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Summer Reading List Grades 6 - 8 2007 |
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| 2006 Summer Reading List | ||
LAKEWOOD MIDDLE SCHOOLS
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Dear Parent or Guardian:
This summer, all future 6th – 8th grade students have a required reading assignment over the summer months.
• Why? Everyone in our district believes that reading is an enjoyable and educational experience that can easily be treasured over the summer months. Adolescents deserve specific opportunities to schedule reading into their days. Parents, teachers, and librarians need to help teens find time to read in their busy lives. We encourage you to sit down over the summer and read a book with your teen.• All students must read one book this summer. After reading, students will have a choice for their assignment. Listed below are the two assignment options. Students should choose one assignment and complete it before school starts. Students should bring their assignment with them to school at turn it in to their language arts teacher before Friday, September 7, 2007.
Assignment Option A:
• Read one of the books on the attached list (110 books to choose from) and complete three journal writings while reading. This assignment can be hand-written or typed. Choose three of the paragraph starters listed below and respond to each one in a well-developed paragraph. You should respond in writing three times during the reading of the book.
• Paragraph Starters (choose three different starters):
I was surprised when…/angry about…/satisfied with…/moved by…
I liked the way the author …
I noticed how the author …
I don’t understand why the author …
If I were the author, I would have …
I’d compare this author to …
This book reminds me of …
I’d say the theme of this book is …
I wish that …
I didn't agree with …
I understood …
I didn't understand …
Why did …?Assignment Option B:
• Read one of the books from the list below and participate in a book discussion (at Lakewood Public Library – Madison Branch):
Books must be read before the program to participate. To register, please stop in the library or call 216-226-8275, Ext. 140.
You must register and participate in the book discussion to receive credit.Madison Library 7:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. in the Children’s and Youth Services Dept.
Tuesday, July 24 Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer Thursday, July 26 The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan Tuesday, July 31 The Tiger Rising by Kate DiCamillo Thursday, August 2 Surviving the Applewhites by Stephanie S. Tolan Tuesday, August 7 Son of the Mob by Gordon Korman Thursday, August 9 Sammy Keyes and the Hotel Thief by W. Van Draanen Tuesday, August 14 When Zachary Beaver Came to Town by Kimberly Willis Holt Thursday, August 16 Hole in My Life by Jack Gantos
Grading• Students will be graded on the assignment based upon following the above instructions. This grade will count for up to ten percent of your student’s first marking period grade in language arts.
How to Obtain the Required Books
• The Lakewood Public Library and other libraries should have copies of the required books on hand.
• Three bookstores: Liberty Books (216-458-5860) in Beach Cliff, Rocky River, Barnes & Noble (440-250-9233) in Crocker Park, Westlake and Borders (440-892-7667) in the Promenade Shopping Center, Westlake, have been notified of the required reading assignments and should have copies on hand.Thank you for your help and cooperation! We hope that you have a great summer and that your student enjoys his/her reading activity.
Sincerely,
Middle School Language Arts Teachers
Lakewood City Schools
Books are arranged alphabetically. Students and parents should choose the summer reading books together, keeping in mind the reading and maturity level of the student — along with his/her interests.
Going on a vacation? Take a book on tape/CD along with you. The symbolindicates that the title is available on CD or cassette at the Lakewood Public Library. Books with an asterisk * are book discussion titles.
An
Acquaintance With Darkness - Ann Rinaldi
At the end of the Civil War, fourteenyear-old Emily Pigbush is orphaned
and makes plans to live with her good friend, Annie Surrat, until Annie’s
mother is arrested for her suspected role in the assassination of President
Lincoln. Emily must go to live with an uncle she suspects of being involved
in stealing bodies for medical research. (**ALA Best Book for Young Adults)
*Artemis
Fowl - Eoin Colfer
Twelve-year-old Artemis Fowl is the most ingenious criminal mastermind in history.
With two trusty sidekicks in tow, he hatches a cunning plot to divest the fairy-folk
of their pot of gold. ![]()
Artemis
Fowl: The Arctic Incident - Eoin Colfe
Book two in the series ![]()
Artemis
Fowl: The Eternity Code - Eoin Colfer
Book three in the series.
![]()
American
Born Chinese
- Gene Luen Yang
All Jin Wang wants is to
fit in. When his family moves to a new neighborhood, he suddenly finds that
he's the only Chinese-American student at his school. Jocks and bullies pick
on him constantly, and he has hardly any friends. Then, to make matters worse,
he falls in love with an all-American girl. (Graphic novel)
Blackwater
- Eve Bunting
Summer stretches lazily
before 13-year-old Brodie Lynch as he contemplates a canoe trip with his buddies
and a possible date with Pauline. Then, with one early morning, during a swimming
event in the Blackwater River, Brodie’s life spirals out of control.
Born
to Rock - Gordon Korman
Leo Caraway is on
the fast track to six figures: President of the Young Republicans, 4.0 GPA and
an early acceptance to Harvard. Then he learns that his biological father is
none other than Marian X. McMurphy, aka King Maggot, the lead singer of Purge,
the most popular, destructive punk rock band ever. When an unfair cheating accusation
gets his scholarship pulled, Leo ends up as a roadie for the band trying to
get tuition money for Harvard.
The
Canning Season - Polly Horvath
One night out of
the blue, Ratchet Clark’s ill-natured mother tells her that Ratchet will
be leaving their Pensacola apartment momentarily to take the train up north.
There she will spend the summer with her aged relatives Penpen and Tilly, inseparable
twins who couldn’t look more different from each other. (National Book
Award Winner)
The Chosen - Chaim
Potok
In 1940s Brooklyn,
New York, an accident throws Reuven Malther and Danny Saunders together. Despite
their differences (Reuven is a Modern, Orthodox Jew with an intellectual, Zionist
father; Danny is the brilliant son and rightful heir to a Hasidic rebbe), the
young men form a deep, if unlikely, friendship.
Cirque
du Freak
- Darren Shan
The story is the compelling saga of a young boy's journey into a dark world
of vampires. Filled with grotesque creatures, murderous vampires, and an unexpected
ending. Cirque du Freak will chill, thrill and leave readers begging
for more. (Series)
Cool
Stuff and How it Works - Chris Woodford
Cool illustrations
and explanations feature such things as iPods, digital cameras, MP3 players,
neon lights, appliances, medicines, how fireworks explode and much more. (Non-fiction)
Criss
Cross - Lynne Ray Perkins
Debbie, who wishes
that something would happen so she'll be a different person, and Hector, who
feels he is unfinished, narrate most of the novel. Both are 14 years old. The
descriptive, measured writing includes poems, prose, haiku, and question-and-answer
formats. (Newbery Medal Book)
Dairy
Queen - Catherine Gilbert Murdock
D.J. Schwenk is no
ordinary milkmaid. Is the farm-girl turned football player prepared for the
reactions of others when she decides to try out the all-male high school football
team?
Day
of Tears - Julius Lester
Emma has taken care of the Butler children since Sarah and Frances's
mother, Fanny, left. Emma wants to raise the girls to have good hearts, as a
rift in morals has ripped the Butler household apart: Sarah and their mother
oppose the inhumanity of slavery, while Frances and their father, Pierce, believe
in the Southern lifestyle and treatment of blacks.
Death
and the Arrow - Chris Priestly
Fifteen-year-old
Tom Marlowe, and the rest of London, is fascinated by a string of murders: People
are being killed with arrows shot from above, and each victim has a “Death
and Arrow” card with him. Danger and intrigue abound, especially when
Tom’s friend, a young pickpocket, is also found murdered.
Dragon's
Gate - Lawrence Yep
A teenage Chinese boy named
Otter lives with his Mother while his Uncle Foxfire and Father go to "The
Land of the Golden Mountain,” also known as America, to help build a transcontinental
railroad.
Dreaming.
Volume 1 - Queenie
Chan
Twin sisters, Amber and Jeanie, attend a boarding school where students have
been known to mysteriously vanish.
Echohawk - Lynda Durrant
A twelve-year-old white boy, adapted and raised by Mohicans in the Hudson River
Valley during the 1730’s, is sent with his younger brother to an English
settlement for schooling.
Emperor’s
Silent Army: Terracotta Warriors of Ancient China - Jane O’Connor
The author describes
the archaeological discovery of thousands of life-sized terra cotta warrior
statues in northern China in 1974, and discusses the emperor who had them created
and placed near his tomb. (Nonfiction j931 O'Connor)
Fever
1793
- Laurie Halse
Anderson
Yellow fever is sweeping
through Philadelphia, and for young Mattie, the epidemic begins with the sudden
death of a friend. This book is a portrayal of a fascinating and terrifying
time in American history.
Free
Radical - Claire Rudolf Murphy
A 15-year-old boy in contemporary Alaska discovers that his mom is a fugitive,
hiding out from the FBI because of her part in an anti-Vietnam War protest at
Berkeley that accidentally killed a college student. Luke is even more upset
to learn that she plans to turn herself in.
Firestorm
- David Klass
Jack is just your regular high school
student, or so he thinks, until he discovers that he has been sent from the
future to save our planet.
The
Flag of Childhood: Poems from the Middle East - Naomi Shihab Nye
In this exciting
collection of poems from the Middle East, honored writer Naomi Shihab Nye welcomes
us to this lush, vivid world and beckons us to explore. Powerful pieces from
Palestine, Israel, Egypt, Iraq, and elsewhere open windows into the hearts and
souls of people we usually meet only on the nightly news. (Nonfiction j808.8100835
Flag )
The
Forbidden Schoolhouse: The True and Dramatic Story of Prudence Crandall and
Her Students - Suzanne Jermain
They threw rocks and rotten eggs at the school windows. Villagers
refused to sell Miss Crandall groceries or let her students attend the town
church. Mysteriously, her schoolhouse was set on fire -- by whom and how remains
a mystery. The town authorities dragged her to jail and put her on trial for
breaking the law. Her crime? Trying to teach African American girls geography,
history, reading, philosophy, and chemistry. (Nonfiction -- Bccb Blue Ribbon
Nonfiction Book Award)
Fun!
Fun! Fun! - Weird Ohio: Your Travel Guide to Ohio's Local Legends and Best Kept
Secrets - Loren Coleman, Andy Henderson and James Willis
Looking for ideas of places to visit in Ohio this summer? This book for you
with its informational pages and fascinating local trivia. (Non-fiction)
Girl Coming in for a Landing:
a Novel in Poems - April Halprin Wayland
One girl. One school
year. All poems. From friends to first dates, school dances to family fights,
this inspiring collection captures the emotional highs and lows of teen life
with refreshing honesty and humor. (Nonfiction j811.54Wayland)
Gold
Dust - Chris Lynch
Through the
haze of his obsession with baseball, Richard Riley Montcreif only dimly hears
what his best friend in eighth grade, Napoleon Charlie Ellis, is trying to tell
him about what it’s like to be African-American.
Good
Brother, Bad Brother: The Story of Edwin Booth and John Wilkes Booth
-- James Cross Giblin
Edwin and John Wilkes
Booth each had a compelling stage presence and a fondness for alcohol, just
like their famous father, Junius. Edwin spent his life perfecting his craft
and building a reputation as the finest classical actor of his time. John was
impulsive, popular with the ladies, and best known today as the man who assassinated
Abraham Lincoln. (Boston Globe-Horn Honors Book)
Granny
Torrelli Makes Soup - Sharon Creech
With the help of
her wise old grandmother, twelve-year-old Rosie manages to work out some problems
in her relationship with her best friend, Bailey, the boy next door.
Gypsy
Rizka - Lloyd Alexander
Living alone in her
wagon on the outskirts of a small town white waiting for her father’s
return, Rizka, a Gypsy and a trickster, exposes the ridiculous foibles of some
of the townspeople.
Granny
Torrelli Makes Soup - Sharon Creech
With the help of
her wise old grandmother, twelve-year-old Rosie manages to work out some problems
in her relationship with her best friend, Bailey, the boy next door.
Heart
of a Champion - Carl Deuker
Seth and Jimmy have the kind of friendship you can't put into words--the kind
you think only happens in movies. They both live and breathe baseball, but while
Seth struggles to be good enough to make the varsity team, Jimmy, a natural,
looks like he's on his way to becoming a major league star some day. On and
off the field, their passion for the game gets them through some of life's bittersweet
struggles and unites them in a once in a lifetime friendship.
*Hole
in My Life - Jack Gantos
The author of the
Joey Pigza books relates his autobiography. How as a young adult he became a
drug user and smuggler, was arrested, did time in prison, and eventually got
out and went to college, all the while hoping to become a writer.
(Nonfiction biography)
Homeless
Bird - Gloria Whelan
In modern India, Koly at 13 is forced into an arranged marriage with a dying
boy. As a teenage widow, she finds herself abandoned by her mother-in-law in
the city where she must make a life for herself or die.
Hope
Was Here - Joan Bauer
Ever since her mother
left, Hope has, with her comfort- food-cooking aunt Addie, been serving up the
best in diner food from Pensacola to New York City.
(Newbery Honor Book)
House
of Scorpion - Nancy Farmer
For
six years, Matt has lived in a tiny cottage in the poppy fields with Celia,
a kind and deeply religious servant woman who is charged with his care and safety.
He knows little about his existence until he is discovered by a group of children
playing in the fields and wonders why he isn’t like them. He grows up
in the family’s mansion, alternately caged and despised as an animal and
pampered and educated as El Patron’s favorite. (Newbery Honor Book, National
Book Award Winner)
I
Am the Messenger
-- Markus Zusak
Meet
Ed Kennedy -- underage cabdriver, pathetic card player, and useless at romance.
He lives in a shack with his coffee-addicted dog, the Doorman, and he's hopelessly
in love with his best friend, Audrey. His life is one of peaceful routine and
incompetence, until he inadvertently stops a bank robbery. (Australian Children's
Book Council Book of the Year Award)
Into
Thin Air: A Personal Account of th Mount Everest Disaster
- Jon Krakauer
A survivor of the mountain's worst disaster examines the business of Mount Everest
and the steep price of ambition. (Non-fiction)
Jefferson’s
Children: The Story of One American Family - Shannon Lanier
"My name is
Shannon Lanier. I am a twenty-year-old descendant of Thomas Jefferson and slave
Sally Hemings." In this unusual photo-essay, Lanier explores his family
history and heritage, interviewing relatives he has known all his life and others
he has only recently discovered, including some of Jefferson’s descendants
through his marriage to Martha Wayles Jefferson. (Nonfiction j973.460922 Lanier)
Jimi
& Me - Jaime Adoff
Keith finds comfort in the music of Jimi Hendrix after his father is killed
and leaves Keith with unanswered questions.
Joey
Pigza Loses Control - Jack Gantos
Joey Pigza and his dog are spending the summer with his father and his grandmother.
His grandmother used to live with them, thus he knows about her. But his father
is a new entity. His mom says that his dad is just like him, only bigger. Joey
still isn't prepared for an adult who is wired. His dad does not stop talking.
And worse, watch out when he starts thinking! Carter is as hyperactive, or more,
as Joey was before he learned how to control his own ADD.
John
Lennon: All I Want is the Truth
- Elizabeth Partridge
Award-winning biographer Elizabeth Partridge dives into Lennon's life from the
night he was born in 1940 during a World War II air raid on Liverpool, cleverly
taking us through his turbulent childhood and his rebellious rock and roll teens
to his celebrated life writing, recording, and performing music with the Beatles.
She sheds light on the years after the Beatles, with Yoko Ono, as he struggled
to make sense of his own artistic life. (BCCB Blue Ribbon Nonfiction Book Award)
The
Journal of Scott Pendleton Collins: A World War II Soldier - Walter Dean
Myers
This is a journal about a sergeant in the army at Normandy, France during World
War II. He is eighteen in the book and because this is a journal, there are
journal entries instead of chapters. He talks about the Battle at Normandy and
what he thinks about killing the Germans. It is hard for him to kill others,
but he thinks it is right in this situation.
Kira-Kira
(Cynthia Kadohata)
Katie’s
first word is “kit-a-kit-a,” the Japanese word for ‘glittering,’
and she uses it to describe everything she likes. Both Katie and her older sister
have trouble adjusting when their parents move the family from Iowa to a small
town in rural Georgia, where they are among only 31 Japanese-Americans. They
seldom see their parents, who have grueling jobs in chicken-processing plants.
(Newbery Medal Book)
Kit’s
Wilderness - David Almond
Thirteen-year-old
Kit goes to live with his grandfather in the decaying coal mining town of Stoneygate,
England, and finds both the old man and the town haunted by ghosts of the past.
![]()
Last
Apprentice: Revenge of the Witch - Joseph Delaney
Tom Ward, seventh son of a seventh son, can hear ghosts and sense evil creatures.
Apprenticed to Spook as a monster hunter, Tom travels the country learning to
control supernatural beings.
Last
Shot: A Final Four Mystery - John Feinstein
For eighth graders Stevie Thomas and Susan Carol Anderson, March Madness has
never been so mad. Both kids are winners of a fourteen-and-under writing contest
sponsored by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association. The grand prizes have
won them trips to the Final Four. Not only will they get to watch the most thrilling
college basketball games of the year, but they'll also be considered working
journalists for the event. Little do they know, however, that they will end
up at the center of the most shocking and important story of all.
Letters
from Rifka - Karen Hesse
This book is an in-depth look at a 12 year old girl's struggle to get to America
from Russia. Her family had to flee Russia so her brothers would not be killed
because they fled their regiment in the Russian armed services. This story talks
about the issues addressed when immigrants are trying to get to America in the
early 1900s and the struggles Rifka must survive if she ever hopes to reach
America.
*The
Lightning Thief - Rick
Riordan
The hero, 12 year-old Percy Jackson, is far from your ordinary
Lily’s
Crossing - Patricia Reilly Giff
Elizabeth Mollahan
lost her mom when she was little. Her father and a grandmother are her only
family. Every summer the three of them flee sweaty New York City for a beach
house in New York’s Rockaways. ![]()
Listen!
- Stephanie S. Tolan
Does the stray dog hold the key to healing Charlie's broken body and spirit?
Lord
Loss
-- Darren Shan
Chock-full
of family curses, werewolf lore, and stomach-turning gore, Lord Loss
is exactly the kind of horror that Cirque Du Freak fans will love. This first
installment in a new series is still guaranteed to gross out anyone ages 12
to 20.
Lord
of the Deep - Graham Salisbury
Lord of the Deep
isn't just about deep-sea fishing, it’s about deep thinking and even deeper
feelings. Veteran young adult author Graham Salisbury has written a masterful
tale that astutely illustrates that almost indecipherable point in adolescence
when a boy becomes a man.
Make
Lemonade - Virginia Euwer Wolf
Living in the projects
but determined to be the first person in her family to go on to college, 14-year-old
LaVaughn takes a jab babysitting for Jolly, the teenage mother of two-year-old
Jeremy and baby Jilly, whose life is the epitome of disorganization. ![]()
Maximum
Ride: The Angel Experiment - James Patterson
Max, Fang, Iggy, Nudge, the Gasman and Angel. Six kids who are pretty normal
in most ways - except that they're 98 percent human, 2 percent bird. They grew
up in a lab, living like rats in cages, but now they're free. Aside, of course,
from the fact that they're prime prey for Erasers - wicked wolf like creatures
with a taste for flying humans.
Milkweed - Jerry
Spinelli
He's a boy who has lived on the streets of Warsaw as long as he can remember.
He remembers no name, other than Stopthief, no parents, no home. But he's small
and quick, so he manages to find enough to eat, and places to sleep -- until
the Nazis come. This book is about the Holocaust.
Mr. Chickee's Funny
Money - Christopher Paul Curtis
Mr. Othello Chickee is Steven's blind, elderly neighbor. Every Saturday morning
Steven accompanies Mr. Chickee to the grocery story to assist him with his shopping.
Usually Mr. Chickee pays Steven with Vernor's Ginger ale and a bag of potato
chops, but one day he gives Steven an envelope that contains a most unusual
piece of currency -- a quadrillion-dollar bill with a picture of singer James
Brown it.
New
Boy - Julian Houston
Rob is the first black student to attend an exclusive boarding school in the
late 1950s. But he wonders where he really belongs when the Civil Rights movement
begins to heat up in his Virginia hometown.
No
Pretty Pictures: A Child of War - Anita Lobel
Lobel, a well-known
illustrator of children's books, tells of her personal experiences during and
after World War II in this unforgettable Holocaust survivor story.
(Non-fiction)
On
the Run - Gordon Korman
Follow the adventures of Aidan and Meg Falconer as they try to stay one step
ahead of the authorities and a mysterious pursuer. (Series)
Phineas
Gage: A Gruesome but True Story About Brain Science - John Fleischman
When a thirteen-pound
iron rod was shot through his brain in 1848, Phineas Gage survived another eleven
years; yet, he “was no longer Gage,” and his case is still a fascination
and revelation to brain scientists today. (Nonfiction j362.197481044 Fleischman)
Poison
Ivy - Amy Goldman Koss
Three of the most popular girls in school stand trial for bullying a classmate.
Can a trial by peers really be fair and just?
Redwall - Brian Jacques
When the peaceful
life of ancient Redwall Abbey is shattered by the arrival of the evil rat Cluny
and his villainous hordes, Matthias, a young mouse, determines to find the legendary
sword of Martin the Warrior which, he is convinced, will help Redwall's inhabitants
destroy the enemy. ![]()
The
Rumplestiltskin Problem - Vivian Vande Velde
The “master
of the unexpected” points out the holes in the story of the girl who couldn't
spin straw into gold. Then, he retells the story in five different witty ways.
(Nonfiction j398.2094301 Vande)
Sabriel
- Garth Nix
Ever since she was tiny child, Sabriel has lived outside the walls of the Old
Kingdom, away from the random power of Free Magic, and away from the Dead who
won't stay dead. But now her father, the Mage Abhorsen, is missing and to find
him Sabriel must cross back into that world.
*
Sammy Keyes and the Hotel Thief - Wendelin Van Draanen
On Halloween night, middle school student Sammy stumbles onto a mystery involving
a twenty-year-old family feud and some heirlooms stolen by a man in a skeleton
costume. ![]()
Scalpels,
Stitches & Scars: A History of Surgery - John Townsend
This volume is one of a series of titles which look at various aspects of the
history of medicine. (Non-fiction)
The
Schwa Was Here - Neal Schusterman
The Schwa has the ability to be invisible to people. At first this power is
pretty exciting and used to make money, but then things turn for the worst.
Shark
Life: True Stories About Sharks and the Sea - Karen Wojtyla/Peter Benchley
Adapted from the book Shark Trouble by the author of Jaws,
experience high underwater adventure. Meet a great white, scratch a killer whale's
tongue and soar on a ride with a giant manta ray. (Non-fiction)
Shug
- Jenny Han
Shug wants her first kiss to taste like a cherry popsicle. Shug wants her friend
Mark to notice her more than one of the boys. So far nothing is going as planned.
A
Single Shard - Linda Sue Park
Tree-ear, a thirteen-year-old
orphan in medieval Korea, lives under a bridge in a potters’ village,
and longs to learn how to throw the delicate celadon ceramics himself.
(Newbery Award)
Skateboarding
is Not a Crime: 50 Years of Street Culture - James Davis
An illustrated tour of a unique subculture. Skateboarding first emerged in the
United States in the 1950s and has been gaining in popularity ever since. The
number of skateboarders worldwide is now estimated at eighteen million. One
in ten U.S. teenagers currently owns or rides a skateboard. (Non-fiction)
Skin
- Adrienne Marie Vrettos
Fourteen-year-old Donnie watches helplessly as his beloved sister starves herself
to death.
Slam!
- Walter Dean Myers
Sixteen-year-old
“Slam” Harris is counting on his noteworthy basketball talents to
get him out of the inner city and give him a chance to succeed in life. His
coach sees things differently.
*Son
of the Mob - Gordon Korman
Seventeen-year-old
Vince’s life is constantly complicated by the fact that he is the son
of a powerful Mafia boss, a relationship that threatens to destroy his romance
with the daughter of an FBI agent.
Speak
- Laurie Halse Anderson
A traumatic event
near the end of summer has devastating effect on Melinda's freshman year in
high school. (Mature themes)
A
Step From Heaven - An Na
When four-year-old Young
Ju and her parents emigrate from Korea to California by plane, the child, who
knows that God is in the sky, concludes that America is heaven. “A step
from heaven,” her uncle corrects her after they arrive. However, life
proves to be far from that for the family, which now includes a new baby. ![]()
Stormbreaker - Anthony Horowitz - When his guardian dies in suspicious circumstances, fourteen-year-old Alex Rider finds his world turned upside down. Forcibly recruited into MI6, Alex has to take part in SAS training exercises. Then, armed with his own special set of secret gadgets, he's off on his first mission to Cornwall, where Middle-Eastern multi-billionaire Herod Sayle is producing his state-of-the-art Stormbreaker computers. Sayle has offered to give one free to every school in the country - but there's more to the gift than meets the eye.
Stormwitch
- Susan Vaught
Ruba trained with her Haitian grandmother in both voodoo and Amazonian warrior
tactics. She moves to Mississippi in 1969 an needs these skills to fight racism
and a force of nature called the witch Zashar.
A
Summer of Kings - Han Nolan
Esther sees a chance for some excitement when her family takes in a black teen
fugitive who has been accused of killing a white man. However, King-Roy doesn't
believe that a black boy and white girl can be friends in 1963 in New York City.
Summerland
- Michael Chabon
Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Michael Chabon has created his own magical baseball landscape on which
to paint a sweeping fantasy sports quest, but mixes the ingredients--folklore
and new inventions--in a distinctively American way.
*Surviving
the Applewhites - Stephanie Tolan
Jake
Semple is notorious. Rumor has it he burned down his old school and got kicked
out of every school in his home state. Only one place will take him now, and
that’s a home school run by the Applewhites, a chaotic and hilarious family
of artists. The only one who doesn’t fit the Applewhite mold is ED. --
a smart, sensible girl who immediately clashes with the unruly lake. (Newbery
Honor Book)
The
Taker - J.M. Steele
When Carly bombs the SAT, she makes a shady pact with the mysterious "Taker."
Is admission to Princeton worth the price?
33
Things Every Girl Should Know About Women’s History - Tonya Bolden
This book uses poems,
essays, letters, photographs and more to present the actions and achievements
of women in the United States, from its beginnings up through the twentieth
century. (Nonfiction j305.40973 33)
*Tiger
Rising - Kate DiCamillo
After Rob’s
mother dies, he and his father move to a new town to get a fresh start, he discovers
a caged tiger in the woods. An emotionally rich story about a boy caught in
the powerful grip of grief.
Travel
Team - Mike Lupica
Twelve-year-old Danny Walker is an average kid who loves basketball. Despite
his small stature he hopes to someday play on the same travel team as his dad,
Richie Walker, who led the team to the national championship when he was Danny's
age.
True
Believer - Virginia
Euwer Wolff
The
sequel to Make Lemonade, True Believer is strong enough to stand alone. It is
the story of LaVaughn’s 15th year, her struggle to stay focused on getting
to college despite the heartbreak she sees around her and the distraction of
her own shifting relationships.
Twilight
- Stephanie Meyer
Isabella Swan's move to Forks, a small, perpetually rainy town in Washington,
could have been the most boring move she ever made. But once she meets the mysterious
and alluring Edward Cullen, Isabella's life takes a thrilling and terrifying
turn.
Under
the Baseball Moon - John H. Ritter
Andy is a skateboarder and aspiring musician. Glory is a promising softball
pitcher with Olympic dreams. Together they have music, baseball, dreams and
passion.
Vanishing
- Bruce Brooks
Eleven-year-old
Alice is unwilling to return to live with her alcoholic mother and her stern
stepfather, so she refuses to eat to the point of slowly starving herself, in
order to remain in the hospital.
The
Voice That Challenged a Nation: Marian Anderson and the Struggle for Equal Rights
- (Russell Freedman)
This
insightful account of the great African American vocalist considers her life
and musical career in the context of the history of civil rights in this country.
Drawing on Anderson’s own writings and other contemporary accounts, Russell
Freedman shows readers a singer pursuing her art despite the social constraints
that limited the careers of black performers in the 1920s and 1930s. (Bccb Blue
Ribbon Nonfiction Book Award)
Wabi:
A Hero's Tale - Joseph Bruchac
Is Wabi willing to undergo the ultimate transformation to win the heart of the
girl he loves?
Warrior
Heir - Cinda Williams Chima
Jack thinks he's an ordinary sixteen-year-old soccer player until one day when
he skips his medicine. He soon discovers that he is one of the last warriors
of the magical underground society of the Weir.
Warriors
- Erin Hunter
Rusty starts out as an ordinary house kitten, but his travels deep in to forest
involve him in the epic battle of the cat warrior clans who roam (and rule)
the wild. With a new name -- Firepaw-- and a position as a ThunderClan apprentice,
our feline hero faces his destiny, struggles with issues of friendship, honor,
courage, and betrayal, and learns what it truly means to be a warrior. (Series)
We
Beat the Street: How a Friendship Pact Led to Success -- Sampson Davis,
George Jenkins and Rameck Hunt
The Three Doctors, as the subjects of this book call both themselves, grew up
in a tough neighborhood in Newark, NJ. Davis remembers the hospital where he
later became an emergency-medicine physician as the same one where his foot
was treated after an incident when he was six. Hunt recalls first meeting Sampson
and Jenkins in ninth grade. Jenkins tells of the friends' success at moving
from high school to college. The book takes the young men through college and
medical school and into their careers. (Non-fiction)
Weedflower
- Cynthia Kadohata
After Pear Harbor is attacked, Sumiko and her Japanese-American family are forced
to leave their flower farm. They are relocated to an internment camp on a Mohave
Indian Reservation in Arizona.
Whale
Talk - Chris Crutcher
intellectually and athletically gifted, TJ, a multiracial, adopted teenager,
shuns organized sports and the gung-ho athletes at his high school until he
agrees to form a swimming team and recruits some of the school’s less
popular students.
*When
Zachary Beaver Came to Town - Kimberly Willis Holt
Summer in the tiny
Texas town of Antler is traditionally a time for enjoying Wylie Womack’s
Bahama Mama snow cones and racking up the pins at Kelly’s Bowl-a-Rama,
but this year its not going well for Toby Wilson. ![]()
Whittington
-- Alan Armstrong
A
battered tomcat named Whittington arrives one late-fall day at a New England
barn, where he gradually befriends the equally ragtag group of animals already
adopted by the barn's silent but soft-hearted owner, Bernie. When the year's
first big snowstorm traps the bored animals in the barn, Whittington begins
telling the story of his namesake, Dick Whittington, to an audience that grows
to include Bernie's parentless grandchildren. (Newbery Honor Book)
Who
Am I Without Him? Short Stories About Girls and the Boys in Their Lives
-- Sharon Flake
Written
in the language of urban African -American teens, which Flake captures flawlessly,
these 10 stories have universal themes and situations. Some are funny and uplifting
-- others, disturbing and sad. (Coretta Scott King Author Honor Books)
Who
the Man - Chris Lynch
When Earl
gets suspended from school for a week for fighting, he figures he’ll fill
up the days somehow. But a lot can happen in a week. His family is falling apart
and Earl is learning what it takes to be a man.
Wolf
Rider a Tale of Terror - Avi
After
receiving an apparent crank call from a man claiming to have committed murder,
fifteen-year-old Andy finds his close relationship with his father crumbling
as he struggles to make everyone believe him.
A
Year Down Yonder - Richard Peck
This book chronicles
the zany adventures of Grandma Dowdel and her granddaughter Mary Alice. Raised
in Chicago, Mary Alice is in for quite a shock when she finds herself sent to
live with her grandmother in a country town in 1937. ![]()
Z
For Zachariah - Robert C. O’Brien
Told in diary form,
this is a gripping story about the survivors of a nuclear holocaust. Seemingly
the only person left alive after a nuclear war, a sixteen-year-old girl is relieved
to see a man arrive in her valley until she realizes that he is a tyrant and
she must somehow escape.
Zazoo
- Richard Moser
One wispy October
dawn, a boy on a bike suddenly appeared on the canal. Then, just as quickly,
he was gone. Little did almost-14-year-old Zazoo know that this inquisitive,
bird-watching bicyclist would hold the key to her past and open a window to
the future as well.