
The Thief by Megan Whalen Turner |
Things are not what they seem in this
story of wit, adventure, and philosophy. Gen, an accomplished thief
incarcerated for stealing the king's seal, is dragged from his cell by
the king's magus, who is on a quest. The prize is Hamiathes's Gift, said
to be a creation of the gods that confers the right of rule on the
wearer. During the quest, the magus and Gen take turns telling the
youngest member of their party myths about the Eddisian god of thieves.
Turner does a phenomenal job of creating real people to range through
her well-plotted, evenly paced story. No one is entirely evil or
completely perfect. Gen is totally human in his lack of discipline,
seeming lack of heroism, and need for sleep and food. The magus makes
the transition from smug, superior scholar to decent guy in a believable
fashion. Turner also does a neat job of puncturing lots of little
prejudices. There are many deft lessons in this story. As absorbing as
it is, the best part lies in the surprise ending. Though it is
foreshadowed throughout, it is not obvious its impact is more like
morning sunlight than a lightning bolt. |

First Light by
Rebecca Stead |
The father of
12-year-old Peter is a glaciologist, his mother, a genetic scientist.
Peter is thrilled when his father decides to take the family on his
latest excursion to Greenland to study the effects of global warming.
Fourteen-year-old Thea lives in a secret society called Gracehope under
the Greenland ice. After finding a map that leads her to the surface,
she becomes obsessed with seeing the sun and bringing her people back
above ground. Peter and Thea accidentally meet on the surface and
discover, through a secret kept by Peter's mother, that their destinies
are unexpectedly joined. This debut novel is slow to start, and Stead's
world building isn't quite convincing. But the icy setting and
global-warming theme are well realized, and middle-school fans of Neil
Shusterman's Downsiders
(2000) and Jeanne DuPrau's Books of Ember will also enjoy this solid,
well-meaning fantasy. |

Elephant Run by
Roland Smith |
At the height of the London blitz,
Nick’s mother sends him to join his father on the family’s remote,
ancestral timber plantation in Burma. Her gambit turns out badly: The
invading Japanese soon seize the plantation, imprisoning his father in a
brutal POW camp, and leaving 13-year-old Nick to endure hardship under
Japanese overseers (whose characterizations are less complex than those
of the diverse Burmese). As readers will expect from suspense-specialist
Smith, Nick faces exciting situations (including several weeks in the
estate’s secret catacombs), and details of Burmese politics,
spirituality, and daily life weave an alluring backdrop. Some readers,
however, may feel disoriented by Smith’s fragmented storytelling style,
in which momentum often seems to consolidate around one character or
plot development only to move suddenly in an entirely new direction.
Still, this offering’s unusual setting deserves attention from
historical fiction fans, who will appreciate the window on a rarely
discussed theater of World War II. |

The White Giraffe
by Lauren St. John |
Losing parents in a tragic fire and
restarting life with an unwelcoming grandmother would be overwhelming
for most 11-year-olds, and Martine is no exception. What's worse,
Martine has never met her grandmother, who presides over a large game
preserve in faraway South Africa. Even so, from the moment Martine steps
off the plane, she senses that her new home holds a special destiny, one
that begins to unfold when she learns about a legendary white giraffe.
The beautiful creature appears one day, and Martine, who is just
becoming aware of her own mystical gifts, begins a heroic journey that
leads her to expose and prevent the destructive work of poachers. |

Emma Jean Lazarus
Fell Out of a Tree
by Lauren Tarshis |
Intellectually gifted but socially aloof
from her seventh-grade peers, Emma-Jean is nonetheless happy with her
life. She has positive relationships with several adults, a number of
interests to pursue, and the memory of her late father to inspire her.
Her life inexorably changes after a chance encounter with a classmate
leads her to become a problem-solver without realizing the ripple effect
that her actions will have.
Supremely logical Emma-Jean has little in common with her seventh-grade
classmates, and she observes their often-tumultuous social interactions
with a detached, scientific curiosity. But when kindly Colleen seeks her
advice in dealing with the school's resident mean girl, Emma-Jean is
moved to apply her analytical mind--and a bit of desktop forgery--to aid
her classmate. Pleased with the initial results of her meddling and a
newfound sense of belonging, Emma-Jean sets out righting the everyday
wrongs of middle-school life with some surprising success. |

Flipped by Wendelin Van Draanen |
Juli Baker devoutly believes in three
things: the sanctity of trees (especially her beloved sycamore), the
wholesomeness of the eggs she collects from her backyard flock of
chickens, and that someday she will kiss Bryce Loski. Ever since she saw
Bryce's baby blues back in second grade, Juli has been smitten.
Unfortunately, Bryce has never felt the same. Frankly, he thinks Juli
Baker is a little weird--after all, what kind of freak raises chickens
and sits in trees for fun? Then, in eighth grade, everything changes.
Bryce begins to see that Juli's unusual interests and pride in her
family are, well, kind of cool. And Juli starts to think that maybe
Bryce's brilliant blue eyes are as empty as the rest of Bryce seems to
be. After all, what kind of jerk doesn't care about other people's
feelings about chickens and trees? With Flipped, mystery author
Wendelin Van Draanen has taken a break from her Sammy Keyes series, and
the result is flipping fantastic. |

A Crooked Kind of
Perfect by Linda Urban |
Eleven-year-old Zoe dreams of giving
piano recitals at Carnegie Hall. When her father purchases a Perfectone
D-60, though, she must settle for the sounds of the organ rather than
the distinguished sounds of a baby grand. Her organ teacher, Mabelline
Person, notices the child's small talent for music and recommends her
for the "Perfectone Perform-O-Rama"; she will play Neil Diamond's
"Forever in Blue Jeans." Accepting this new twist to her ambitions, Zoe
must depend on a quirky support system: her father, who gets anxious
when he leaves the house and who earns diplomas from Living Room
University; her workaholic mother; and her classmate Wheeler, who
follows Zoe home from school daily to spend time with her father,
baking. Playing television theme songs from the '60s and '70s rather
than Bach doesn't get Zoe down. Instead, aware of the stark difference
between her dream and her reality, she forges ahead and, as an underdog,
faces the uncertainty of entering the competition. |

The Thief Lord by
Cornelia Funke |
After their mother dies, 12-year-old
Prosper and his brother, Bo, five, flee from Hamburg to Venice (an awful
aunt plans to adopt only Bo). They live in an abandoned movie theater
with several other street children under the care of the Thief Lord, a
cocky youth who claims to rob "the city's most elegant houses." A
mysterious man hires the Thief Lord to steal a wooden wing, which the
kids later learn has broken off a long-lost merry-go-round said to make
"adults out of children and children out of adults," but the plan alters
when Victor, the detective Aunt Esther hired to track the brothers,
discovers their camp and reveals that the Thief Lord is actually from a
wealthy family. |

Diamond Willow by
Helen Frost |
This is a book in verse.
Set in a remote part of Alaska, this story in easy-to-read verse blends
exciting survival adventure with a contemporary girl’s discovery of
family roots and secrets. Middle-schooler Willow’s dad is Anglo, and her
mother is Athabascan. The girl longs to spend more time with her
traditional Indian grandparents even though she knows she will miss
computers and other things that are a part of her life. When her beloved
dog, Roxy, is blinded in an accident (partly Willow’s fault), and her
parents want to put the dog down, Willow tries to take Roxy to Grandma
and Grandpa. The two are caught in a raging blizzard, and Willow is
saved by the spirits of her ancestors, who live on in the wild animals
around her. |

Jeremy Fink and
the Meaning of Life
by Wendy Mass |
An elaborately locked wooden box
requiring four separate but missing keys holds the treasure in this
modern-day quest. Jeremy's father lived his life preparing for an early
death, as foretold by a fortune-teller. He did, in fact, die when Jeremy
was eight, but a package from him containing the locked box arrives one
month before Jeremy's 13th birthday, the day on which the box is to be
opened. With his friend Lizzy, Jeremy searches for the keys while
contemplating the words engraved on the box, The Meaning of Life: For
Jeremy Fink. 13th Birthday. The search for the keys takes the friends
around and about New York City, where they meet a large and increasingly
convenient range of supporting characters, from members of a
spiritualist congregation to a prominent astronomer, all of whom point
them toward their own takes on the meaning of life. |

Someone Named Eva
by Wolf |
Eleven-year-old Milada lives with her
family and plays with her best friend in Czechoslovakia. Life seems to
be normal, with stories of Hitler and Germany far away. But one night,
soldiers come into the house and take the family in different
directions. Milada finds herself in a room with other girls who look
surprisingly like herself--blond hair, fair skin, light colored eyes.
Milada and the other girls are taught to be good German girls and
prepared to fit into their new lives. But as she becomes German Eva,
Milada realizes she is forgetting who she really is. Danger is never far
away, even in her new family, as the war continues to destroy the
country. How can Milada remain true to her identity as everyone around
her wants her to become someone else? Is anyone from Milada's real life
left? Based on a true story. |

Yellow Star by
Jennifer Roy |
Syvia is four years old in 1939, when
the Germans invade Poland and start World War II. A few months later,
her family is forced into the crowded Lodz ghetto, with more than a
quarter of a million other Jews. At the end of the war, when Syvia is
10, only about 800 Jews remain-only 12 of them are children. Syvia
remembers daily life: yellow stars, illness, starvation, freezing cold,
and brutal abuse, with puddles of red blood everywhere, and the
terrifying arbitrariness of events ("like the story of a boy / who went
out for bread / and was shot by a guard / who didn't like the way the
boy / looked at him"). When the soldiers first go from door to door,
"ripping children from their parents' arms" and dragging them away, her
father hides her in the cemetery. For years thereafter, she's not
allowed to go outside. In 1944 the ghetto is emptied, except for a few
Jews kept back to clean up, including Syvia's father, who keeps his
family with him through courage, cunning, and luck. As the Nazis face
defeat, Syvia discovers a few others hidden like her, "children of the
cellar." When the Russians liberate the ghetto, she hears one soldier
speak Yiddish, and the family hears of the genocide, the trains that
went to death camps. At last they learn of the enormity of the tragedy:
neighbors, friends, and cousins-all dead. |

Hunger Games by
Suzanne Collins |
In a not-too-distant future, the United
States of America has collapsed, weakened by drought, fire, famine, and
war, to be replaced by Panem, a country divided into the Capitol and 12
districts. Each year, two young representatives from each district are
selected by lottery to participate in The Hunger Games. Part
entertainment, part brutal intimidation of the subjugated districts, the
televised games are broadcasted throughout Panem as the 24 participants
are forced to eliminate their competitors, literally, with all citizens
required to watch. When 16-year-old Katniss's young sister, Prim, is
selected as the mining district's female representative, Katniss
volunteers to take her place. She and her male counterpart, Peeta, the
son of the town baker who seems to have all the fighting skills of a
lump of bread dough, will be pitted against bigger, stronger
representatives who have trained for this their whole lives. |

The Alchemyst by Michael Scott |
Twin 15-year-old siblings Sophie and
Josh Newman take summer jobs in San Francisco across the street from one
another: she at a coffee shop, he at a bookstore owned by Nick and Perry
Fleming. In the vey first chapter, armed goons garbed in black with
"dead-looking skin and... marble eyes" (actually Golems) storm the
bookshop, take Perry hostage and swipe a rare Book (but not before Josh
snatches its two most important pages). The stolen volume is the Codex,
an ancient text of magical wisdom. Nick Fleming is really Nicholas
Flamel, the 14th-century alchemist who could turn base metal into gold,
and make a potion that ensures immortality. Sophie and Josh learn that
they are mentioned in the Codex's prophecies: "The two that are one will
come either to save or to destroy the world." Mayhem ensues, as Irish
author Scott draws on a wide knowledge of world mythology to stage a
battle between the Dark Elders and their hired gun—Dr. John Dee—against
the forces of good, led by Flamel and the twins (Sophie's powers are
"awakened" by the goddess Hekate, who'd been living in an elaborate
treehouse north of San Francisco). Not only do they need the Codex back
to stop Dee and company, but the immortality potion must be brewed
afresh every month. Time is running out, literally, for the Flamels. |

Fablehaven by
Brandon Mull |
Danger lurks everywhere at Fablehaven,
where someone has released a plague that transforms beings of light into
creatures of darkness. In dire need of help, the Sorensons question
where to turn, now that long trusted allies have been revealed as
potential foes. Kendra embarks on a special mission that only she can
attempt because of her new abilities as fairykind, while Seth stays
behind and discovers an incredible new talent of his own. The siblings
are put to the test as the threat grows both abroad and home at the
Fablehaven preserve |

Eighth Grade
Bites by Heather Brewer |
Vladimir Tod's is a vampire-or at least
sort of; he's not quite sure. His father was a vampire, but his mother
was human, and they died three years ago in a mysterious accident. Now
Vlad has only his friend Henry and his "Aunt" Nelly, his mother's best
friend who is raising him, to confide in. He has a hunger for blood,
although he's been trained since babyhood to be "normal" and not to act
on it. He gets by because Nelly, who's a nurse, brings home bags of
blood from the hospital where she works, and he hides one or two in his
backpack for when he gets hungry. But Vlad realizes that his father had
a history he didn't know about when his English teacher vanishes
mysteriously, to be replaced by a tall, thin substitute teacher in a
purple top hat who seems to know a little too much about him. |

The Thing About
Georgie by Lisa Graff |
This story about the trials of a fourth
grader who is a dwarf will entertain and enlighten kids. About to become
a big brother, Georgie worries that the baby will grow bigger than he
and fulfill his musician parents' hope for a child who can play an
instrument. At the same time, Georgie fears that Andy, who's been his
friend since kindergarten, likes the new boy better. When Georgie's
parents leave him at Andy's house on Christmas Eve, he finds himself
being unexpectedly cruel and losing the friendship. Georgie is also
assigned to do a project on Abraham Lincoln with Jeanie the Meanie, who
puts his name in for the role of the lanky president in a class play.
Stuck with the nomination, he's able to give a commanding
performance-with Jeanie's help. Andy lets Georgie know he misses him,
and his loving parents, who have been somewhat oblivious to his
concerns, also come through. |

Twilight by
Stephanie Meyer |
"Softly he brushed my cheek, then held
my face between his marble hands. 'Be very still,' he whispered, as if I
wasn't already frozen. Slowly, never moving his eyes from mine, he
leaned toward me. Then abruptly, but very gently, he rested his cold
cheek against the hollow at the base of my throat."
As Shakespeare knew, love burns high when thwarted by obstacles. In
Twilight, an exquisite fantasy by Stephenie Meyer, readers discover
a pair of lovers who are supremely star-crossed. Bella adores beautiful
Edward, and he returns her love. But Edward is having a hard time
controlling the blood lust she arouses in him, because--he's a vampire.
At any moment, the intensity of their passion could drive him to kill
her, and he agonizes over the danger. But, Bella would rather be dead
than part from Edward, so she risks her life to stay near him, and the
novel burns with the erotic tension of their dangerous and necessarily
chaste relationship. |

Absolutely Normal
Chaos by Sharon Creech |
Mary Lou, 13, wonders if kisses with
boys really taste like chicken; if her best friend will ever shut up
about her new boyfriend; and how her visiting cousin, Carl Ray, can be
such a silent clod, especially when someone has anonymously given him
$5000. Later, when he is in a coma following a car accident, she rereads
her journal and wonders how she could have been so unseeing. Mary Lou is
a typical teen whose acquaintance with the sadder parts of life is
cushioned by a warm and energetic family. Her entertaining musings on
Homer, Shakespeare, and Robert Frost are drawn in nifty parallels to
what is happening in her own life. When forbidden by her mother to say
"God," "stupid," and "stuff," she makes a trek to the thesaurus to
create some innovative interjections. |

Schooled by
Gordon Korman |
Capricorn Anderson had never watched a television show before. He'd
never tasted a pizza. He had never even heard of a wedgie. And he
had never, in his wildest dreams, thought of living anywhere but
Garland Farm commune with his hippie caretaker, Rain.
Capricorn (Cap for short) had lived every day of his life on Garland
Farm growing fruits and vegetables. He was homeschooled by Rain, the
only person he knew in the world. Life was simple for Cap. But when
Rain falls out of a tree while picking plums and is
hospital-ridden, he has to attend the local middle school and live
with his new guidance counselor and her irritable daughter. While
Cap knew a lot about Zen Buddhism, no amount formal education could
ready him for the trials and tribulations of public middle school.
Cap doesn't exactly fit in at Claverage Middle School (dubbed C
Average by the kids). He has long, ungroomed hair, wears hemp
clothes, and practices Tai Chi out on the lawn.
His weirdness basically makes him biggest nerd in school. This is
great news for Zach Powers, big man on campus. He can't wait to
instate the age-old tradition in C-Average School: The biggest nerd
is nominated for class president--and wins. So when Cap becomes
president, he is more puzzled than ever. But as Cap begins to take
on his duties, the joke starts to turn on Zach.Will Cap turn out to
be the greatest President in the history of C-Average School? Or
the biggest punchline?
|

11 Birthdays by
Wendy Mass |
It's Amanda's 11th birthday and she is
super excited---after all, 11 is so different from 10. But from the
start, everything goes wrong. The worst part of it all is that she and
her best friend, Leo, with whom she's shared every birthday, are on the
outs and this will be the first birthday they haven't shared together.
When Amanda turns in for the night, glad to have her birthday behind
her, she wakes up happy for a new day. Or is it? Her birthday seems to
be repeating iself. What is going on?! And how can she fix it? Only
time, friendship, and a little luck will tell. . . |

The City of Ember
by Jeanne DuPrau |
It is always night in the city of Ember.
But there is no moon, no stars. The only light during the regular twelve
hours of "day" comes from floodlamps that cast a yellowish glow over the
streets of the city. Beyond are the pitch-black Unknown Regions, which
no one has ever explored because an understanding of fire and
electricity has been lost, and with it the idea of a Moveable Light.
"Besides," they tell each other, "there is nowhere but here" Among the
many other things the people of Ember have forgotten is their past and a
direction for their future. For 250 years they have lived pleasantly,
because there has been plenty of everything in the vast storerooms. But
now there are more and more empty shelves--and more and more times when
the lights flicker and go out, leaving them in terrifying blackness for
long minutes. What will happen when the generator finally fails?
Twelve-year-old Doon Harrow and Lina Mayfleet seem to be the only people
who are worried. They have just been assigned their life jobs--Lina as a
messenger, which leads her to knowledge of some unsettling secrets, and
Doon as a Pipeworker, repairing the plumbing in the tunnels under the
city where a river roars through the darkness. But when Lina finds a
very old paper with enigmatic "Instructions for Egress," they use the
advantages of their jobs to begin to puzzle out the frightening and
dangerous way to the city of light of which Lina has dreamed. As they
set out on their mission, the haunting setting and breathless action of
this stunning first novel will have teens clamoring for a sequel. |

Crossing the Wire by Will Hobbs |
Ever since his family moved to the tiny
village of Los Árboles, Victor has been best friends with Rico. When
Rico tells him that he has enough money to pay for a coyote to help him
cross into El Norte, Victor is unable to decide if he, too, should go
along and look for work or try to feed his family with the pitiful
annual corn harvest. The decision is made for him the next day when he
discovers that the corn prices have bottomed out and that there is no
point in even planting this year. Readers suffer with the 15-year-old as
he makes his painful decision to leave his mother and younger siblings
and attempts the dangerous border crossing, jumping trains, fleeing
thieves and border officials, and suffering from thirst and hunger. His
desperation and fear are completely believable as he faces near-death
situations and must decide whom to trust. |

The Great Wide Sea by M.H. Herlong |
Soon after their mother’s death,
15-year-old Ben and his two younger brothers are stunned when their
father sells their home, buys a sailboat, and announces that they will
live on board and cruise the Bahamas for the next year. Wrenched from
everything he knows and forced to obey his father-captain’s orders, Ben
starts out angry and finds no escape. As he says, “We were always
together.” When their father sets a course for Bermuda and disappears
overboard one night, the boys have little time to wonder if he jumped or
fell before they’re struggling to stay afloat in a fierce Atlantic
storm. Lost at sea in a damaged boat, they find their way to an island
where they are stranded with little food, little water, and little hope
of rescue. |