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 February
By Kaitlyn Spotts | February 6 2026 | Books in SpanishGeneralHigh SchoolMiddle School
Battling gods was not in the curriculum. But it’s a final. What if the protagonists of myths were real, and your decisions could change the fate of the world?
Have you ever dreamed of having magical powers? Being able to read your friends’ minds? Making objects levitate? Predict the future? Or make things appear and disappear whenever you want? Then this book is for you. Here you won’t just learn magic… I’ll guide you step by step so you can become a magician. Page by page, we’ll go on many adventures together: you’ll discover illusions that trick the brain, mind games that will test your cleverness, impossible challenges to achieve (unless you have this book), and I’ll reveal magic’s deepest secrets.
Dive into the most captivating dystopian universe with this deluxe edition that brings together The Hunger Games, Catching Fire, Mockingjay, and The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes. With a renewed design, this collection becomes an essential treasure for both devoted fans and new readers alike.
Susy Fang is a standalone story set within the fascinating Shadowy World. With a touch of detective fiction, it explores more secrets and deepens the mystery of Nana Buba’s tales. Perfect for readers looking to enter this fun and terrifying universe.
Related articles
Standards-Aligned Manga Gives Students a New Way to Learn, One Adventure at a Time Penguin Random House is thrilled to offer titles from Manga Quest, a new series from TOKYOPOP Learning. TOKYOPOP, the pioneering manga publisher that introduced an entire generation of American readers to the art form, has launched Manga Quest, the debut series from
Read moreInterview in April 2026 by Claire Kelley, Seven Stories Press, with Jonathan Kozol author of We Shall Not Bow Down: Children of Color Under Siege, An Invocation to Resistance. You have long argued that educational inequality is not inevitable but the result of political decisions. Why do you think the idea that inequality is “natural”
Read more