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6 books by R J Anderson

Cover Title and Author Summary (Scroll) Reasons (Scroll) Tags Date Audience

A Pocket Full of Murder
by R J Anderson
In the spell-powered city of Tarreton, the wealthy have all the magic they desire while the working class can barely afford a simple spell to heat their homes. Twelve-year-old Isaveth is poor, but she’s also brave, loyal, and zealous in the pursuit of justice—which is lucky, because her father has just been wrongfully arrested for murder. Isaveth is determined to prove his innocence. Quiz, the eccentric eyepatch-wearing street boy who befriends her, swears he can’t resist a good mystery. Together they set out to solve the magical murder of one of Tarreton’s most influential citizens and save Isaveth’s beloved Papa from execution. But each clue is more perplexing than the next. Was the victim truly killed by Common Magic—the kind of crude, cheap spell that only an unschooled magician would use—or was his death merely arranged to appear that way? And is Quiz truly helping her out of friendship, or does he have hidden motives of his own? Isaveth must figure out who she can trust if she’s to have any hope of proving her Papa’s innocence in time. . .
Author's Comment:""Disability" tag applies because one of the protagonists is blind in one eye. "Race" and "Class" apply because the heroine is both poor and part of an ethnic/religious minority, and the cast of secondary characters is also racially diverse."
race, disability, class, Various, Blind 2015 YA

Ultraviolet
by R J Anderson

Series: Ultraviolet
Book 1 of 2
Once upon a time there was a girl who was special. This is not her story. Unless you count the part where I killed her. Sixteen-year-old Alison has been sectioned in a mental institute for teens, having murdered the most perfect and popular girl at school. But the case is a mystery: no body has been found, and Alison's condition is proving difficult to diagnose. Alison herself can't explain what happened: one minute she was fighting with Tori -- the next she disintegrated. Into nothing. But that's impossible. Right?
Secondary character Tori is ace, second book focuses on her
asexual, disability, Mental_Illness 2011 YA

Quicksilver
by R J Anderson

Series: Ultraviolet
Book 2 of 2
Back in her hometown, Tori Beaugrand had everything a teenaged girl could want—popularity, money, beauty. But she also had a secret. A secret that could change her life in an instant, or destroy it. Now she’s left everything from her old life behind, including her real name and Alison, the one friend who truly understood her. She can’t escape who and what she is. But if she wants to have anything like a normal life, she has to blend in and hide her unusual... talents. Plans change when the enigmatic Sebastian Faraday reappears and gives Tori some bad news: she hasn’t escaped her past. In fact, she’s attracted new interest in the form of an obsessed ex-cop turned investigator for a genetics lab. She has one last shot at getting her enemies off her trail and winning the security and independence she’s always longed for. But saving herself will take every ounce of Tori’s incredible electronics and engineering skills—and even then, she may need to sacrifice more than she could possibly imagine if she wants to be free.
Asexual protagonist
asexual 2013 YA

Knife
by R J Anderson

Series: Faery Rebel
Book 1 of 3
Once upon a time, a fairy is born. She lives in an old oak tree at the bottom of a garden with the rest of the fairy folk. Never has she known a time when life hasn’t been hard, with many dangers and much adversity. But when she becomes the Hunter of the group and learns to do battle in the outside world, her adventures really take off... Don’t read this book if you’re expecting fairy dust – the last thing Knife is likely to wield is a magic wand...
Author Comment: ""Disability" applies because a major character in the book is a 17-year-old boy with a spinal cord injury who uses a wheelchair for mobility. "All-Female" may apply because the heroine comes from an all-female community, and there are only two named male characters in the book (only one of whom plays any significant role)."
all-female, disability, Mobility 2009 YA

Rebel
by R J Anderson

Series: Faery Rebel
Book 2 of 3
The faeries of the Oak are dying, and it’s up to a lone faery named Linden to find a way to restore their magic. Linden travels bravely into dangerous new territory, where she enlists the help of an unlikely friend—a human named Timothy. Soon they discover something much worse than the Oakenfolk’s loss of magic: a potent evil that threatens the fate of all faeries. In a fevered, desperate chase across the country, Timothy and Linden risk their lives to seek an ancient power before it’s too late to save everyone they love.
Author Comment: " "Race" applies because the faery heroine of the book is mixed-race (her mother is black) and encounters racial prejudice for the first time in the story. "Disability" applies because a secondary character introduced in the second half of the story has a spinal cord injury and uses a wheelchair; another character also experiences intermittent and debilitating muscle spasms."
race, disability, Black, Multiracial 2010 YA

Arrow
by R J Anderson

Series: Faery Rebel
Book 3 of 3
Rhosmari has lived her whole life on a sheltered chain of faery islands. But with the Empress's power growing, and her desire to enslave the entire faery race becoming a reality, Rhosmari knows she must fight back.
"Disability" applies because a significant secondary character has a spinal cord injury and uses a wheelchair for mobility. Another character is injured and develops intermittent muscle spasms in the course of the story.
disability, Moblity, Injury 2011 YA

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