Monday, July 25, 2016

The absolutely true diary of a part-time Indian

Alexie, S., & Forney, E. (2007). The absolutely true diary of a part-time Indian. New York: Little, Brown.

Summary:  Arnold “Junior” Spirit is a Spokane Indian living on an Indian reservation.  He was born with many health issues and growing up he is everyone’s punching bag except his best friend Rowdy.  As Junior enters high school he makes a bold decision to attend an all-white school in a nearby town and betray his people.   This story follows Junior through his freshman year and the trials he faces as a kid from the “rez”.  In the end Junior loses a lot but learns that he has a strength inside himself he never knew existed.  He learns to balance his part-time life on the “rez” and his part-time life in the white school.  There are several themes at play in this story one being isolation, not only is there a geographical isolation of the rez where Junior lives. Junior also has physical isolation due to his size.  Loss of friendship, life, and identity are reoccurring in this story as well.  Race and racism are ever present too. 

Book Trailer:


Speak

Anderson, L. H. (2006). Speak. New York: Penguin Group.

Summary:  Melinda is a high school freshman that had something really terrible happen to her the summer before high school. On the first day of school all her friends abandon her in lieu of the event that happened in the summer.  So Melinda finds herself friendless, alone, and not speaking to anyone.  Throughout her freshman year Melinda slowly allows the reader into her mind but still speaks to no one in her life.  When she finally has the courage to tell someone about what happened to her she begins to find her voice and at just the right time to save her life.  Due to the trauma Melinda endured it left her unable to speak with ease due to the depression she is experiencing.  Through her art and introspection Melinda learns she is no longer a victim but a survivor.  The character development through the story is amazing and makes the reader excited for her future. 

Book Trailer:


El Deafo

Bell, C., & Lasky, D. (2014). El Deafo. Retrieved May 12, 2016, from https://southtexas.libraryreserve.com.

Summary: Cece is a rabbit who was born perfectly normal and at the age of three gets bacterial meningitis which leaves her deaf. Her family finally figures out that Cece cannot hear and get her to a doctor where she has to wear hearing aids.  The hearing aids have cords that attach to her ears to a box which helps her hear.  Her first year of school she attends a school that has other deaf students and learns to lip read, but then her family moves and she gets the Phonic Ear for her next school year. The Phonic Ear has a microphone that the teacher uses to help Cece hear her better than the just the hearing aids.  Through the Phonic Ear Cece learns that she has her own “super power” at school.  This “super power” becomes really cool in fifth grade when it helps her become El Deafo, one of the coolest kids at school. The book is semi-autobiographical so it only makes sense that the narrator is the main character. Since the book is written from the perspective of the main character the reader is allowed into Cece’s inner most thoughts and feelings. 

Video Cece Bell discussing El Deafo:

Annie on my mind

Garden, N. (1982). Annie on my mind. New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux.

Summary: Annie on My Mind, is a wonderful coming of age romance with two high school senior females, Liza and Annie. They go to vastly different schools in New York and meet by chance when Liza hears Annie singing at the museum. They quickly become friends and constantly make-believe they are parts of a story (knights, unicorns). The girls have each struggled to fit in at their own schools and hold tightly to their new friendship. When the friendship begins to blossom into something more, the girls are scared and hesitant but soon are completely in love. However, their relationship takes a turn for the worst when they are found out by the secretary of Liza’s strict private school and she is threatened with expulsion for being a lesbian. The novel starts in the third-person point of view and then continues from Liza's point of view as she tells the story of Annie and herself. It ends again in the third person. Interestingly the sections from the third person represent Liza as more vulnerable than she represents herself in the first person. While in the third person, which occurs in present time, she is at university and perhaps more comfortable with who she is, in the first person point of view, though she knows she is different, she is always trying to fit in.

George

Gino, A. (2015). George. New York: Scholastic Press.

Summary: George is about a boy who hates the fact that he is a boy.  He dislikes everything that comes with being a boy.  In her eyes she Melissa.  Melissa is sensitive, caring and screaming to come to life.  She feels her opportunity to show everyone what an amazing girl she is comes from playing the main character in the school play of Charlotte’s Web.  The problem is that Charlotte is a girl’s character and George is a boy.  Her best friend Kelly encourages her to try out for the part and when she does she is told that no matter how good she is the teacher won’t cast her in a girl part. This is a terrible blow for George but it gives her the courage to tell her best friend that she identifies with being a girl.  After a brief break Kelly comes around and accepts George just the way she is. In the end, the day at the zoo allows George (Melissa) to really be herself. This book is quite cutting edge with the societal issue at hand.  The conflict George has with himself is the heart and soul of the book.  The conflict also lies with how others, including his family will respond to his true self. 

Author Alex Gino’s website:

It's perfectly normal: A book about changing bodies, growing up, sex and sexual health

Harris, R. H., & Emberley, M. (2009). It's perfectly normal: A book about changing bodies, growing up, sex and sexual health. Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press.

Summary:  This nonfiction book deal exclusively with sexual development of young adults.  The book is written with cartoon pictures but terminology that young people can understand.  The book deals with the question of sex, the human body, puberty, families and babies, and staying healthy.  This book has diagrams labeling the anatomy of females and males as well as an index to reference. This book has all the elements that make it great informational literature for young adults.  The information is accurate and current, has no stereotypes, it is given balanced treatment considering the topic, and the qualifications of the author while not a doctor, give a through indication of sources used and consulted.

Monster

Myers, W. D., & Myers, C. (1999). Monster. New York, NY: HarperCollins.

Summary:  Steve Harmon is on trial for murder.  But he feels as if this couldn’t really be happening to him so Steve tells his story as though he is filming a movie, a movie of his life.  A murder occurred although it was not at the hands of Steve but he was involved but to what extent is what his lawyer is trying to prove.  In the end Steve is found not guilty but at what expense?  His mom is happy he is not in jail, his dad moved away and is no longer sure of who Steve is anymore, and even Steve himself isn’t sure who he is either. The characters seem to hardened to life by their environment.  These lack sensitivities appear to be the result of growing up in an indifferent environment with great socioeconomic disadvantages.  The main character’s inability to see himself as an integral part of the events that occurred is an example of the lack of sensitivity.

Book Trailer:

The knife of never letting go Chaos walking. Book one

Ness, P. (2008). The knife of never letting go Chaos walking. Book one. London: Walker.

Summary:  Todd Hewitt is the only boy left in his town Prentisstown, a settlement in the ‘New World’.  He is getting really close to his fourteenth birthday where he is no longer a boy but a man.  During his time in the swamp he discovers something that forces Todd to have to leave the town.  What discovered was a girl, of which he had never seen.  Todd must defend his new travel companion against the preacher in his town and sets them off on an adventure to a safe town.  Along the way Todd and Viola discover all they have is each other, but in the end Todd has to surrender his position to save Viola.  This book left me feeling anxious for Todd for most of the story. The cliff-hanger ending makes me want to read the next book to find out what happens next. This is a coming-of-age story where our protagonist rebels against the majority because he is strong enough to question what is right and wrong rather than just blindly offering his loyalty. This story is told through Todd’s point of view which allows the reader to be privy to his thoughts and feelings about everything and keeps all the other characters as a bit of a mystery.

Book Trailer:

Gabi, a girl in pieces

Quintero, I. (2014). Gabi, a girl in pieces. Retrieved May 18, 2016, from https://southtexas.libraryreserve.com

Summary:  Gabi is a senior in high school and who chronicles her life through her journal.  She finds out that her best friend Cindy is pregnant and her other best friend Sebastian just came out to his parents who kicked him out of the house and to top it off her dad is a meth addict.  Gabi is having her own difficult time with food and boys.  Through her journey Gabi deals with the death of her father, losing her virginity and her mom’s constant nagging about her weight. In the end she finds who she is through her beautiful gift of poetry.  Poetry allows Gabi to deal with the turmoil in her life and come out the other end able to find balance in her life.  This story has so many things going on; teen pregnancy, gay best friend, drug addicted father who over-doses and dies, a troubled brother, a mom who nags her constantly.  She is completely real and a character young people and adults can relate to which make this a great novel to read.

Teaching resource:


Persepolis

Satrapi, M. (2003). Persepolis. N, NY: Pantheon Books.

Summary:  Persepolis is an exquisite story told through the lens of Marjane Satrapi the author of her own story.  Ms. Satrapi tells her story of growing up in Iran as the country encountered suppressive regimes, terrifying killings, and prejudiced laws. In light of all the harmful events she reveals to the reader a story of a rich culture full of life and love. She felt it important not to forget those that were forced to leave their families and homeland, those that lost their lives in prisons defending freedom, and those who died in the war against Iraq.  The book is presented in a graphic novel format which is unique for this type of story. The coming of age theme is apparent in this novel as Marjane develops into an independent woman who then questions her national identity.

Film Trailer:

Brown girl dreaming

Woodson, J. (2014). Brown girl dreaming. New York, NY: Penguin Group.

Summary:  Brown girl dreaming is a beautifully written story in the format of free verse poetry.  This books explores the author’s life as she was growing up in the 1960s and 1970s in both the North and the South.  She explores what life was like growing up in the South in her early childhood as her awareness of the civil rights movement grew and its impact on her and her family. She also describes life in Brooklyn, New York in her later adolescence and how being a Jehovah Witness meant following rules not everyone understood. The greatest moment was when she found her voice through her writing despite her struggles with reading. Included in the book are a family tree and actually photos of family members.  Family is a major theme in this story.  In Brown Girl Dreaming, family involves mutual love, compassion, loyalty towards, and emotional, spiritual, and physical support of individuals who may or may not be blood-related, but who still behave in the fashion of the traditional family unit. 

Jacqueline Woodson reading from Brown Girl Dreaming:

Athletic shorts: Six short stories

Crutcher, C. (1991). Athletic shorts: Six short stories. New York: Greenwillow Books.

Summary:  Written as six short stories all of which have an athletic theme.  Each story has a relatable problem for the characters.  One story deals with AIDS, homosexuality, and dying.  The character learns that standing up for what you believe is more important than what everyone else thinks about what you should do.  In another story the character loses his family at the hands of drunk boater who he knows.  Swimming is his way of dealing or not dealing with the loss of his family.  He learns that forgiveness is not about being weak or forgetting what happened but healing himself.   The topics discussed in these short stories are ones that can not be kept from young readers and give a great platform for teacher to discuss the tough topics with students in a positive way.  These stories are completely relatable to high school students who may be facing similar issues. 

Chris Crutcher’s Website:

I crawl through it: A novel

King, A. S. (2015). I crawl through it: A novel. New York, NY: Little Brown and Company.

Summary:  This book is told from four different point of views. Stanzi, Gustav, China, and Lansdale are all students in high school facing testing week, but with bomb-threats and relocating class outside seems to put them all over the edge.  They are all bright and internalizing their anxieties in a terrible way.  Stanzi is trying to deal or not deal with the death of her sister, China is coping with a sexual assault and depression, Lansdale just wants someone to talk to.  Eventually all truths are told and the teens are left in a better place with their family and friends.  I found this book extremely hard to read.  Most of the time I didn’t “get it”.  Which left me feeling lost and searching for connections.  The plot of this book is definitely not linear. It employs several complex plot characteristics such as flashback and dual narratives.  The conflict lies with the characters against themselves at times as well as the societal issue of high-stakes testing and the anxieties that causes with students. 

Book Trailer:

100 sideways miles

Smith, A. (2014). 100 sideways miles. New York: Simon & Schuster.

Summary: Finn Easton is a sixteen year old and epileptic.  He has a best friend named Cade Hernandez who helps Finn feel normal and not like a character in his father’s best-selling cult classic novel.  Finn meets the new girl in school Julia Bishop whom he falls in love with.  Then Julia moves back to Chicago and Finn is heart-broken.  Finn and Cade go on a road trip to Oklahoma and while on the road their lives completely change.  The two of them save a grandpa, grandson, and a dog that swerved off the road in a storm.  After that they change course to Chicago to see Julia and Finn ends up realizing he is not a character in his father’s book and he is just Finn a sixteen year old epileptic.  This story was humorous while dealing with very serious situations in life.  I found myself smiling and laughing out loud throughout the story. Coming of Age is an important theme in literature and in this book "100 Sideways Miles." Finn comes of age as he views his life differently by the end of the story.

Book Trailer:

The strange case of Origami Yoda

Angleberger, T., & Rosenstock, J. L. (2010). The strange case of Origami Yoda. Retrieved June 22, 2016, from southtexas.libaryreserve.com.

Summary:  Tommy has a problem, “Is Origami Yoda real?”  Tommy has an important question to ask the Origami Yoda but is having a difficult time deciding if the origami finger puppet is for real.  The finger puppet is owned by Dwight a friend of Tommy’s who is a bit weird.  The book chronicles journal entries that Tommy has gotten his friends to write about their experiences with Origami Yoda.  In the end Tommy realizes that Origami Yoda has helped all their friends in one way or another and Tommy takes the chance that Origami Yoda can help him too.  This book would be a great recommendation for any young person in fourth grade and up.  There are many other books by this author including, Darth Paper Strikes Back and Emperor Pickletine Rides the Bus. The book’s point of view is multifaceted. A cast of ten people share their experiences with the Yoda doll. Tommy has more chapters than others, since he is the main character. Each entry into the book is first person point of view. This allows for a closer connection between the characters and the reader. Multiple points of view from other characters also offer insight into the personal thoughts and feelings of those characters, and how they deal with the Yoda doll’s predictions.

Book Trailer:

Red glove

Black, H. (2011). Red glove. New York: Margaret K. McElderry Books.

Summary: Cassel Sharpe is a seventeen year old transformation worker whose brother was just murdered and the federal agents ask for his help to solve the murder.  During his journey to find the killer he is also approached by mobsters whom his brother worked for.  The mobsters offer him a lifestyle that make it hard to say no to, but it comes with moral and legal consequences.  In the end he finds out that his brother’s killer was his brother’s estranged wife and he ends up framing someone else for the murder.  And the girls he loves is joining the ranks of her father’s mob putting a divide between the two of them.  This is the second book of the Curse Workers series.  I really enjoyed reading this book it was a page turner and makes me want to read the other books in the series. This plot is full of twists and turns and the reader is not really sure if good is going to prevail over evil.  The major conflict in this story Cassel’s conflict with himself and if he wants to do the right thing or the wrong.

Curse Workers Series Trailer:

Paper towns

Green, J. (2008). Paper towns. New York: Dutton Books. Retrieved June 24, 2016, from southtexas.libaryreserve.com.

Summary: Quentin Jacobsen is a seventeen-year-old living in an Orlando-area high school. He has been in love with his childhood best friend, Margo, his entire life. Quentin is an intelligent boy and Margo has a reputation for being tough and cool. When they were nine years old, he and Margo shared a discovery that changed their lives forever. After the discovery they drifted apart as friends. Then a few weeks before high school graduation Margo appears at Quentin’s window in the middle of the night so he will accompany her on an all-nighter of pranks. Quentin thinks that this night will bring him and Margo together again as friends. However, Margo runs away after their adventures. Quentin turns to his friends, for help in an attempt to find her. They eventually skip their high school graduation and go on a cross-country trip to find or “save her.” Margo has left clues in the hopes that he will find her. Along the way, Quentin realizes that Margo is not really the person that he thought he knew. The central conflict of this novel is the journey that Quentin, the protagonist makes as he battles with his love and infatuation for Margo and comes to realize the difference between the Margo he loves and the real Margo who is actually shown to be a rather callous and unthinking individual, as shown by her night of pranks that she insists Quentin joins her on.

Paper Towns Movie Trailer:

Goodbye stranger

Stead, R. (2015). Goodbye stranger. New York: Penguin Group.

Summary:
Bridgette is nearly killed in a skating accident when she was hit by a car when she was eight.  Now a seventh grader with her two best friends; Tab and Emily.  The three girls have one rule:  No fighting!  Bridge worries whether her friend Sherm “like likes” her, whether her older brother Jamie will ever manage to get rid of his toxic “frenemy” Alex.  Tabitha has discovered feminism thanks to her English teacher, Ms. Berman and Emily has grown breasts, become the star of the soccer team and is being pursued by older boys. When a sexy picture of Emily begins circulating around the school, Emily wonders why she didn’t listen when her friends told her not to take the picture.  Emily has to deal with being called names by others at school and being pushed out of the talent show due to her reputation.  Thankfully she has the support of her best friends.  In the end the friends realize mistakes were made and can be forgiven.  This book has many characteristics of contemporary realistic fiction. The main characters are smart but realistically flawed and the smartest of them does something very, very stupid, yet somehow plausible. They do things they regret, and then they say sorry, face the consequences and learn something from it.

Rebecca Stead’s Website:

Something like normal

Outstanding Books for the College Bound


Doller, T. (2012). Something like normal. New York: Bloomsbury.

Summary: Travis Stephenson is the oldest son of the Dean Stephenson, former NFL player with the Green Bay Packers. When his father began grooming him for a potential career as a football player, Travis wanted no part of it and quit the game. After high school, he enlisted in the Marines, and was sent overseas to Afghanistan. While in Afghanistan his best friend Charlie was killed. Travis arrives home on leave trying to cope with his girlfriend, Paige, having dumped him and taken up with his brother Ryan, Ryan having taken over his car, his parents crumbling relationship and of all of these things, it is Charlie's death that is the most troubling for Travis who is experiencing nightmares and hallucinations, and tremendous guilt over Charlie's death.
Things appear to be going all downhill until one night Travis stumbles into a bar and runs into a former schoolmate, Harper Gray. Harper and Travis do not have a good history mainly because in Grade 8 Travis told everyone lies about her and permanently ruined her reputation. Although Harper at first rejects Travis, a sort of cautious friendship develops between the two. Harper seems to recognize that Travis is struggling and needs some companionship. It is Harper's caring concern that provides a mooring for Travis to begin to heal the hurt he has in his life, and he wisely takes hold of it. In this contemporary fiction, the story is very possible and could be anyone’s life who has been in the military.  Travis is a character that readers can connect with due to the amount of trauma he has endured.  Death and romance are prominent themes intertwined in the story.

Me and Earl and the dying girl: A novel

NYT Bestseller List Book


Andrews, J. (2012). Me and Earl and the dying girl: A novel. New York: Amulet Books.

Summary:
Greg Gaines’ only wants to get through high school.  He doesn’t have any real friends, floating from group to group with no real connections to anyone.  Greg is so insecure he avoids living life instead of participating in it.  Greg’s only friend is Earl Jackson whom shares his love of cinema and together they write and film their own short films based on their favorite movies.  When a childhood friend, Rachel becomes sick with leukemia his mom suggests that Greg reach out to her to reconnect.  This is when his life changes because at first he was reluctant then the more time he spends with her he realizes that he enjoys spending time with her.  Greg finally introduces Earl to Rachel and they have a rocky start but find common ground when he tells her about the films they made.  The boys are surprised when Rachel really likes the films they have made.  One day Greg is asked to make film especially for Rachel.  During the process of making the film Greg’s grades fall, but they finally made “Rachel the Film”.  The film ends up being shown to the entire school and Greg’s nonexistence is over. Shortly after the showing of the film, Rachel dies. In the Epilogue, Greg reveals that he is writing the book in order to explain to the admissions board that his grief over Rachel’s death is the reason that he failed so many classes in his first year of college and that he really wants to go to film school like Rachel wanted him to. The author doesn’t make this book a sappy cancer love story which is refreshing and actually more true to how real teens may feel.  

Book Trailer:
Movie Trailer:

Red queen

Quick Picks


Aveyard, V. (2015). Red queen. Retrieved June 22, 2016, from southtexas.libaryreserve.com.

Summary:
“Red Queen” is a novel by which follows how seventeen-year-old Mare Barrow’s discovery that she, a peasant-born Red, has the special powers of the elite ruling Silvers and changes the course of her country’s future. When the novel begins, Mare is a lowly peasant pickpocket of the Red-blooded class. The Reds carry out most of the dirty work of the world, ruled over by elite Silver-blooded humans with special powers and ability. Mare hates the Silvers. When an incident occurs where her sister Gisa is punished for pick-pocketing Mare cannot face going home.  Instead she ends up at a pub where she is promised by a wealthy man he will help her.  The next day she is whisked to work for the royal family.  During the Queenstrial violent shaking of the building causes Mare to fall and during the fall she emits a massive shield of lightning to protect herself.  The Silver royals do not know what to make of her but come up with a plan to have her marry Maven, a royal prince as a cover up.  She goes through training and begins to fall for Cal the older prince who is set to marry Evangaline.  As time passes, Mare develops romantic feelings for Cal and for Maven, though she tries to keep hating them. She ultimately comes to join the Scarlet Guard in order to make things right for the Reds and to end the ongoing war. Surprisingly, Maven joins her, telling her that it is time for change.   The Queen uses her powers to force Cal to kill his own father. Maven reveals himself as a traitor, having used Mare to help him destroy the Scarlet Guard and become king on his own. Mare and Cal are then sentenced to death, but manage to escape when they are aided by the Scarlet Guard. Coming of age is an important theme in the novel. Coming of age involves the personal, spiritual, moral, or emotional growth and maturation of an individual often based on real world experiences, events, or mistakes.  It is Mare who comes of age, and her journey of self-discovery and growth both influences, and is influenced by, the overall plot.

Book Trailer:

The crossover

Best Fiction for Young Adults


Alexander, K. (2014). The crossover. Retrieved July 7, 2016, from southtexas.libaryreserve.com.

Summary:
Flithy aka Josh Bell loves basketball.  Josh is a seventh grader who has a twin brother named JB, he and Josh are the stars of their basketball team.  Their dad Chuck was a star basketball player and played professionally in Italy.  Josh and JB both love basketball, but it is Josh who truly admires and wishes to emulate his father by following in his father’s footsteps. For Josh, basketball is not merely about fame at school, or future fortune, but because he truly does have a love for the game itself. He loves his family dearly, and loves the way life is going for him. Until he is forced to cut his dread locks and his brother gets a girlfriend.  Josh is left feeling lonely and angry at his brother for the changes in his life.  Josh’s anger boils over during a basketball game where he nearly breaks his brother’s nose because of a pass he through too hard.  After this incident JB won’t even speak to Josh, leaving him feeling even more alone.  Josh’s father suffers a heart attack due to a lifetime of poor eating habits and heredity.  His dad dies after several more heart attacks in the hospital.  Josh comes to understand that he still has his brother. JB feels the same way, and as such, both brothers renew their relationship and realize aside from their mother they will always have each other.  This young adult novel is written entirely in poetic verse.  It has many of the characteristics of effective poetry such as relatability, rhythm, rhyme, imagery, and figurative language.  The relatability of the subject matter is a major hook for young readers and the family theme is one that all readers can relate to. 

Book Trailers:

The carnival at Bray: A novel

Printz Honor


Foley, J. A. (2014). The carnival at Bray: A novel. Retrieved July 7, 2016, from southtexas.libaryreserve.com.

Summary:
The story follows the experiences of Maggie Lynch, a sixteen-year-old girl from Chicago. Maggie, her younger sister Ronnie, and their mother Laura move from Chicago to Ireland after Laura marries Colm.  As a young teen, Maggie is not thrilled with the move because she doesn't feel like she fits in with the other kids. Maggie is not only struggling with her new life in a foreign country, but she is having problems with her family, too.  Maggie's mother acts younger than her real age, and Maggie’s Uncle Kevin, a rocker with whom she has always been especially close, has taken to using heavy drugs back in Chicago.  During Christmas Maggie’s Uncle Kevin and Grandma come to visit in Ireland for the holidays and Laura and Uncle Kevin end up in a huge fight and Kevin leaves the next day.  Maggie’s highlight of the holidays is when she shares a kiss with her crush Eoin, but her happiness is short lived when she learns her beloved Uncle is dead.  A month later Maggie gets a letter explaining that her Uncle committed suicide because he just couldn’t get his life together. The package also contains two tickets to an upcoming concert in Rome for Nirvana. Maggie and Eoin run away together to Rome to see the concert. They enjoy the show and later tour Rome. Back at their hotel room, they confess their love to one another and end up having sex. She is almost expelled from her school Eoin is expelled due to the run-away incident. The story ends with Maggie’s mom and sister going back to Chicago and Maggie staying to finish school in Ireland. The overall theme in this story is coming of age.  Coming of age involves the personal, spiritual, moral, or emotional growth and maturation of an individual often based on real world experiences. These experiences may lead the individual astray before bringing the individual to a better place, as is the case with Maggie in the novel. 


Sisters

Great Graphic Novels for Teens


Telgemeier, R., Lamb, B., & Falco, P. (2014). Sisters. Retrieved June 22, 2016, from southtexas.libaryreserve.com.

Summary: In this story Raina is big sister to Amara.  The two sisters will be going on a road trip with their mom and brother for a family reunion.  Needless to say Raina and Amara are at the ages where they dislike each other a lot.  They spend most time bickering over trivial issues.  When unexpected car trouble happens the girls are stuck alone and must work together to capture the “missing” snake.  I have two daughters around the same ages as these characters and I can totally relate.  The author tells this story of her own experience with sister growing up. Other books by this author are Smile and Drama

Book Trailer:

Steve Jobs: The man who thought different

Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults

Blumenthal, K. (2012). Steve Jobs: The man who thought different. London: Bloomsbury.

Summary:  This is a biography of the technology revolutionist Steve Jobs.  Karen Blumenthal writes about the life of Steve Jobs, she tells about his upbringing in elementary school into high school and the challenges he faced.  The book also discusses his career and how the company Apple came to existence.  She tells about the ups and downs Steve Jobs had during his career as well.  The book is divided into three sections, the first section discusses his early life and Apple’s beginning.  The second section discusses his family and his rise back at Apple.  The third section discusses his battle with cancer and juggling his career.  The book includes a timeline, photos, glossary, and an author’s note. This book was very insightful for the reader into the life of Steve Jobs.  A young person in high school could use this book as a way to see life different and its okay to be different.

Book Trailer: 

Textbook Chart Analysis