Check out these great new books for middle and high school students releasing this month from PRH Grupo Editorial! Discover more titles in Spanish here.
New Spanish-Language Books Releasing in November
By Kaitlyn Spotts | October 31 2025 | GeneralBooks in SpanishHigh SchoolMiddle School
The Pura Belpré Honor Award winning author of Aniana del Mar Jumps In makes her YA debut with a powerful novel-in-verse about a Texas teen who is battling racism in her theatre program and book banning efforts by her town’s school board.
From the authors of Sanctuary comes a haunting near-future companion tale about undocumented immigrants subjected to deadly experiments in a government labor camp and the four courageous rebels who set into place a daring plan to liberate them.
Return to the universe of The Hunger Games with this special edition featuring gold finishes, sprayed edges, and extra content. When everything you love is taken from you, is there anything left worth fighting for? As the Fiftieth Hunger Games dawns, Haymitch Abernathy tries not to dwell on his chances. His only concern is surviving the day to be with his girl. But when Haymitch’s name is called, his dreams are shattered. He is torn from his family and his beloved, and thrust into the Games. Haymitch realizes the Capitol wants him to fail, yet a spark within him yearns to fight…
Return to the planet Detritus with FM, Alanik, and Jorgen in this must-have three-novella collection featuring exclusive character art and deleted scenes from Skyward with commentary from Brandon Sanderson.
Brandon Sanderson’s Skyward is a science fiction saga full of space battles, galactic mysteries and a fate that will change the universe. In the distant future, humanity struggles to survive on a hostile planet besieged by unknown forces. Spensa, a young woman who dreams of piloting a starship, must overcome society’s prejudices and discover her full potential. In this four-part series, Spensa sets out on an epic adventure full of space battles, cosmic mysteries and revelations that challenge everything she thought she knew about her people and the universe.
Related articles
Educators have raised concerns about students’ growing disconnection from the natural world as academic pressures and screen-based learning increases. Coined by Richard Louv as “nature-deficit disorder,” this loss of direct contact with nature has meaningful implications for students’ health, learning, and long-term environmental stewardship. Integrating nature writing and outdoor experiences into the classroom offers a
Read moreIn recent years, educators have emphasized the importance of teaching women’s history as a way to address historical silences and confront contemporary challenges to gender equity. Despite being told that “girls can be anything,” students still encounter women appearing as exceptions rather than central figures shaping history and society. In the urgency of this moment,
Read more