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Each year the editoral staff of Booklist Magazine chooses nonfiction and fiction titles "based upon literary and artistic quality and special appeal to youth." Included on this page are titles for readers in grades 5-12.
Click on book titles for reviews and purchasing information from Amazon.com.

2006
BOOKS FOR OLDER READERS (grades 7 and up)
Almond, David. Clay.
A strange new kid in town convinces altar boy Davie to steal the body and blood of Christ from church, which the boys use to create a golem that obeys their wishes. Rooted in the life of a small English town, this gripping story raises issues about God, creativity, and evil.
Anderson, M.T. The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation, Volume 1: The Pox Party.
A young black boy in pre-revolutionary Boston experiences slavery’s monstrous horrors in this ambitious story rooted in eighteenth-century literary traditions. The masterful, archaic narrative, which shifts from diary to letter to journalism, echoes today’s vital questions about racism, power, freedom, and moral choices. (Top of the List winner—Youth Fiction.)
Bausum, Ann. Freedom Riders: John Lewis and Jim Zwerg on the Front Lines of the Civil Rights Movement.
Poignantly introducing the 1961 bus integration protests through specific personal histories, Bausum focuses on two participants—one black, one white. As the separate stories converge, stirring interviews and incisive archival photos speak volumes about the shocking actions of those opposed to integration, and the power of nonviolent protest. (Top of the List winner—Youth Nonfiction.)
Budhos, Marina. Ask Me No Questions. De
Both the secrets and the family dynamics are dramatic in teenage Nadira’s first-person narrative, which reveals her mixed-up feelings about being an illegal alien as well as the diversity in her family and her contemporary Muslim community in New York.
Chambers, Aidan. This Is All: The Pillow Book of Cordelia Kenn.
Chambers gives readers extraordinary full-dress portraits of his characters, particularly Cordelia, whose unsparingly honesty, and explicit recollections are both captivating and maddening as they explore the why of things as well as the what and the how.
Engle, Margarita. The Poet Slave of Cuba: A Biography of Juan Francisco Manzano.
In plain, stirring free verse, Engle dramatizes the boyhood of a nineteenth-century Cuban slave, who secretly learned to read and eventually wrote poetry about beauty and courage in his world of unspeakable brutality.
Freedman, Russell. The Adventures of Marco Polo.
Newbery Medalist Freedman takes readers along on Polo’s journey in a glorious piece of bookmaking that is as beautiful as many of the sights the explorer observed.
Green, John. An Abundance of Katherines.
Green’s sharp, intelligent story, full of mathematical problems, historical references, and anagrams, introduces child prodigy Colin Singleton, who faces life after high-school graduation fearing that he’ll never live up to his promise or get over being dumped by his girlfriend.
Jansen, Hanna. Over a Thousand Hills I Walk with You.
An important addition to Holocaust curriculums, this elemental account of perpetrators, victims, and bystanders tells the story of eight-year-old Jeanne, the only one of her family to survive the 1994 Rwanda genocide.
Knox, Elizabeth. Dreamhunter.
Imagining a society where dreams can be harvested and sold, Knox smartly explores the ramifications of this conceit through the coming-of-age experiences of 15-year-old cousins Rose and Laura. A heady narrative, rich in turn-of-the-century detail, magical adventure, and mystery.
Larson, Kirby. Hattie Big Sky.
In a first-person narrative infused with the sounds, smells, and sights of the prairie in 1918, 16-year-old orphan Hattie Brooks struggles to make a place for herself as a homesteader and support new friends endangered by local anti-German sentiment.
Lat. Kampung Boy.
Brimming with humor and affection, cartoonist Lat uses the graphic novel format to share the story of his childhood in a small Malaysian village, effectively encompassing both the universals of growing up and the specifics of a particular time and place.
Leavitt, Martine. Keturah and Lord Death.
The romance is intense, the writing is startling, and the story is spellbinding, as difficult to turn away from as the tales beautiful Keturah tells the villagers. Then one day she uses her storytelling skills with a different audience: Death.
Levine, Gail Carson. Fairest.
In a sophisticated, richly drawn world of fairy-tale music and magic, Asa, an innkeeper’s daughter with a beautiful voice, is blackmailed by a treacherous queen. Family secrets and Asa’s artistic growth add to the dramatic politics and thrilling romance.
McCormick, Patricia. Sold.
Based on interviews and told without sensationalizing the brutality, this unforgettable account of sexual slavery as it exists now tells the story of Lakshimi, 13, who is sold into prostitution by her stepfather and ends up in a Calcutta brothel.
Nuzum, K. A. A Small White Scar.
Fifteen-year-old Will strikes out across the Colorado plains in an attempt to leave behind his job on the family ranch: looking after his twin brother, who has Down syndrome. This coming-of-age story offers adventure as well as solid emotional and family dynamics.
Pfeffer, Suan Beth. Life as We Knew It.
A meteor hits the moon, but the event is not as benign as predicted. As life goes from bad to worse, 16-year-old Miranda struggles to survive mentally and physically. What happens is terrifying and infused with honest emotion.
Philip, Neil. The Great Circle: A History of the First Nations.
Philip takes on a huge challenge: to present a unified narrative that explains the complex and confrontational relationships between Native Americans and whites. Solid research, an engaging writing style, and a talent for making individual stories serve the whole make this successful. Top marks, too, for the photographs.
Philip, Neil. The Great Circle: A History of the First Nations.
Philip takes on a huge challenge: to present a unified narrative that explains the complex and confrontational relationships between Native Americans and whites. Solid research, an engaging writing style, and a talent for making individual stories serve the whole make this successful. Top marks, too, for the photographs.
Pratchett, Terry. Wintersmith.
This rollicking, clever, and charming adventure is the third in the Discworld series for young readers who will find themselves delighted again—or for the first time—by Pratchett’s exuberant storytelling.
Stroud, Jonathan. Ptolemy's Gate.
The concluding volume in the Bartimaeus trilogy, which is notable for its original fantasy world and the most delectably sardonic footnotes known to fiction, delves deeper into the histories and complexities of the characters, while the plot thunders along to a colossal climax.
Yang, Gene Luen. American Born Chinese.
With vibrant colors and visual panache, graphic novel writer-illustrator Yang introduces three characters in connected tales that touch on facets of Chinese American life. The thoughtful, powerful stories have a simple, engaging sweep as they introduce weighty subjects, such as shame and racism.
Zusak, Markus. The Book Thief.
Death, overwhelmed by the souls he must collect, turns his attention to orphaned Liesl, struggling to survive in Nazi Germany, who discovers horrifying cruelty as well as kindness in unexpected places.
BOOKS FOR MIDDLE GRADES READERS (grades 4-7)
Cooper, Susan. Victory.
Thirteen-year-old Molly, who longs to return to England, and 11-year-old Sam, an eighteenth-century lad pressed into service on the HMS Victory, provide compelling alternating narratives that find Molly making a choice that honors Sam’s life while bringing her own into balance.
Grimes, Nikki. The Road to Paris.
Grimes’ beautiful story of family, friendship, and faith unfolds from the viewpoint of biracial Paris, nine, who searches for a home in a harsh world. Her foster brother tells her to keep God in her pocket, something she never forgets.
Gutman, Dan. The Homework Machine.
Four classmates forge an unlikely alliance after one reveals that he has programmed his computer to do his homework. This fast-paced story has something for everyone: ethical underpinnings, convincing characters, and every child’s dream machine.
Jaramillo, Ann. La Linea.
In a heart-wrenching contemporary survival story, a brother and sister undergo a harrowing journey from Mexico across the border to join their parents in California. Told without romanticism, the harsh facts are gripping and immediate.
Kadohata, Cynthia. Weedflower.
Creating beautifully individualized characters, Kadohata brings a little-known part of World War II history to the fore, introducing 12-year-old Sumiko, who is relocated with her family to a desert internment camp on an Indian reservation.
Lin, Grace. The Year of the Dog.
The child of Taiwanese immigrants, Lin captures the soul and the spirit of girlhood stories like those of Hayward and Lovelace, reimagining them through the lens of her own experience while transforming them into something new for today’s readers.
Matthews, L.S. A Dog for Life.
John and his brother, Tom, share a special bond with their dog Mouse: they can read one another’s thoughts. When Tom’s illness forces Mouse from the house, the three come up with a plan. This is a little gem––part adventure and part heartfelt family story dusted with magic realism.
Montgomery, Sy. Quest for the Tree Kangaroo: An Expedition to the Cloud Forest of New Guinea.
This beautifully designed entry in the Scientists in the Field series follows a grueling expedition in Papua New Guinea to study a rare tree kangaroo. The detailed text and exemplary photographs give a strong sense of the place, its people, and the exciting demands of fieldwork.
Myers, Walter Dean. Jazz.
The father-son Myers team puts together an absolutely airtight melding of words and pictures that makes jazz perfectly accessible to a young audience.
Paterson, Katherine. Bread and Roses, Too.
With connections to contemporary issues about immigrants, the stirring story of a mill workers’ strike, as witnessed by 12-year-old Rosa, melds with the tale of a mean foster kid who finds kindness from a tough, needy man, still suffering from a tragedy in his own life.
Stanley, Diane. Bella at Midnight.
Stanley subtly twists strands of the Cinderella story until it’s something new and fine. Her version, dotted with jeweled descriptions and anchored by strong values, helps readers understand nobility, not in the sense of aristocracy but as it signifies dignity and decency.