into a monster, instead of as the victim of sexual assault. The people around Alicia are upholding toxic patriarchal values that objectify her and lead to issues of victim shaming and double standards. This is more than a story of sexual violence, even though the violence Alicia and others go through affects every aspect of their lives. Racism, homophobia, shame, virginity stigma, and misogyny abound.

Alicia’s trauma runs through her life, leaving her isolated and feeling invisible. Through this novel in verse, Alicia is abandoned by her best friend, leaves her hobbies, and has outbursts in class that land her in in-school suspension. Amongst the bad, Alicia also finds mysterious letters left in her locker, that lead her to believe that there may be other student victims. Alicia’s struggles have some bright spots as she starts making friends and even has a growing attraction to a new girl at her school. Life is changing around her, leading Alicia to start branching out. The characters in Dear Medusa are representative of a wide variety of people. This is queer young adult fiction with bisexual, lesbian, and asexual characters, plus characters of different races and ethnicities.

Dear Medusa destroyed me. I have noticed a trend of novels in verse that deal with tough topics. Writing a novel in verse about hard topics allows readers to take a step back and see the story from a more relatable perspective. This relates to Dear Medusa specifically in the sense that readers follow Alicia as she works through her feelings about the past and the present. Dear Medusa covers a wide variety of topics and as a result can become quite heavy, but the poetic style allows the author to shift seamlessly and quickly between topics while also presenting them in an accessible and easier way. This book is very well written and effectively brings these topics to attention.

“I’m starting to realize
that a woman doesn’t get that mad
so mad that her hair turns to snakes
so mad that her rage turns blood to boulder
all on her own.”

― Olivia A. Cole, Dear Medusa