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Young Adult

Apprenticeship of Lucas Whitaker, The

Apprenticeship of Lucas Whitaker, The

By Cynthia DeFelice 160 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

One of the best pieces of young adult historical fiction that I have read in the past five years. A boy apprentices for a doctor in the 19th century and searches for a cure to the consumption that is killing everybody in town, including his own family. I used this book for a class that was discussing advances in medical technology (it worked great with my impression of Steve Martin acting as a middle age doctor/barber in a hilarious old Saturday Night Live sketch).

Modie and the Power of the Bell Keys

Modie and the Power of the Bell Keys

By Stefanie Bailey,C. J. Bailey 166 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

Probably most appropriate for upper elementary and middle school students, this fantasy will whet young readers' appetites for the Harry Potter series.

Top Secret

Top Secret

By John Reynolds Gardiner 128 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

Probably every fourth or fifth grader has read Gardiner’s popular Stone Fox about a boy’s dog sled race in Alaska. This is the one I prefer, though, as it is the funny and educational tale of a boy who decides to discover human photosynthesis and enter his findings into the school science fair. Young Allen ingests a ton of magnesium and soon loses his taste buds and craves sunlight, and the government does not want anyone to know that he has, indeed, discovered human photosynthesis. This book will get reluctant readers reading and teach them a thing or two about science while they eagerly laugh and flip pages.

Making Up Megaboy

Making Up Megaboy

By Virginia Walter 62 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

I am a huge fan of the great Japanese film director Akira Kirosawa, and one of Kurosawa’s most provocative films is Rashomon, the story of a woman’s rape told from different perspectives. Walter attempts to do the same in this book by telling the story of a teenager who kills an elderly store owner, as told through 18 different first-person perspectives. I have heard many teachers gripe that the book offers no definite resolution, but that is precisely one of the things I like about the book. It makes for intense book discussions.

Master Puppeteer, The

Master Puppeteer, The

By Katharine Paterson 192 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

When a young adult book wins a National Book Award, you know it must be pretty special. This one is, as it tells the story of the teenage son of a poor puppet-maker who becomes a theatre apprentice and discovers the identity of Robin Hood-like character in famine struck 18th-century Japan.

Something Like an Autobiography

Something Like an Autobiography

By Akira Kurosawa 240 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

Alright, the Megaboy book got me thinking about Kurosawa, so of course I wound up re-watching some of my favorite Kurosawa films (The Seven Samurai, Yojimbo, Ran, The Hidden Fortress). If you have never heard of Kurosawa, just know that George Lucas and Steven Spielberg idolized him, and his movies inspired all sorts of American adaptations (e.g. The Magnificent Seven, High Plains Drifter, Star Wars). Because of Kurosawa, I have managed to get a lot of middle and high school students interested in foreign films and Joseph Campbell. This brief autobiography is great and should whet your appetite for the much longer The Emperor and the Wolf (about Kurosawa and his turbulent relationship with his favorite star, Toshiro Mifune).

Book of Three, The

Book of Three, The

By Lloyd Alexander 224 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

Note to Hollywood producers in search of the next children’s blockbuster: read this book. The coming of age story of Taran, assistant pig-keeper who assembles a group of companions to rescue the oracular pig Hen Wen from the forces of evil. This classic has been around for over 30 years, and I cannot believe there is still not a movie version. Read this, and you will be rewarded like readers of The Lord of the Rings and The Chronicles of Narnia, as there are more in the series.

Kissing Tennessee

Kissing Tennessee

By Kathi Appelt 132 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

Appelt’s collection of short stories revolving around a middle school dance makes for a great book discussion among middle schoolers, especially girls. Appelt captures the voice of teen girls as well as any current young adult author. I have even shared this with grown-ups who were moved by the writing.

How I Live Now

How I Live Now

By Meg Rosoff 194 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

Grabbed a copy when I read praise on the cover from Mark Haddon (author of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time). This is a MUST READ. One of the best young adult novels I have read in years, as it manages to cast a self-centered teen (redundant?) in dire circumstances (a 21st century World War), and the protagonist actually learns empathy – something more adolescents could use. Middle school students cannot stop talking about this one.

I, Juan De Pareja

I, Juan De Pareja

By Elizabeth Borton de Trevino 192 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

A Newbery winner from the 60s, this book (written like an autobiography) chronicles the trials and tribulations of a slave prohibited from painting on his own that serves the great Spanish painter Velazquez (a painter whose work I used to enjoy almost daily on trips to the Prado when I lived in Madrid).

Boy Who Couldn’t Die, The

Boy Who Couldn’t Die, The

By William Sleator 184 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

When I come across teens who don’t like to read, one of my favorite authors to direct them to is William Sleator. While Sleator writes a lot of great sci-fi, this “horror” book is a great way to peak teens’ interest in reading. Fast-paced, with plenty of clever twists and turns.

You Know Where to Find Me

You Know Where to Find Me

By Rachel Cohn 224 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

A tale of two drastically different cousins. When one commits suicide, the other spirals down the same path until her family intervenes. I found the book to be pleasantly uplifting in an overcrowded market of morose tales of teen angst.

How They Croaked: The Awful Ends of the Awfully Famous

How They Croaked: The Awful Ends of the Awfully Famous

By Georgia Bragg 184 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

With funny cartoons by Kevin O’Malley to lighten up the text, Bragg offers tidbits and trivia about 19 famous dead people that is sure to cause a reading frenzy among boys, in particular.

Fly on the Wall

Fly on the Wall

By E. Lockhart 182 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

The perfect book for teachers to complement Franz Kafka’s Metamorphosis. Lockhart’s female protagonist turns into a fly on the wall of the boy’s locker room, and hilarity and introspection ensue.

Close to Famous

Close to Famous

By Joan Bauer 240 pages Young Adult

Danny Says

One of my most important requirements for young adult books is a happy ending, as I am sick of books about teenage suicide, drug abuse and neglect. While plenty of awful things happen in protagonist Foster’s life, she and her mother endure in this book filled with wonderfully quirky characters.

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