
* = Moderate
** = Challenging
*** = Difficult
Remember
all students are required to read TWO selections and complete the summer
reading questionnaire for each selection.
Flush by Carl Hiasson ** (Realistic
Fiction)
Noah and his sister, Abbey, are more understanding of their
volatile dad's latest arrest than their mother, who begins talking of divorce.
Dad sank the Coral Queen, a casino boat on a Florida Key because, he
alleges, its owner, Dusty Muleman, has been illegally dumping raw sewage into
the local waters. Soon enough the kids begin trying to gather proof that will
vindicate their father and put the casino out of business. The colorful cast
includes Lice who disappears before he can be persuaded to testify against
Dusty, his former boss. His rough-around-the-edges girlfriend, Shelly, comes
through, though, helping the siblings dump dye in the boat's holding tanks,
which finally brings the matter to court. Dusty's son, Jasper, is a chip off
the old block, threatening and beating Noah on several occasions until he and,
later, Abbey are rescued by a mysterious stranger who turns out to be their
grandfather, long ago thought to have died in South America, probably while
involved in drug smuggling. As the tale ends, he's back to Colombia to settle
old scores.
Fever: 1793 by
Laurie Halse Anderson *** (Historical Fiction)
During
the summer of 1793, Mattie Cook lives above the family coffee shop with her
widowed mother and grandfather. Mattie spends her days avoiding chores and
making plans to turn the family business into the finest Philadelphia has ever
seen. But then the fever breaks out. Disease sweeps the streets, destroying
everything in its path and turning Mattie's world upside down. At her feverish
mother's insistence, Mattie flees the city with her grandfather. But she soon
discovers that the sickness is everywhere, and Mattie must learn quickly how to
survive in a city turned frantic with disease.
Witness by
Karen Hesse ** (Historical Fiction/Poetry)
It is 1924, and a small Vermont town finds itself under siege--by
the Ku Klux Klan. Using free verse, Newbery Medal-winning author Karen Hesse (Out of the Dust) allows 11 unique and
memorable voices to relate the story of the Klan's steady infiltration into the
conscience of a small, Prohibition-era community. The Klan's
"all-American" philosophy is at first embraced by several of the
town's influential men, including Constable Parcelle Johnson and retailer
Harvey Pettibone. But Harvey's sensible wife, Viola, and independent restaurant
owner Iris Weaver suspect from the beginning that the Klan's arrival heralds
trouble. As the only African Americans in town, 12-year old Leonora Sutter and
her father try to escape Klan scrutiny, while 6-year-old, city-born Esther
Hirsch remains blissfully unaware of the Klan's prejudice against Jews as she
enjoys the Vermont countryside. And Sara Chickering, the lady farmer who has
opened her home to Esther and her father, is torn between her own hidden biases
and her growing love for Esther.
Chasing Vermeer by Blue
Balliet ** (Fiction-Mystery)
When a book of unexplainable occurrences brings Petra Andalee & Calder
Pillay together, strange things start to happen: seemingly unrelated events
connect, an eccentric old woman seeks their company, & an invaluable
Vermeer painting disappears. Before they know it, the two find themselves at
the center of an international art scandal. As Petra & Calder are drawn
clue by clue into a mysterious labyrinth they must draw on their powers of
intuition, their skills at problem solving, and their knowledge of Vermeer. Can
they decipher a crime that has left even the FBI baffled?
Set in
the breathtaking landscape of Lugano, Switzerland, Bloomability is
Sharon Creech at her very best. When
13-year-old Dinnie Doone is plucked out of her troubled life by her aunt and
uncle and whisked away to an international school in Switzerland, her world is
turned upside down. Suddenly surrounded by different cultures, languages, and
beliefs, Dinnie struggles to hold on to her past life. Gradually, through
friendships and experiences she could have nowhere else, she learns to trust
herself and discovers the beautiful "bloomabilities" her new life has
to offer.
The Cay by Theodore Taylor * (Fiction-Adventure)
Phillip is excited when the Germans invade the small
island of Curaçao. War has always been a game to him, and he’s eager to glimpse
it firsthand–until the freighter he and his mother are traveling to the United
States on is torpedoed.
When Phillip comes to, he is on a small raft in the middle of the sea. Besides
Stew Cat, his only companion is an old West Indian, Timothy. Phillip remembers
his mother’s warning about black people: “They are different, and they live
differently.”
But by the time the castaways arrive on a small island, Phillip’s head injury
has made him blind and dependent on Timothy.
Freak the Mighty by Rodman
Philbrick ** (Realistic
Fiction)
A wonderful story of triumph over imperfection, shame, and loss. Large,
awkward, learning-disabled Maxwell Kane, whose father is in prison for
murdering his mother, and crippled, undersized Kevin are both mocked by their
peers; the cruel taunting they endure is all too realistic and believable. The
boys establish a friendship-and a partnership. Kevin defends them with his
intelligence, while Max is his friend's "legs," affording him a
chance to participate in the larger world. Inspired by tales of King Arthur,
they become knights fighting for good and true causes. But Kevin's illness
progresses, and when he dies, Max is left with the memories of an extraordinary
relationship and, perhaps, the insight to think positively about himself and
his future. The author writes with empathy, honoring the possibilities of even
peripheral characters; Kevin and Max are memorable and luminous. Many YA novels
deal with the effects of a friend dying, but this one is somewhat different and
very special.
Journey to the River Sea by Eva Ibbotson ** (Juvenile
Fiction)
Sent in 1910 to live with distant relatives who own a rubber plantation along
the Amazon River, English orphan Maia is excited. She believes she is in for
brightly colored macaws, enormous butterflies, and "curtains of sweetly
scented orchids trailing from the trees." Her British classmates warn her
of man-eating alligators and wild, murderous Indians. Unfortunately, no one
cautions Maia about her nasty, xenophobic cousins, who douse the house in bug
spray and forbid her from venturing beyond their coiffed compound. Maia,
however, is resourceful enough to find herself smack in the middle of more
excitement than she ever imagined, from a mysterious "Indian" with an
inheritance, to an itinerant actor dreading his impending adolescence, to a
remarkable journey down the Amazon in search of the legendary giant sloth.
Molly Moon’s Incredible Book of Hypnotism *** (Fantasy)
By Georgia Byng
Orphan Molly Moon is unloved and unlovely. The other children pick
on her, as do the mean-spirited women who run Hardwick House Orphanage. Molly
occasionally escapes to the Briersville library to avoid them all. One day she
finds a mysterious tome on hypnotism hidden in the stacks and discovers her
real talent. With her newfound skill, she is able to change her luck and her
life, getting out of the orphanage to win the local talent competition, and
ending up in New York City, where she hypnotizes the entire city into making
her a child star. However, evil Professor Nockman will stop at nothing to get
the book.
The Fall (Seventh Tower, Book 1) ** (Science
Fiction)
By Garth Nix
Welcome to the Dark World. Tal lives high above, in a
mountaintop castle where light is the ultimate commodity, the spirit world is
the only escape and isolation from the outside world is complete. He does not
think to question his world. He does not dare to dream of anything else. Then
one day he tries to steal a sunstone, the only way of assuring his family's safety.
The attempt fails, and Tal falls from the Castle . . . straight into the
unknown.