Here we round up new and forthcoming children’s titles, including a book highlighting the fallout from a high schooler’s bigoted social media account, a YA tale about a young woman chasing superheroes across the globe, a picture book dilemma surrounding a box of new crayons, a YA retelling of “Sleeping Beauty” set in a world where one’s appearance dictates status, and more.

Accountable: The True Story of a Racist Social Media Account and the Teenagers Whose Lives It Changed by Dashka Slater. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $20.99; ISBN 978-0-374-31434-7. Slater chronicles the fallout of a high schooler’s bigoted Instagram account via interviews from the individuals who experienced the event, while documenting mediation attempts and student protests against the account and its owner.

Actually Super by Adi Alsaid. Knopf, $18.99; ISBN 978-0-5933-7580-8. Struggling against the idea that the world is consumed by evil rather than good, 18-year-old Isabel searches the globe for sightings of rumored superhumans, in this new YA novel by the author of Let’s Get Lost.

The Brand-New, Never-Used, Perfect Crayons by Leanne Hatch. Holiday House/Ferguson, $18.99; ISBN 978-0-8234-5230-9. When Violet receives a box of brand-new crayons, she worries about ruining their perfection by using them.

Creeping Beauty by Andrea Portes. HarperTeen, $19.99; ISBN 978-0-06-242247-7. In this retelling of “Sleeping Beauty,” a prick of her finger sends Princess Bitsy to a discriminatory alternate reality where looks determine one’s status. There, she must challenge the realm’s mysterious, tyrannical ruler if she hopes to survive and return home.

Foxglove by Adalyn Grace Little, Brown, $19.99; ISBN 978-0-316-16250-0. In the sequel to Belladonna, the only way for Signa to save her friend from wrongful imprisonment is to engage with Fate, even if he triggers frightening new powers that Signa battles to control.

Forty Words for Love by Aisha Saeed. Kokila, $18.99; ISBN 978-0-593-32646-6. This new YA novel from the author of Amal Unbound follows Raf on the night he plans to tell his best friend Yas about his true feelings for her. But instead he stumbles upon a dead body that shakes up their entire town.

Give by Jen Arena, illus. by Rahele Jomepour Bell. Knopf, $18.99; ISBN 978-1-5247-1499-4. One act of kindness sparks a domino effect of compassion among a group of schoolchildren as they show the importance of being willing to share with one another.

Just Do This One Thing for Me by Laura Zimmerman. Dutton, $19.99; ISBN 978-0-593-53033-7. Seventeen-year-old Drew is used to her unreliable mother’s requests for her to do “just one more thing” for her. When she receives a text alongside an appeal to babysit her siblings, Drew almost obliges, until she discovers her mother’s dead body and fears who is demanding favors.

Rewind by Lisa Graff. Philomel, $17.99; ISBN 978-1-5247-3862-4. On the day of her town’s Time Hop fashion show, a party thrown every June to commemorate a single year in history, sixth grader McKinley sneaks out with her grandmother to attend, only to accidentally get stuck in 1993.

Stickler Loves the World by Lane Smith. Random House Studio, $18.99 40p ISBN 978-0-5936-4983-1. Stickler, a character in one of Smith’s previous works, A Gift for Nana, gives a tour to a mysterious visitor, pointing out his beloved surroundings. The picture book received a starred review from PW.

Tessa Miyata Is No Hero by Julie Abe. Little, Brown, $16.99; ISBN 978-0-3164-4852-9. While visiting her grandparents in Japan, Tessa Miyata notices strange occurrences around the delicate antique she’s supposed to deliver, and learns that it was bound to the spirit of a thousand-year-old samurai lord. When the case breaks, Tessa must do whatever it takes to save Tokyo from the escaped lord.

These Olive Trees by Aya Ghanameh. Viking, $18.99; ISBN 978-0-5935-2518-0. Young Oraib and her family care for the beautiful olive trees near their refugee camp. When the Palestinian family must flee due to a looming war, Oraib worries about the future of the trees, and resolves to ensure that they endure.

Unexpecting by Jen Bailey. Wednesday, $20; ISBN 978-1-250-78094-2. After having sex with his best friend Maxie to solidify questions surrounding his sexuality, Bailey must navigate their friendship when Maxie winds up pregnant.

The Walking School Bus by Aaron Friedland and Ndileka Mandela, illus. by Andrew Jackson Obol, afterword by Julian Lennon. Greystone Kids, $18.95; ISBN 978-1-77164-469-3. Shaka and Nandi’s father can no longer walk them to school, so together the siblings come up with a community-based idea that will transport them.

Water Day by Margarita Engle, illus. by Olivia Sua. Atheneum, $18.99; ISBN 978-1-665-91871-8. A small town with little access to water celebrates when the deliveryman arrives with water for everyone, in this new picture book by the Cuban American poet and author.

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