I’m so excited for today’s Armchair BEA
topic - children's lit!
As stated on their blog, this genre
includes everything from children’s books to YA novels. For me, I am going to
use this post to share with you ten of my favorite tween reads.
Now, the ones I'm sharing today are
aimed at tween girls. These would be great reads for ages nine to twelve, and they
all have made me smile, laugh, get a little teary-eyed, but at the end made me
feel good about life.
I hope you enjoy!
Are
You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (J. Blume)
Summary
from Goodreads:
Margaret
Simon, almost twelve, has just moved from New York City to the suburbs, and
she's anxious to fit in with her new friends. When she's asked to join a secret
club she jumps at the chance. But when the girls start talking about boys,
bras, and getting their first periods, Margaret starts to wonder if she's
normal. There are some things about growing up that are hard for her to talk
about, even with her friends. Lucky for Margaret, she's got someone else to
confide in... someone who always listens.
No
Cream Puffs (K. Day)
Summary from Goodreads:
MADISON
IS NOT your average 12-year-old girl from Michigan in 1980. She doesn’t use
lipgloss, but she loves to play sports, and joins baseball for the summer—the
first girl in Southern Michigan to play on a boys’ team. The press call her a
star and a trailblazer, but Madison just wants to play ball. Who knew it would
be so much pressure? Crowds flock to the games. Her team will win the
championship—if she can keep up her pitching streak. Meanwhile, she’s got a
crush on a fellow player, her best friend abandons her for the popular girls,
the “O” on her Hinton’s uniform forms a bulls-eye over her left breast, and the
boy she punched on the last day of school plans to bean her in the championship
game.
Mean
Ghouls (S. Deutsch)
Summary
from Goodreads:
If
Megan thought life at her new boarding school was going to be easy, she was
dead wrong. All the students have the same mysterious virus--one that's slowly
turning them all into zombies. The teachers at Zombie Academy are lifeless and
the food stinks. Literally. And worst of all, the clique of popular mean girls
who rule the school have already decided that Megan's dead to them.
All Megan wants is to get back to her old school and her old friends. But until a cure is found, she'll have to figure out how to survive middle school.
All Megan wants is to get back to her old school and her old friends. But until a cure is found, she'll have to figure out how to survive middle school.
Ten
(The Winnie Years) (L. Myracle)
Summary
from Goodreads:
Winnie
Perry is turning ten and ten is BIG: it means double digits, more responsibility,
and being an almost-middle-schooler. Ten means that Winnie can handle anything,
even a three-year-old baby brother and a practically teenage (and acting like
it) older sister. And with her best friend, Amanda, by her side, Winnie plans
on enjoying every last second of their last year in elementary school.
This prequel to the New York Times bestselling Winnie Years series will thrill the tweens who grew up with Winnie and introduce a whole new generation of readers to a heroine they can grow up with.
This prequel to the New York Times bestselling Winnie Years series will thrill the tweens who grew up with Winnie and introduce a whole new generation of readers to a heroine they can grow up with.
The
Agony of Alice (P.R.Naylor)
Summary
from Goodreads:
Alice
McKinley is about to become a teenager, but she doesn't know how. Her mother
has been dead for years, and what do her father and her nineteen-year-old
brother, Lester, know about being a teenage girl? If only she had a role model,
like the beautiful sixth-grade teacher Miss Cole. But instead Alice gets
assigned to plain, pear-shaped Mrs. Plotkin's class. Is Alice doomed to a life
of one embarrassment after another?
Agnes
Parker, Girl in Progress (K. O’Dell)
Summary
from Goodreads:
Agnes
Parker isn't the class outcast or its queen bee-which is okay except that
sometimes the middle just seems . . . really . . . ordinary. So Agnes sets out
to be a different version of the girl she's always been. Someone who won't
always get clobbered by bullies, who can some-times be cool and confident-and
maybe catch the eye of that new boy in class?
New author Kathleen O'Dell offers a wise and funny story for all immersed in the thrilling and treacherous process of becoming. Kids will find a new friend, and plenty of reflections of their own thoughts and feelings, within the pages of this refreshing and insightful tale.
New author Kathleen O'Dell offers a wise and funny story for all immersed in the thrilling and treacherous process of becoming. Kids will find a new friend, and plenty of reflections of their own thoughts and feelings, within the pages of this refreshing and insightful tale.
Accidentally
Fabulous (L. Papademetriou)
Summary
from Goodreads:
Meet Amy Flowers:
She’s a seventh grader who marches to her own beat. Being the new girl at
super-exclusive Allington Academy doesn’t break her stride!
Meet the League: They rule the school,
and their queen is oh-so-mean Fiona, who doesn’t exactly appreciate Amy’s
individuality.
Amy is doing her best to fit in at her
new school, but Fiona and the rest of the League aren’t making it easy for her.
If she can pass their tests, she’ll be part of the in crowdbut
what will she have to give up to fit in?
The
Teashop Girls (L. Schaefer)
Summary
from Goodreads:
Annie,
Genna, and Zoe have been hanging out at the Steeping Leaf since elementary
school. The Teashop Girls do everything together -- at least they used to. With
the end of eighth grade approaching, Genna's too busy with theater, Zoe's
always at tennis, and Annie feels totally left out. What happened to tea every
week, no matter what?
When Annie convinces her grandmother to give her a job as a barista at the Leaf, things begin to look up. In between whipping up chai lattes for customers, and attempting to catch the attention of her Barista Boy crush, Annie is finally beginning to feel as grown-up as her best friends. But an eviction notice spells trouble for the Leaf and unless they can turn the business around, the teashop will have to close its doors forever.
Fresh, honest, and sweet, Laura Schaefer's debut novel is sure to resonate with readers everywhere.
When Annie convinces her grandmother to give her a job as a barista at the Leaf, things begin to look up. In between whipping up chai lattes for customers, and attempting to catch the attention of her Barista Boy crush, Annie is finally beginning to feel as grown-up as her best friends. But an eviction notice spells trouble for the Leaf and unless they can turn the business around, the teashop will have to close its doors forever.
Fresh, honest, and sweet, Laura Schaefer's debut novel is sure to resonate with readers everywhere.
Miss Popularity (F. Sedita)
Summary from Goodreads:
Meet
Cassie Knight. Bubbly, stylish, and super-friendly, she's the fashion queen at
her Texas school. But when her father's job moves the family to cold, snowy
Maine, Cassie's in for a huge culture shock. At her new prep school, the
students are prim and proper, and worst of all, they don't find Cassie as
fabulous as she knows she is! Then Cassie comes up with a brilliant idea for
the school fundraiser. If she can pull it off, she may just become Miss
Popularity again . . . but if not, is she doomed to remain friendless forever?
Katie
and the Cupcake Cure (C. Simon)
Summary
from Goodreads:
This
first book in The
Cupcake Diaries is told through the perspective of Katie Brown. We
find Katie miserable on the first day of middle school. Her best friend Callie
came back from camp boy-crazy and part of a whole new group of friends. When
it's made clear that Callie is in the PGC (Popular Girls Club) and Katie is not
invited to join, Katie suddenly feels incredibly alone. Katie realizes if she’s
going to survive middle school she needs to seriously regroup and find some new
friends. But how? She bites into the cupcake her mother packed her for lunch
and for a second closes her eyes. The sweet treat makes her happy—finally
something goes right! Looking around her table, Katie notices the other
students seeming a bit lost, as well. Which gives her an idea…With three new
friends Katie forms a club as a way to spread the cupcake love and earn some
cupcake cash.
That’s my list – what’s on yours today?
Any tween suggestions from you?
Comment below and let’s talk about
books.
Happy Reading!
- The
Hodgenator
This is an area I really need to work on reading. I am an elementary teacher librarian and I read a lot of children's lit, but the tween fiction is something that I am not reading as much. I guess I would say my favorites in that area are Smile and Drama from Raina Telgemeier. For more serious tween reads, I would go with See You at Harry's, Almost Home, and One for the Murphys. Sugar and Ice by Messner is also a favorite. Oh, and My Mixed-Up Berry Blue Summer. I will try some of your recommendations. Thanks! Here are some of mine: http://readingtl.blogspot.com/2013/06/armchair-bea-childrens-literature.html
ReplyDeleteIf you have up to fifth grade, I really do recommend the Candy Apple books - all of them. I've read them all and decided if I was a school librarian, those would be priority. They're great for fourth/fifth/sixth graders.
DeleteHappy Reading,
C
I loved all of the Judy Blume books!
ReplyDeleteI think I am the only 30-something in America who never read much Judy Blume! I just didn't have the access to it.
ReplyDeleteNope, I didn't read Blume until I was an adult. 'Are You There God...' was my first - and I loved it. I feel like I can appreciate her writing more now in my late 30s than I could when I was that age. Does that make sense?
DeleteHappy Reading,
C