The February 2026 young adult book news included several awards announcements, adaptation updates, and previews of upcoming releases. Highlights ranged from literary honors to renewals for TV series and film projects. Publishers shared insights into spring titles across genres.
In February 2026, the young adult literature scene saw a mix of accolades and developments, as detailed in a monthly roundup. Candace Fleming received multiple major awards at the American Library Association’s Youth Media Awards for her nonfiction works aimed at young readers.
Award announcements continued with the finalists for the 2025 Bram Stoker Awards, featuring a strong YA category. The United States Board on Books for Young People selected outstanding international books, including several YA titles. Winners of the Walter Awards included honorees in YA and younger categories. The Black Caucus of the American Library Association and School Library Journal named recipients for the 2026 Children & Youth Literary Awards. Finalists in the YA category for the Los Angeles Book Awards were revealed, with winners set for April.
Adaptation news brought excitement: Netflix renewed the series based on Finding Her Edge for a second season. Showrunners were attached to the TV adaptation of Eragon, expected to improve on the original film. The trailer for the film version of Hayley Kiyoko’s YA book Girls Like Girls was released. Amazon MGM Studios optioned A Stage Set for Villains, and a creative team was assembled for The Education of Kia Greer.
Publishing updates included Simon & Schuster reviving the Simon Pulse imprint, with a new Meg Cabot book anticipated. Upcoming titles featured Tomi Adeyemi’s dark academia novel this fall, Jasmine Guillory’s YA debut inspired by Dirty Dancing, Renée Watson’s October release with a cover by Morgan Harper Nichols, and Andrew Joseph White’s next YA book. Previews covered Canadian YA authors, spring children’s and YA books, YA sci-fi and fantasy from February, romance graphic novels, and YA/adult comics. Bestselling YA titles from the previous year were reviewed, alongside debuts in adult fiction by YA authors Victoria Aveyard and Mackenzie Reed. Teenagers discussed reading’s importance in The New York Times.