Articles
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2 months ago |
kirkusreviews.com | Elle Gonzalez Rose |Daniel O. Aleman |Laura Nowlin
Masterfully balances themes of justice and acceptance, offering profound lessons on grief and letting go. A cunning tale in which a twin’s quest for justice pulls her closer to a killer while unraveling everything she thought she knew about her sister. In this gripping novel, Puerto Rican identical twins Luna and Solina Flores face immense challenges that culminate in tragedy when Solina’s body is discovered floating in a river, bearing signs of violence.
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Jan 15, 2025 |
kirkusreviews.com | Laura Nowlin |Daniel O. Aleman
This thriller delivers on all levels—teen readers may very well devour this novel in one sitting. Carlisle’s YA thriller revolves around a series of gruesome murders that could be attributed to a mythical creature. Seventeen-year-old Eliza Loft’s high-school experience in Whitehall—a “Podunk” town in the Adirondack Mountain region of New York—isn’t exactly idyllic.
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Jan 7, 2025 |
kirkusreviews.com | Kate Pearsall |Daniel O. Aleman |Holly Jackson
An 18-year-old girl is confronted with the mysteries and magic of her small town. Rowan James and her sisters, born with magical gifts, live in Caball Hollow, West Virginia, where the townspeople treat them with a mixture of awe and suspicion. Rowan has a special ability to smell lies, so she becomes confused when she can’t detect dishonesty where she expects to find it. This discovery leads her to realize that people in town are losing not only personal belongings but also their memories.
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Dec 10, 2024 |
datebook.sfchronicle.com | Daniel O. Aleman |Urban Waite
"I Might Be in Trouble" by Daniel Aleman. Photo: Grand Central Publishing“I Might be in Trouble,” the debut adult novel from talented YA writer Daniel Aleman, might be one of the best novels ever written about being a writer … and what not to do with a dead body. From the first page, and even simply from the book jacket, the reader is meant to understand that this is a book about when things go horribly wrong.
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Dec 6, 2024 |
writersdigest.com | Daniel O. Aleman
So you’ve got a killer idea for your book. It’s fresh, exciting, and it has that spark that you know could make for a truly compelling read. The only issue? It’s also the kind of premise that requires a pretty big leap of faith. For your idea to work, you need readers to suspend disbelief enough to accept somewhat unlikely circumstances.
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