Middle schooler Amedeo Kaplan moves from New York City to Florida, where he gets to know his eccentric neighbor, an elderly former opera star, and makes his first friend, a boy named William. We learn a fair amount about modern art, especially art that was stolen by the Nazis during Hitler’s regime. This book’s OK, […]

Greg Heffley is an undersized sixth grader who keeps a journal (not a diary!) of his first year in middle school. Greg’s questionable choices get him into trouble with bullies at school and with his parents and brothers at home. “Hand printed” on lined paper and filled with drawings, this book is a quick read […]

Eleven-year-old Mags schemes to help her talented new friend Gillian convince her father to pay for her to study violin at a conservatory in England. Very Irish, and some of the phrases may be problematic for Americans, but delightful. For grades 4-6.

Catherine is 12 and is tired of having to deal with her 8-year-old brother’s autism. She loves him, but she doesn’t like being embarrassed by his behavior. She takes it upon herself to make him a list of rules to live by, because he won’t learn them any other way. At the speech therapist’s office […]

Thirteen-year-old Miles O’Malley knows more about the ecology of the tidal mudflat near his home in Olympia than anyone. That summer he finds a giant squid and a rare deep-sea fish that was thought to be extinct. He becomes a minor celebrity and members of a religious cult seek him out. Miles is passionate about […]

Fifteen-year-old Meline and 16-year-old Jocelyn are cousins who go to live with their eccentric uncle after their parents are killed. Their uncle lives on an uninhabited island near Vancouver, B.C. The story is told from alternating points of view of Meline, Jocelyn, Uncle Marten, the housekeeper, and the butler. Strange and quirky as Horvath’s books […]

Parallel stories of two boys abandoned by their fathers told in spare blank verse. One story is the biblical one of Ishmael and the other is about modernday Sam, whose father has a new wife and son. Both boys rely on their faith in God to help them adjust to their new status. A quick […]

Jerry Oltion is a Eugene science fiction writer. I tried two other books of his and didn’t much like them, but I did like this one. When a friend of theirs develops a drive that enables interstellar travel in a converted pickup truck, Trent and his wife Donna decide to leave an increasingly dictatorial America […]

A fascinating book that starts with the premise that all people have suddenly disappeared and then examines various ecosystems to see what is likely to happen over the next ten or fifty or thousand or ten thousand years. By detailing the proliferation of plastics in the ocean and the long-lived residue of nuclear reactors, the […]

Landvik has done it again with her seventh book. She excels in writing about characters who survive terrible tragedies, so her books are not the best to listen to in a car–though the tragedy is not the central focus of the book. In this book, the main characters are a young man named Joe and […]