Young teens have their first crush, try to find a new identity and travel through time in light-hearted new paperbacks from Scholastic.
Susie Day's coming-of-age story The Twice-Lived Summer of Bluebell Jones sees Bluebell turn 13 and begin looking to the future.
She has a unique adviser: her 14-year-old self has arrived from that future and is determined to change the younger version into a feistier, funkier, braver Bluebell.
The trouble is, the older Bluebell has a secret that might just explain why she changed.
My Big Fat Teen Crisis finds Sam alone, friendless and feeling very lost after her best friend goes to live in the Outer Hebrides.
In Jenny Smith's novel Young Sam decides on an image overhaul is needed, especially because she likes the new boy in school.
Cue changes all round, but this experimenting leaves her more lost than ever as she struggles to decide exactly who she wants to be.
Cassie's Crush also sees a girl back at school after the holidays, with a new boy to fall for, and personal traumas to endure.
Cassie becomes infatuated with cute and cool Ollie but he doesn't seem to know who he prefers, her or arch-enemy Amber-the-Leech.
Meanwhile Ollie's best friend Sam likes Cassie -- and she has to decide which boy she prefers.
Flower Girls is a new series of books from Scholastic that tells of Del and her three sisters whose family runs a flower shop.
Stories centre around both the shop and the girls' school lives, often intertwining, with a rival florist, a nwe crush, mean girls and a Homecoming.
Del, Rose, Aster and Poppy's adventures are told in Too Many Blooms, Petal Power, Best Buds and Coming Up Roses.