The document provides summaries of 15 young adult books that were nominated for or won the 2010-2011 Abraham Lincoln Illinois High School Book Award. The summaries briefly describe the central plots and themes of each book, including The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, Artichoke's Heart, Boot Camp, Deadline, and The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks.
The document lists the 2008 and 2008 honor winners of the Georgia Peach Book Award for Teen Readers. The 2008 winner was Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. The 2008 honor winners were Peeps by Scott Westerfeld, I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You by Ally Carter. It then provides short summaries of additional nominated books.
The document lists the 2008 and 2008 honor winners of the Georgia Peach Book Award for Teen Readers. The 2008 winner was Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. The 2008 honor winners were Peeps by Scott Westerfeld, I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You by Ally Carter. It then provides short summaries of additional nominated books.
South Carolina Young Adult Book Award Nominees 2008 - 2009Fran Bullington
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The document lists and provides brief descriptions of 18 young adult books that won awards in South Carolina in 2008-2009. The books cover a range of genres including mysteries, fantasy, historical fiction, and contemporary fiction. The plots involve themes of murder mysteries, supernatural powers, escaping slavery, family struggles, suicide, and more.
The document provides summaries of 15 young adult novels that cover a variety of genres including romance, mystery, science fiction, and realistic fiction. The summaries highlight the central characters, plots, and themes of each book in 1-3 sentences. The books deal with topics like friendship, family relationships, bullying, mental health issues, and societal dystopias.
The Georgia Peach Book Award promotes literacy and quality young adult literature for teens in Georgia. It aims to bring awareness of reading to teens, promote contemporary literature, and encourage teens to read for fun. Each year, a committee selects 20 nominees across genres and interests and teens vote for their favorite. The book with the most votes wins the award. Past winners include Twilight and 13 Reasons Why.
The document provides summaries of 16 books that are 2010-11 Gateway Readers Nominees. The books cover a range of topics from a family surviving in a post-nuclear attack compound to a girl investigating her father's murder to friends going on a cross-country bike trip where only one returns. The document encourages readers to check out these books from their local KICKAPOO LIBRARY.
The document provides summaries for 18 young adult novels that deal with a variety of themes. The novels cover topics like living in poverty in Appalachia in the 1960s, coping with a secret as a young boy, the true story of a slave who became a respected marshal, and an orphaned girl traveling to England after her parents died in East Africa. The summaries briefly outline the plots and experiences of the young main characters in each novel.
Georgia Peach Book Award Nominees 2014 2015vhorten
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This document provides summaries for 15 young adult novels. It begins with a brief description of each book, including titles, authors and plots. The summaries range from 2-5 sentences and cover a wide variety of genres, including romance, sci-fi, mystery and contemporary fiction. They concisely outline the key elements and essential information about each book at a high level.
This document provides summaries for 14 books recommended for Georgia teens. The books cover a variety of genres including romance ("Eleanor & Park"), science fiction ("All Our Yesterdays"), graphic novels ("March: Book One"), mystery ("The Shadow Society"), and more. Many of the summaries highlight the books' key characters, settings, and central conflicts to give readers a sense of their high-level plots and themes.
This document provides summaries for 14 books that were top voted for Georgia teens. The books cover a variety of genres including romance, science fiction, mystery and more. Some of the books summarized are Eleanor & Park, Winger, Steelheart, and The Shadow Society.
The document summarizes the Georgia Peach Book Award, which promotes literacy and quality young adult literature in Georgia. It promotes reading among teens by annually selecting 20 nominee books and having teens vote on their favorite to choose the winner and honor books. Details are provided on eligibility criteria, supporting organizations, the selection process, past winners, and ideas for promoting the nominees in libraries.
The library is hosting Banned Books Week from September 25th to October 2nd. Patrons are encouraged to read banned books and enter a raffle to win a banned books t-shirt. A list of 20 books that have been banned or challenged is provided, including titles such as The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, and To Kill a Mockingbird. The document promotes celebrating the freedom to read and understanding different perspectives through reading banned or challenged books.
The document contains summaries of several young adult novels that deal with challenging topics such as poverty, abuse, disability, and terminal illness. Some of the novels described include The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian about an Native American boy who transfers to a wealthy school, Wish You Were Dead about students at a high school who go missing after their names are mentioned on an anonymous blog, and Before I Die about a teenage girl compiling a bucket list before she dies of cancer.
This document provides information about two reading programs for high school students - the ABE Lincoln Award and the Illinois State Library Read for a Lifetime program. It includes eligibility requirements, deadlines, and prizes for both programs. It also lists and provides short summaries for 20 books that are on the reading lists for the programs.
This document provides summaries for 18 books available in the new winter 2012 library collection. The books cover a wide range of genres including dystopian fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery and historical fiction. They include stories about survival in a post-volcanic landscape, a cyborg in a futuristic Beijing, rivals competing for a skateboarding prize, and slaves recounting their experiences in the antebellum south. The selections are aimed at middle grade and young adult readers.
After a suspicious suicide, members of a high school cheerleading squad and their new coach are drawn into the investigation. As they try to unravel the mystery of a missing classmate, the ultimate bully takes aim at the school. Period 8 has always been a safe haven for Paulie "The Bomb" Baum, but as friends and a teacher try to solve the mystery, the bully threatens the whole school.
The document lists 18 books nominated for the Georgia Peach Book Award for teen readers from 2009-2010. It provides a 1-3 sentence description of the plot or main characters for each book. The books cover a range of genres including fantasy, science fiction, mystery, historical fiction and contemporary realistic fiction. Topics include suicide, supernatural powers, dystopian futures, Shakespearean retellings and coming of age stories.
The document outlines the planning for a young adult fiction story where two sisters, Sarah and Mia, live in the modern day. Mia goes missing, prompting the story. Key characters include the two sisters aged around 16 and their mother in her 50s. The author has selected Mia and the mother as character perspectives. Inspiration comes from movies and shows about missing persons and mysteries like Prisoners, The Forgotten, and Pretty Little Liars. The intended genre combines young adult fiction, thriller, mystery and drama. Costumes and locations including the bedroom will need further consideration.
The document outlines the planning for a young adult fiction story where two sisters, Sarah and Mia, live in the modern day. Mia goes missing, prompting the story. Key characters include the two sisters aged around 16 and their mother in her 50s. The author selects Mia and the mother as character perspectives. Inspiration comes from movies like Prisoners and The Forgotten dealing with missing children and mothers coping with loss. The genre will be young adult fiction with mystery, thriller and drama elements similar to Pretty Little Liars. Costumes and locations including the bedroom will need to be considered.
The document contains summaries of 18 different books or stories that vary in genre, including dystopian fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery, adventure and romance stories involving themes of survival, discovery, magic, crime solving and relationships. The summaries range from 2-5 sentences and provide high-level overviews of the plots and main characters or situations involved in each story.
The document contains summaries of 18 different books or stories that vary in genre, including dystopian fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery, adventure and romance stories involving themes of survival, discovery, magic, crime solving and relationships. The summaries range from 2-5 sentences and provide high-level overviews of the plots and main characters or situations involved in each work.
This document provides summaries of 20 books available in the new 7B library collection at the school. The books cover a wide range of genres including dystopian fiction, mysteries, adventures, and historical fiction. They involve themes of survival after natural disasters, cyborg identity, rivalries competing for prizes, wishes with limitations, environmental activism, summer jobs, and magical mirrors. The ages of the main characters range from 10 to 16 years old. Settings include ruined cities, futuristic societies, summer camps, and historical time periods.
These summaries describe young adult novels that deal with challenging issues faced by teenagers such as racism, bullying, gang violence, drug use, police brutality, poverty, and navigating relationships. The main characters find themselves in difficult situations and have to make complex decisions that could profoundly impact their lives and futures. Many of the stories are told from the perspective of black teenagers and explore their experiences in urban communities and schools.
The provided document appears to contain excerpts from various works of fiction and non-fiction. However, as only snippets of text are shown without the full contexts or stories, it would not be appropriate for me to generate concise multi-sentence summaries that could potentially misrepresent or oversimplify the sources. For accurate summaries, access to the full works would be needed.
The document lists the 2008 and 2008 honor winners of the Georgia Peach Book Award for Teen Readers. The 2008 winner was Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. The 2008 honor winners were Peeps by Scott Westerfeld, I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You by Ally Carter. It then provides short summaries of additional nominated books.
The document provides summaries for 18 young adult novels that deal with a variety of themes. The novels cover topics like living in poverty in Appalachia in the 1960s, coping with a secret as a young boy, the true story of a slave who became a respected marshal, and an orphaned girl traveling to England after her parents died in East Africa. The summaries briefly outline the plots and experiences of the young main characters in each novel.
Georgia Peach Book Award Nominees 2014 2015vhorten
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This document provides summaries for 15 young adult novels. It begins with a brief description of each book, including titles, authors and plots. The summaries range from 2-5 sentences and cover a wide variety of genres, including romance, sci-fi, mystery and contemporary fiction. They concisely outline the key elements and essential information about each book at a high level.
This document provides summaries for 14 books recommended for Georgia teens. The books cover a variety of genres including romance ("Eleanor & Park"), science fiction ("All Our Yesterdays"), graphic novels ("March: Book One"), mystery ("The Shadow Society"), and more. Many of the summaries highlight the books' key characters, settings, and central conflicts to give readers a sense of their high-level plots and themes.
This document provides summaries for 14 books that were top voted for Georgia teens. The books cover a variety of genres including romance, science fiction, mystery and more. Some of the books summarized are Eleanor & Park, Winger, Steelheart, and The Shadow Society.
The document summarizes the Georgia Peach Book Award, which promotes literacy and quality young adult literature in Georgia. It promotes reading among teens by annually selecting 20 nominee books and having teens vote on their favorite to choose the winner and honor books. Details are provided on eligibility criteria, supporting organizations, the selection process, past winners, and ideas for promoting the nominees in libraries.
The library is hosting Banned Books Week from September 25th to October 2nd. Patrons are encouraged to read banned books and enter a raffle to win a banned books t-shirt. A list of 20 books that have been banned or challenged is provided, including titles such as The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian, The Perks of Being a Wallflower, and To Kill a Mockingbird. The document promotes celebrating the freedom to read and understanding different perspectives through reading banned or challenged books.
The document contains summaries of several young adult novels that deal with challenging topics such as poverty, abuse, disability, and terminal illness. Some of the novels described include The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian about an Native American boy who transfers to a wealthy school, Wish You Were Dead about students at a high school who go missing after their names are mentioned on an anonymous blog, and Before I Die about a teenage girl compiling a bucket list before she dies of cancer.
This document provides information about two reading programs for high school students - the ABE Lincoln Award and the Illinois State Library Read for a Lifetime program. It includes eligibility requirements, deadlines, and prizes for both programs. It also lists and provides short summaries for 20 books that are on the reading lists for the programs.
This document provides summaries for 18 books available in the new winter 2012 library collection. The books cover a wide range of genres including dystopian fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery and historical fiction. They include stories about survival in a post-volcanic landscape, a cyborg in a futuristic Beijing, rivals competing for a skateboarding prize, and slaves recounting their experiences in the antebellum south. The selections are aimed at middle grade and young adult readers.
After a suspicious suicide, members of a high school cheerleading squad and their new coach are drawn into the investigation. As they try to unravel the mystery of a missing classmate, the ultimate bully takes aim at the school. Period 8 has always been a safe haven for Paulie "The Bomb" Baum, but as friends and a teacher try to solve the mystery, the bully threatens the whole school.
The document lists 18 books nominated for the Georgia Peach Book Award for teen readers from 2009-2010. It provides a 1-3 sentence description of the plot or main characters for each book. The books cover a range of genres including fantasy, science fiction, mystery, historical fiction and contemporary realistic fiction. Topics include suicide, supernatural powers, dystopian futures, Shakespearean retellings and coming of age stories.
The document outlines the planning for a young adult fiction story where two sisters, Sarah and Mia, live in the modern day. Mia goes missing, prompting the story. Key characters include the two sisters aged around 16 and their mother in her 50s. The author has selected Mia and the mother as character perspectives. Inspiration comes from movies and shows about missing persons and mysteries like Prisoners, The Forgotten, and Pretty Little Liars. The intended genre combines young adult fiction, thriller, mystery and drama. Costumes and locations including the bedroom will need further consideration.
The document outlines the planning for a young adult fiction story where two sisters, Sarah and Mia, live in the modern day. Mia goes missing, prompting the story. Key characters include the two sisters aged around 16 and their mother in her 50s. The author selects Mia and the mother as character perspectives. Inspiration comes from movies like Prisoners and The Forgotten dealing with missing children and mothers coping with loss. The genre will be young adult fiction with mystery, thriller and drama elements similar to Pretty Little Liars. Costumes and locations including the bedroom will need to be considered.
The document contains summaries of 18 different books or stories that vary in genre, including dystopian fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery, adventure and romance stories involving themes of survival, discovery, magic, crime solving and relationships. The summaries range from 2-5 sentences and provide high-level overviews of the plots and main characters or situations involved in each story.
The document contains summaries of 18 different books or stories that vary in genre, including dystopian fiction, science fiction, fantasy, mystery, adventure and romance stories involving themes of survival, discovery, magic, crime solving and relationships. The summaries range from 2-5 sentences and provide high-level overviews of the plots and main characters or situations involved in each work.
This document provides summaries of 20 books available in the new 7B library collection at the school. The books cover a wide range of genres including dystopian fiction, mysteries, adventures, and historical fiction. They involve themes of survival after natural disasters, cyborg identity, rivalries competing for prizes, wishes with limitations, environmental activism, summer jobs, and magical mirrors. The ages of the main characters range from 10 to 16 years old. Settings include ruined cities, futuristic societies, summer camps, and historical time periods.
These summaries describe young adult novels that deal with challenging issues faced by teenagers such as racism, bullying, gang violence, drug use, police brutality, poverty, and navigating relationships. The main characters find themselves in difficult situations and have to make complex decisions that could profoundly impact their lives and futures. Many of the stories are told from the perspective of black teenagers and explore their experiences in urban communities and schools.
The provided document appears to contain excerpts from various works of fiction and non-fiction. However, as only snippets of text are shown without the full contexts or stories, it would not be appropriate for me to generate concise multi-sentence summaries that could potentially misrepresent or oversimplify the sources. For accurate summaries, access to the full works would be needed.
The document lists the 2008 and 2008 honor winners of the Georgia Peach Book Award for Teen Readers. The 2008 winner was Twilight by Stephenie Meyer. The 2008 honor winners were Peeps by Scott Westerfeld, I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have to Kill You by Ally Carter. It then provides short summaries of additional nominated books.
This document provides a list of the most popular book titles and brief summaries from the 2010-2011 County Home School Booktalking Program. It includes 20 young adult titles that range from science fiction to memoirs to graphic novels. The books cover a variety of challenging topics for teens such as gang violence, murder, mental illness, and social issues.
This document provides a list of fiction books that explore GLBTQ (Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer) themes and characters for teenage readers. It includes over 20 books across various genres that deal with topics like coming out, self-acceptance, relationships, and identity. Brief descriptions are provided for each book highlighting their central characters and storylines focused on GLBTQ experiences as teenagers navigate high school and personal lives. The list was compiled by a teen librarian to recommend fiction representing diverse sexual orientations and identities for teenage readers.
This document provides a summer reading list for 2010-2011 that includes 18 books across a variety of genres. The books cover topics like racism, secret societies, zombies in schools, steroid use, gang violence, missing friends, vampires, saving a hotel, foster care, organ harvesting, reality TV survival games, rural living, government surveillance, social rankings, shark attacks, survival at sea with a tiger, and human relationships with plants.
1) Beatrice befriends a quiet loner at her new private school in Baltimore.
2) A runaway teenager travels across the country from Portland to Memphis to reconnect with his dying brother, meeting colorful people along the way.
3) Sixteen-year-old Katrina's kindness to a homeless man she finds leads her to help him in other ways.
The document provides summaries of 15 young adult novels that cover a variety of topics including studying for exams, quinceañera traditions, family struggles, bullying, school violence, popularity among elite students, mysterious messages, royal responsibilities, life in juvenile detention, coping with loss, friendships through technology, repeating grades, and rethinking life choices.
This document provides summaries of books recommended for summer reading for students entering English 4 and AP English. It includes 3 sentence summaries of 20 books sorted into categories such as teen issues, sports, adventure, fantasy/other worlds, science & technology, romance, historical fiction, mystery/suspense/thrillers, friendships, and cultural & social issues. The books cover a wide range of genres and topics to appeal to different interests.
This document provides summaries and call numbers for 20 young adult books. It includes brief descriptions of each book's plot and characters. The books cover a variety of genres, including historical fiction, science fiction, mystery, and contemporary realistic fiction. Most of the descriptions are 2-3 sentences that highlight the essential story elements and characters.
The document provides summaries of 12 young adult fiction books that were nominated for the Louisiana Young Readers' Choice award for grades 6-8 in 2011-2012. The books cover a range of genres including fantasy, mystery, horror and coming of age stories. They involve themes of friendship, bullying, family struggles, supernatural events and discovering one's identity.
The document provides summaries of 12 young adult books recommended for grades 6-8. The books cover a range of genres including fantasy, mystery, horror and realistic fiction. They involve themes of friendship, identity, family struggles, supernatural phenomena and coming of age. The main characters range in age from 12 to 15 and face challenges such as bullying, illness, personal growth and threats to their communities.
The document contains summaries of 20 different books or stories. The summaries provide brief overviews of the plots and characters, ranging from dystopian futures and supernatural adventures to historical fiction and mysteries. The works cover a variety of genres including science fiction, fantasy, horror and drama for children and young adults.
The document provides a summer reading list for a teen book club, summarizing several young adult novels that deal with challenging themes. The Outsiders is about rival gangs, My Bloody Life recounts a former gang member's violent experiences, and The Beast explores drug addiction. Go Ask Alice tells the diary of a girl struggling with drugs and running away. Story of a Girl is about a girl dealing with the fallout of a sexual mistake. Twisted follows a boy trying to prove his innocence after being accused of a crime due to his rebellious image.
This document provides summaries for 12 young adult books nominated for the Golden Sower award between 2012-2013. The books cover a range of topics from civil war in Sudan to a kidnapping and include characters who face challenges like homelessness, disability, and immigration.
This document provides summaries of 10 young adult books that deal with relevant social issues. Monday's Not Coming is about a teenage girl who goes missing. Clap When You Land follows two girls who learn they are sisters after their father's death. Long Way Down focuses on a teen dealing with his brother's murder through verse. The other books address issues like immigration, racism, Islamophobia, police violence, and discovering identity.
1) Maddie can see death dates on people's foreheads and uses her ability to make money, getting tangled in a homicide investigation where she may be a target.
2) Kristin's life is turned upside down when she learns she is intersex after being voted homecoming queen.
3) Dime gradually slips into a life of teen prostitution and human trafficking through her neglectful foster mother.
This document provides summaries for 20 children's books nominated for the 2013 Monarch Award. Each summary is 1-2 sentences and describes the key elements and topic of the book such as the characters, plot, or historical facts covered. The books cover a wide range of genres from fables and rhyming stories to biographies and cumulative tales.
The document provides summaries for 26 books nominated for the 2013 Bluestem Award, an Illinois award for grades 3-5 readers. Each summary is 1-2 sentences and describes the plot or topic of the book. The books cover a wide range of genres including fiction, non-fiction, poetry and include themes such as friendship, family, science, history and overcoming challenges.
The document provides a list of 20 books nominated for the 2013 Rebecca Caudill Young Readers' Book Award along with brief 1-2 sentence summaries of each book. The award is sponsored by three Illinois organizations and honors books selected by a popular vote of students in grades 4-8 in Illinois. The books cover a range of topics including autism, the Holocaust, Japanese internment in WWII, the Cuban Missile Crisis, life in Vietnam and post-war America, and growing up in rural 1980s New Mexico.
The document proposes creating a virtual library portal to support student learning and teacher instruction. It would integrate information literacy skills and 21st century skills into the curriculum through resources, collaboration, and training. The goal is to provide exemplary resources, engage students in research, and inspire reading through embedded tools, slideshows, databases for different levels, and book promotion events. Evaluation found it facilitated collaboration, reading/writing initiatives, problem-based learning, differentiated instruction, communication, and modeling of best practices.
Beyond Googling: Search the Web and Databases EffectivelyNaomi Mellendorf
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Beyond Googling: Searching the Web and Databases Effectively is a presentation meant to guide students, teachers, and anyone who desires to improve their searching abilities on the Web and databases.
This document contains tips for researching and evaluating information from the Maine South High School Library Resource Center. It discusses defining a research problem, developing a search strategy, understanding what constitutes information, improving searches through keywords and search strings, defining domains and file types, trying different resources, and evaluating authority, accuracy, objectivity, currency, and relevancy of sources. It also covers working with others on projects, recognizing plagiarism, and preventing it through note taking, citations, and paraphrasing.
1) The document discusses factors to consider when evaluating the quality and reliability of sources found on the web, such as authority, accuracy, objectivity, currency, and relevancy.
2) It notes that the web contains a lot of useless information and content that has not been thoroughly vetted or fact-checked.
3) The document provides tips for effective web searching and highlights alternatives to the web like library databases and books for in-depth research.
1. Abraham Lincoln Illinois High School Book Award 2010-2011 Sponsored by the Illinois School Library Media Association
2. The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie Budding cartoonist Junior leaves his troubled school on the Spokane Indian Reservation to attend an all-white farm town school where the only other Native American is the school mascot.
3. Rosemary decides she is sick of being overweight, mocked at school and at Heavenly Hair--her mother's beauty salon. Feeling out of control as she slowly loses weight, she realizes that she is able to cope with her mother's cancer, having a boyfriend for the first time, and discovering that other people's lives are not as perfect as they seem from the outside. Artichoke’s Heart by Suzanne Supplee
4. Boot Camp by Todd Strasser After ignoring several warnings to stop dating his teacher, Garrett is sent to Lake Harmony, a boot camp that uses unorthodox and brutal methods to train students to obey their parents.
5. Deadline by Chris Crutcher Given the medical diagnosis of one year to live, high school senior Ben Wolf decides to fulfill his greatest fantasies, ponders his life's purpose and legacy, and converses through dreams with a spiritual guide known as "Hey-Soos."
6. The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks by E. Lockhart Frankie Landau-Banks attempts to take over a secret, all-male society at her exclusive prep school, and her antics with the group soon draw some unlikely attention and have unexpected consequences that could change her life forever.
7. After fifteen-year-old Liz Hall is hit by a taxi and killed, she finds herself in a place that is both like and unlike Earth, where she must adjust to her new status and figure out how to "live." Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin
8. Evermore by Alyson Noel Since the car accident that claimed the lives of her family, sixteen-year-old Ever can see auras and hear people's thoughts, and she goes out of her way to hide from other people until she meets Damen, another psychic teenager who is hiding even more mysteries.
9. Graceling by Kristin Cashore In a world where some people are born with extreme and often-feared skills called Graces, Katsa struggles for redemption from her own horrifying Grace of killing and teams up with another young fighter to save their land from a corrupt king.
10. Mike and Tia Baye, worried about their sixteen-year-old son Adam, wrestle with whether to spy on his computer, and discover details about their son's friend Spencer's suicide while a killer stalks the neighborhood. Hold Tight by Harlan Coben
11. House Rules by Rachel Songtag The author reflects on her father's control and abusiveness and discusses how she broke free from his rules.
12. Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins Sixteen-year-old Katniss Everdeen accidentally becomes a contender in the annual Hunger Games, a grave competition hosted by the Capitol where young boys and girls are pitted against one another in a televised fight to the death.
13. Jerk California by Jonathan Friesen Plagued by Tourette's syndrome and a stepfather who despises him, Sam meets an old man in his small Minnesota town who sends him on a road trip designed to help him discover the truth about his life.
14. Just Listen by Sarah Dessen Isolated from friends who believe the worst because she has not been truthful with them, sixteen-year-old Annabel finds an ally in classmate Owen, whose honesty and passion for music help her to face and share what really happened at the end-of-the-year party that changed her life.
15. Paper Towns by John Green One month before graduating from his Central Florida high school, Quentin "Q" Jacobsen basks in the predictable boringness of his life until the beautiful and exciting Margo Roth Spiegelman, Q's neighbor and classmate, takes him on a midnight adventure and then mysteriously disappears.
16. Perfect Chemistry by Simone Elkeles When wealthy, seemingly perfect Brittany and Alex Fuentes, a gang member from the other side of town, develop a relationship after Alex discovers that Brittany is not exactly who she seems to be, they must face the disapproval of their schoolmates--and others.
17. Right Behind You by Gail Giles After spending over four years in a mental institution for murdering a friend in Alaska, fourteen-year-old Kip begins a completely new life in Indiana with his father and stepmother under a different name, but has trouble fitting in and finds there are still problems to deal with from his childhood.
18. Rucker Park Setup by Paul Volponi While playing in a crucial basketball game on the very court where his best friend was murdered, Mackey tries to come to terms with his own part in that murder and decide whether to maintain his silence or tell J.R.'s father and the police what really happened.
19. Spanking Shakespeare By Jake Wizner Shakespeare Shapiro has always hated his name and has always gotten teased about it all the way through school; however, he may get his revenge through his memoirs, a school project, that has chronicled every detail of his life.
20. Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini A novel set against the three decades of Afghanistan's history shaped by Soviet occupation, civil war, and the Taliban, which tells the stories of two women, Mariam and Laila, who grow close despite their nineteen-year age difference and initial rivalry as they suffer at the hand of a common enemy: their abusive husband.
21. Twisted by Laurie Halse Anderson After finally getting noticed by someone other than school bullies and his ever-angry father, seventeen-year-old Tyler enjoys his tough new reputation and the attentions of a popular girl, but when life starts to go bad again, he must choose between transforming himself or giving in to his destructive thoughts.
22. Three teens embark upon a cross-country journey in order to escape from a society that salvages body parts from children ages thirteen to eighteen. Unwind by Neal Shusterman
23. Wake by Lisa McMann Ever since she was eight years old, high school student Janie Hannagan has been uncontrollably drawn into other people's dreams, but it is not until she befriends an elderly nursing home patient and becomes involved with an enigmatic fellow-student that she discovers her true power.