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Posted By: delbows Adolescent Literature - 10/23/06 01:43 PM
Our 12yo is an avid reader and our 10yo is a voracious reader. Here are some less commonly mentioned books and authors that may be of interest to your kids as well. I would appreciate recommendations from you all for books that your children love in the 5th-8th grade level (important because of subject and content).

�Alex Rider� series by Anthony Horowitz
�Pendragon� series by D.J. MacHale
�Percy Jackson and the Olympians� series or trilogy (two are out so far)

�Stormbreaker�, the first book of the �Alex Rider� series is currently in theaters. We saw it two weekends ago. I thought there would be a line out the door like a Harry Potter movie, but there were only a dozen or so people in the audience. I haven�t read the book, but I loved the movie! It�s not a low budget film and is very well done! I highly recommend it for family night.
Posted By: delbows Re: Adolescent Literature - 10/23/06 01:47 PM
Sorry, I forgot to include the author for the Olympians series.

Rick Riordan
Posted By: Ania Re: Adolescent Literature - 10/30/06 10:03 AM
I am crazy about books for kids/teens, well, books in general!
Last week our local independent bookstore hosted a midnight madness sale. We were all thrilled.
Some of the interesting books that I have picked up and that were recommended to us :
Sophie's World (A Novel About the History of Philosophy) by Jostein Gaarder (Norwegian)
City of the Beasts and Kingdom of the Golden Dragon by Isabel Allende - didn't even know that she writes for kids!
If you are not afraid about talking to your kids about death, have them read Oscar and the Lady in Pink by Eric - Emmanuel Schmitt. Kas read it when he was 10 and loved it! It's a tiny book, takes probably less than an hour.
As you can see, I am big on translations.
Will keep you posted about more. Books are my life!
Ania
Posted By: delbows Re: Adolescent Literature - 11/11/06 04:30 PM
Ania,
Last night I bought City of the Beasts by Isabel Allende to put under the tree. Thanks for the lead. It looks like one my kids will really like.
Diana
Posted By: Ania Re: Adolescent Literature - 01/18/07 03:16 AM
Two books by Blue Balliett:
Chasing Vermeer and The Wright 3.
I read only book #1 and thought it was great, especially great for gifted kids. Ms. Balliett used to be or still is a teacher at the gifted school.
Also, if you have a girl who plays violin, who has some jewish blood in her, get The Mozart Season by Virginia Euwer Wolff. I could not put it down. Even my mathematically gifted middle school age son enjoyed this book. And it made him want to practice violin more! ( a very, very positive bonus I might add)
Ania
Posted By: Ania Re: Adolescent Literature - 02/09/07 08:52 PM
My nine year old daughter is really into Shakespeare. Through Scholastic we have purchased Shakespeare's Secret by Elise Broach. It is a well written mystery that explores (a little) an idea that maybe Shakespeare was not really Shakespeare.
Also available through Scholastic, I really recommend Tales from Shakespeare retold by Tina Packer. Nice edition that retells 10 plays, each illustrated by a different artist.
Candlewick Press has produced Shakespeare's Globe, an interactive pop up theatre - she and her friends love to play with it.
Ania
Posted By: ams Re: Adolescent Literature - 02/17/07 08:07 AM
My YS sons, 13 & 17 don't care much for reading. The older one, however was assigned to read "The Count of Monte Cristo," by Dumas. We all became captivated by this story that involves very little violence, but lots of well thought out revenge. Seventeen yr old says it's the best book he's ever read...tho not in those words...
Posted By: Galaxy Girl Re: Adolescent Literature - 02/18/07 08:22 PM
Just want to say thanks to everyone who lists titles and authors here. Let's keep adding to it!

Ania, I plan to get The Mozart Season for DD12 who plays violin. Thanks for the recommendation.

Some books DD12 recently read and enjoyed:

The Devil's Arithmetic, by Jane Yolen (sad and powerful)
Julie of the Wolves, by Jean Craighead George
The Goose Girl & Enna Burning, both by Shannon Hale
The Two Princesses of Bamarre, by Gail Carson Levine
Elsewhere* by Gabrielle Zevin

*Elsewhere is interesting for its concept of life after death. A 15-year-old girl dies and goes to "Elsewhere," a place similar to Earth, where people age backward (from whatever age they were when they died on Earth) until they become babies and are reborn again on Earth. DD12 really liked this one. (Parents might want to read this one first for content, as it is geared towards more of a teenage/young adult audience.)



Posted By: Ania Re: Adolescent Literature - 05/03/07 06:48 PM
Summer is upon us and books recommendations are again in order :-)
Some of the books that have been recently "inhaled" by our family:

Uglies by Scott Westerfeld (part one of a trilogy, it is about a girl but my DS LOVED it. It is followed by Pretties and then, i believe, Perfect.

Pirate's Passage by William Gilkerson . This book picked up Governor General's Literary Award (Canada)

Raven's Gate by Anthony Horowitz (Alex Rider author)

Robinson Cruzoe by Daniel Defoe - took DS a while to finish this one but he perserveered. I believe this to be one of the first, if not the first, novels to be written in English.

This school year I hosted a bookclub for grades K-4. Since this was totally my baby, I chose to do children's literature in translation. I picked the books that I knew and enjoed reading as a child:
Pipi Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren
The Book of Coupons by Susie Morgenstern
The Snow Queen By Andersen
Nicholas by Sempe
Finn Family Moomintrol by Tove Jansson
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint Exupery
The Thief Lord by Cornelia Funke
Children of Noisy Village again by Lindgren

My DD10 wants to host a booklub for her girl friends over the summer. The first read will be Ann of Green Gables.
Do you have any recommendations for other books that might be enjoyed by 10 year old girls (my daughter reads at 8 grade level but not all of her friends are). Something less main stream would be great!
Thanks, Ania
Posted By: Jill Re: Adolescent Literature - 05/03/07 06:58 PM
How about

About a boy, but I loved the book at that age:
Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls

Silly, light, not very difficult:
Bunnicula or anything by James Howe

For fantasy lovers:
The Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula LeGuin
The Hobbit by Tolkien

Jill

Posted By: Ania Re: Adolescent Literature - 08/21/07 02:21 AM
Hi Guys:
While stressing about the 7th grade I found this list

http://www.pwcs.edu/beville/IB/IBMYP%20Documents/IBMYP_SummerReading07.pdf

I liked it because it provided different books for girls and boys.

Ania
Posted By: Lorel Re: Adolescent Literature - 08/24/07 10:43 PM
The third Percy Jackson book came out a couple months ago. My kids and I love this series! Other good middle schoolish reads are :

Ida B.-
Millicent Min: Girl Genius- Lisa Yee
Circle of Magic by Tamora Pierce (some of her other works may be a bit mature for ten year olds, but I have allowed my 10 yo son to read them)
The Young Royals series- Carolyn Meyer
The Bartimaeus Trilogy- Jonathan Stroud
The Bromilead Trilogy- Terry Pratchett

We recently gifted a young friend with the two Blue Balliett books, and accompanied them with a set of pentominoes, a Mike Venezia "Getting to Know the World's Greatest Artists" book on Vermeer, and a Frank Lloyd Wright paper Robie house model. I think it went over well!
Posted By: delbows Re: Adolescent Literature - 08/29/07 09:36 PM
I should post here more often as my son reads at least a book per week. He usually reads two at a time.

I liked to share the title of a book that DS10.9 bought last night. He was actually somewhat shaking with excitement as he waited to pay for it because it was a complete surprise to him that a sequel to a favorite book was expected.

�The Land of the Silver Apples� By Nancy Farmer

It is the sequel to �The Sea of Trolls�


He said that he learned quite a bit about Norse mythology from the first book.




Posted By: Ania Re: Adolescent Literature - 08/30/07 05:47 AM
Ghost is crazy right now about anything written by Clive Cussler.
5th grade daughter finished recently Watership Down and today started reading All Things Great and Small. She wants to read it for a 5th grade book report.LOL. Can you beat that?
(she wants to be a vet!!!)
Posted By: cym Re: Adolescent Literature - 08/31/07 09:57 PM
My 9 yo son loves the Warrior series by Erin Hunter. After the first six there is another Warrior series (The New Prophesy) that he's just starting.

My 11 yo son loved "The Takers"- the first in a trilogy by R.W. Ridley. He doesn't read a lot, so when he devoured that I had to run out and get the second one: "Delon City". He was reading it today in the carpool.

My 13 yo reads everything--can't keep track. Currently he's reading "Cabin Pressure" by Josh Walk.
Posted By: delbows Re: Adolescent Literature - 11/05/07 06:14 PM
Hi,
My son has just read the first two books of the �Angle Experiment� series by James Patterson.

�Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment�

�Maximum Ride: School's Out � Forever�
(He finished this one in two days!)

We just ordered �Maximum Ride: Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports�. He can�t wait.

He is also currently reading the �Odyssey� by Homer, but I think I will order a different translation. I have heard that the Fagles translation is excellent.
Posted By: Grinity Re: Adolescent Literature - 11/05/07 06:26 PM
Ds11 and I enjoyed the Maximum Ride group. If your son is reading the Odyssey, he'll probably also enjoy the Percy Jackson series, which DS and I just finished. Let me know what you find as far as Odyssey translations because there is so interest in DS now. He is even forming a guild on World of Warcraft based on the Olympian Gods.

Trin
Posted By: Jenafur Re: Adolescent Literature - 11/06/07 11:50 PM
For those of you with little ones, DS3 has been crazy for any of the Magic School Bus picture books (Author is Joanna Cole). I enjoy reading them to him and learn from them also.(they make chapter books also, we have read one about bats that he seemed to also enjoy.)
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