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Recommended Books for Teens
- A Hero Ain't Nothin' but a Sandwich by Alice Childress
- The life of a thirteen-year-old Harlem youth on his way to becoming a
confirmed
heroin addict is seen from his viewpoint and from that of several people
around him.
paperback
hardcover - A Separate Peace by John Knowles
- Knowles' classic story of two friends at boarding school during World
War II has been a
consistent seller for more than 20 years.
paperback
hardcover - Bee and Jacky by Carolyn Coman
- A moving story told with grace and courage of one family's deep wounds,
the
consuming impact of incest, and the ability to heal. A National Book
Award finalist.
hardcover - Belle Prater's Boy by Ruth White
- Gypsy and her cousin Woodrow become close friends after Woodrow's mother
disappears. White's words artfully describe the coal mining region of
Virginia and the
emotional journey her characters must take.
paperback
hardcover - Bless the Beasts & the Children by Glendon Swarthout
- The neglected attendees of the Box Canyon Boys Camp find their lives
turned
around by Cotton, who, in a hot-wired pickup, challenges them to join
efforts to
save a herd of buffalo and rediscover themselves in the process.
paperback - California Blue by David Klass
- John must choose between an important cause and his own townspeople when
he learns
that a blue butterfly is unique in all the world and that the local mill
must be closed in
order to save it.
paperback - Chicken Soup for the Teenage Soul : 101 Stories of Life, Love and Learning (Chicken Soup for the Soul Series) by Jack Canfield (Editor), Kimberly Kirberger, Mark V. Hansen (Editor)
- A batch of short stories that guides teenagers through one of the most
difficult periods in
life. Contains important lessons on friendship and love, the importance
of belief in the
future, the value of respect for oneself and others, and more.
paperback - Dangerous Angels : The Weetzie Bat Books by Francesca Lia Block
- The many wild adventures of Weetzie and friends have finally been
compiled into one
delicious volume.
paperback - Go Ask Alice by Anonymous, Beatrice M. Sparks (Editor)
- The pain of adolescence has is clearly dipicted in this classic diary by
an anonymous,
addicted teen. Lonely, awkward, and under extreme pressure from her
"perfect" parents,
she finally succumbs to drug use as a terrifying escape.
paperback - I Never Promised You a Rose Garden by Joanne Greenberg
- Chronicles the three-year battle of a mentally ill, but perceptive,
teenage girl against
a world of her own creation, emphasizing her relationship with the
doctor who gave
her the ammunition of self-understanding with which to help herself.
paperback - Missing May by Cynthia Rylant
- This simple and sweet story, which won the Newbery Medal in 1993, is
injected with just
the right touches of humor and mysticism.
paperback
hardcover - Lisa, Bright and Dark by John Neufeld
- paperback
hardcover - Lord of the Flies by William Gerald Golding
- The classic tale of a group of English school boys who are left stranded
on an
unpopulated island, and who must confront not only the defects of their
society but
the defects of their own natures.
paperback
hardcover - Of Mice and Men John Steinbeck
- An itinerant farmhand's loving protection of a slow-witted comrad has
profound
implications for both characters, in Steinbeck's classic tale.
paperback - Out of the Dust (Newbery Medal Book) by Karen Hesse
- In a series of poems, fifteen-year-old Billie Jo relates the hardships
of living on her family's
wheat farm in Oklahoma during the dust bowl years of the Depression.
paperback
hardcover - Smack by Melvin Burgess
- This searing account of two young runaways' descent into heroin
addiction and
their faltering climb back out. Won England's Carnegie Medal and
Guardian Prize for
Fiction.
hardcover - Summer of My German Soldier by Bette Greene
- A poignant, tragic story of a mistreated Jewish girl who befriends an
escaped
German prisoner of war because he is kind to her.
paperback - The Chosen by Chaim Potok
- In 1940s Brooklyn, an accident throws Reuven Malther and Danny
Saunders together. Despite their differences the young men form a deep,
if unlikely,
friendship.
paperback - The Face on the Milk Carton by Caroline B. Cooney
- A photograph of a missing girl on a milk carton leads Janie Johnson on a
search for
her real identity.
paperback
hardcover - The Giver by Lois Lowry
- Twelve-year-old Jonas lives in a seemingly ideal world. But when he is
given his life
assignment as the Receiver, he begins to understand the dark secrets
behind
this fragile community.
paperback
hardcover - The Hobbit by J. R. R. Tolkien
- A children's story at heart (originally written for Tolkien's own kids),
the book
rightly holds its own as a classic, the sweet if simple predecessor to
the most-loved
epic in all of fantasy.
paperback
hardcover - The Island on Bird Street by Uri Orlev, Hillel Halkin (Translator)
- During World War II a Jewish boy is left on his own for months in a
ruined house in
the Warsaw Ghetto, where he must learn all the tricks of survival under
constantly
life-threatening conditions.
paperback
hardcover - The Midwife's Apprentice by Karen Cushman
- A homeless medieval waif who names herself Alyce is taken in by the
village
midwife, befriends a cat, learns about delivering babies, and confronts
failure when
an infant dies.
paperback
hardcover - The Night of the Twisters by Ivy Ruckman
- A fictional account of the night freakish and devastating tornadoes hit
Grand Island,
Nebraska, as experienced by a twelve-year-old, his family, and friends.
paperback - Where the Lilies Bloom by Vera Cleaver, Bill Cleaver
- Set in the Appalachian hills, the story, narrated by 14-year-old Mary
Call, tells of her
efforts to keep her family together and independent after their
sharecropper father
dies. School Library Journal Best of the Best (1969); ALA Notable
Children's Book;
New York Times Outstanding Children's Book of 1969.
paperback
hardcover
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