Hitting shelves next week are a picture book about a goldfish crossing over, a middle grade novel about an orphan seeking her origins, and a YA novel set in the world of a bestselling series.

The One Memory of Flora Banks by Emily Barr. Philomel, $15.99; ISBN 978-0-399-54701-0. In her first book for teens, British author Barr creates a realistic portrayal of the protagonist’s amnesia through her repetitive and confused first-person narration.

Mr. Tanner by Harry Chapin, illus. by Bryan Langdo. Ripple Grove (SPU, dist.), $17.99; ISBN 978-0-9913866-8-0. The late singer-songwriter Chapin’s 1976 song “Mr. Tanner” gets a picture-book adaptation that softens some of the song’s melancholy (though not much).

Kill All Happies by Rachel Cohn. Disney-Hyperion, $17.99; ISBN 978-1-4231-5722-9. In the latest YA novel from Cohn, one teen has big plans to connect with her longtime crush and bring down her arch nemesis at her graduation night party.

The Black Witch by Laurie Ann Forest. Harlequin Teen, $19.99; ISBN 978-0-373-21231-6. In this tale of rebellion and star-crossed romance, 17-year-old Elloren Gardner, the granddaughter of a powerful Mage known as the Black Witch, is expected to fulfill a legendary prophecy but she possesses no magic. The book earned a starred review from PW.

Cinnamon by Neil Gaiman, illus. by Divya Srinivasan. Harper, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-06-239961-8. In this picture book, Cinnamon, the heroine of this Just So–style story, lives in a magnificent palace, wears an orange sari, and has pearls for eyes, “which gave her great beauty, but meant she was blind.” Cinnamon doesn’t talk, and her parents, the Rajah and Rani, offer gifts to those who can get her to speak. All fail until a tiger appears.

Real Friends by Shannon Hale, illus. by LeUyen Pham. First Second, $12.99; ISBN 978-1-62672-785-4. Hale’s childhood struggles with friends and family come to achingly poignant life in this candid graphic memoir. The book earned a starred review from PW.

A Face Like Glass by Frances Hardinge. Abrams/Amulet, $19.95; ISBN 978-1-4197-2484-8. An amnesiac girl named Neverfell is thrust into court politics she can’t begin to understand in this complex and claustrophobic novel, originally published in the U.K. in 2012. The book earned a starred review from PW.

Peterrific by Victoria Kann. Harper, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-06-256356-9. Peter, younger brother to the star of Kann’s Pinkalicious books, moves to center stage in this spin-off.

The Lost Kingdom of Bamarre by Gail Carson Levine. Harper, $16.99; ISBN 978-0-06-207466-9. A prequel to Levine’s The Two Princesses of Bamarre, this middle grade novel draws on elements of that book, including appearances from the fabled hero Drualt and the magical “seven league” boots, but is set generations earlier.

Invisible Emmie by Terri Libenson. HarperCollins/Balzer + Bray, $10.99; ISBN 978-0-06-248493-2. In her first children’s book, cartoonist Libenson (The Pajama Diaries) offers strikingly different visions of seventh grade through two very dissimilar narrators.

A Court of Wings and Ruin by Sarah J. Maas. Bloomsbury, $18.99; ISBN 978-1-61963-448-0. In the third and final volume in Maas’s bestselling series, war looms over the court.

Ramona Blue by Julie Murphy. HarperCollins/Balzer + Bray, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-06-241835-7. In Dumplin’ author Murphy’s latest YA novel, there are two things protagonist Ramona knows: she likes girls, and she’s the responsible one in her family, especially now that her sister, Hattie, is pregnant.

Gabby Garcia’s Ultimate Playbook by Iva-Marie Palmer, illus. by Marta Kissi. HarperCollins/Tegen, $12.99; ISBN 978-0-06-239180-3. From the opening pages of her story, baseball-obsessed seventh-grader Gabby Garcia makes it clear that her book is not a diary but a playbook, because “playbooks are how you make things happen.”

If You Ever Want to Bring a Circus to the Library, Don’t! by Elise Parsley. Little, Brown, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-316-37661-7. In this third picture book in the series, Magnolia cautions readers about the dangers of circus-library commingling.

Crazy House by James Patterson and Gabrielle Charbonnet. LB/Patterson, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-316-43131-6. In this dystopian thriller, set in the not-too-distant future, twin sisters discover that their peaceful existence in a strictly regimented farming community is a lie and struggle to survive against overwhelming odds.

The Adventures of John Blake: Mystery of the Ghost Ship by Philip Pullman, illus. by Fred Fordham. Graphix/Fickling, $19.99; ISBN 978-1-338-14912-8. In this middle grade graphic novel, young Serena Henderson, washed overboard when a storm hits her family’s sailboat, is saved by John Blake, a mysterious teenager aboard a time-traveling ghost ship called the Mary Alice.

The Dark Prophecy by Rick Riordan. Disney-Hyperion, $19.99; ISBN 978-1-4847-4642-4. In the second volume of the Trials of Apollo series, Zeus punishes Apollo by sending him to Earth as a gawky teenager.

From Percy Jackson: Camp Half-Blood Confidential: Your Real Guide to the Demigod Training Camp by Rick Riordan. Disney-Hyperion, $9.99; ISBN 978-1-4847-8555-3. The book poses as Percy Jackson’s response to a boring training video at Camp Half-Blood.

House of Furies by Madeleine Roux. HarperTeen, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-06-249861-8. It’s 1809 in Malton, England, and Louisa Rose Ditton barely scrapes by telling fortunes in the market. When an old woman approaches Louisa with an offer of employment and a warm bed, she is soon on her way to Coldthistle House, “a place for the wayward and lost.”

Dragons Love Tacos 2: The Sequel by Adam Rubin, illus. by Daniel Salmieri. Dial, $18.99; ISBN 978-0-525-42888-6. In this picture book sequel, the world is out of tacos, and two dinosaurs set out to solve the problem.

Worlds Book 1: The Sand Warrior by Mark Siegel and Alexis Siegel, illus. by Xanthe Bouma, Matt Rockefeller, and Boya Sun. Random House, $12.99; ISBN 978-1-101-93588-0. This new interplanetary graphic novel series explores issues of race, class, and scarcity. The book earned a starred review from PW.

Windfall by Jennifer E. Smith. Delacorte, $18.99; ISBN 978-0-399-55937-2. In this YA novel, Teddy has had to deal with a gambling addict father, who drained the family’s bank account before abandoning them. But on his 18th birthday, Teddy’s luck changes when best friend Alice buys him a winning lottery ticket.

Goldfish Ghost by Lemony Snicket, illus. by Lisa Brown. Roaring Brook/Porter, $17.99; ISBN 978-1-62672-507-2. “Goldfish Ghost was born on the surface of the water in a bowl on the dresser in a boy’s room,” writes Snicket (The Dark) at the outset of this melancholic looking-for-friendship story, using the fish’s off-screen death as a new beginning.

Thick as Thieves by Megan Whalen Turner. Greenwillow, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-06-256824-3. Even minor characters in Turner’s Queen’s Thief saga have stories to tell, as the author proves in this fifth installment, seven years in the making. The book earned a starred review from PW.

The Pearl Thief by Elizabeth Wein. Hyperion, $18.99; ISBN 978-1-4847-1716-5. In this prequel to Code Name Verity, in 1938, Lady Julia Beaufort-Stuart, 15, returns from boarding school for one last idyllic summer at her late grandfather’s Scottish estate, which has been sold to pay his medical bills. The book earned a starred review from PW.

Spill Zone by Scott Westerfeld, illus. by Alex Puvilland. First Second, $22.99; ISBN 978-1-59643-936-8. In the first volume of a new graphic novel series from Westerfeld, characters fight to survive in a dystopian version of Poughkeepsie.

The Good for Nothing Button by Mo Willems. Disney-Hyperion, $9.99; ISBN 978-1-4847-2646-4. In the latest early reader from the Elephant and Piggie Like Reading! series, three birds discover a strange button.

Clayton Byrd Goes Underground by Rita Williams-Garcia. Amistad, $16.99; ISBN 978-0-06-221591-8. In this slim novel, a boy processes grief through playing music. The book earned a starred review from PW.

Way of the Warrior Kid: From Wimpy to Warrior the Navy SEAL Way by Jockio Willink, illus. by Jon Bozak. Feiwel and Friends, $16.99; ISBN 978-1-250-15107-0. Marc had a terrible year in fifth grade: he can’t swim or do pull-ups, doesn’t know his multiplication tables, and is being terrorized by school bully Kenny. But Marc’s uncle Jake, a Navy SEAL, will be spending the summer with Marc and his mother, and once he arrives, he begins training Marc to be a “Warrior Kid.” The training is both physical and mental, and chapters are dedicated to principles such as living by a code, early morning workouts, and discipline.

Beyond the Bright Sea by Lauren Wolk. Dutton, $16.99; ISBN 978-1-101-99485-6. Newbery Honor–winner Wolk (Wolf Hollow) tells a tale about an orphan determined to find her roots, set in the 1920s. The book earned a starred review from PW.

Morris Mole by Dan Yaccarino. Harper, $17.99; ISBN 978-0-06-241107-5. Yaccarino (I Am a Story) highlights the power of kindness and daring to go against the grain in this picture book about a small, dapper mole who doesn’t fit in with his larger, burlier brothers.

For more children’s and YA titles on sale throughout the month of May, check out PW’s full On-Sale Calendar.