What to Read Next If You Love Hadestown
If you can’t get enough of Greek mythology, add these myth-inspired books to your summer reading list.
If you can’t get enough of Greek mythology, add these myth-inspired books to your summer reading list.
Thundercluck
How have we all gone so long without demigod chickens fighting evil to save Asgard? Thundercluck is the hero Norse legend forgot to mention, but he’ll definitely be a memorable addition to your readaloud list. (All ages)
Where the Mountain Meets the Moon
The power of Orpheus’s story is his belief that he can change his fate if he just keeps fighting — and in Where the Mountain Meets the Moon, Minli follows the same determined path on her quest to find the Old Man of the Moon. (Middle Grades)
Lalani of the Distant Sea
Lalani’s voyage to legendary Mount Isa — in search of a cure for her mother — is steeped in Filipino folklore, but readers will find echoes of Hadestown’s themes of personal responsibility, loyalty, and leadership in Lalani of the Distant Sea. (Middle Grades)
When You Trap a Tiger
Lily makes a deal with a magical tiger to save her grandmother in When You Trap a Tiger. This tale based on Korean myth hints at the same risks Orpheus discovers in making agreements with supernatural powers. (Middle Grades)
Pandora’s Jar
If you’re over the heavy Boys Club atmosphere of the classic Greek myths, Pandora’s Jar is just what Athena ordered. In this imaginative collection, Natalie Haynes emphasizes the stories of the goddesses and women who usually get short shrift, including Eurydice, Pandora, Artemis, and Hera. (High School)
Circe
The complicated feminist witch of the Odyssey finally gets center stage in Madeline Miller’s Circe. From her childhood in the shadows of Olympus to her (surprise!) friendship with Penelope, Circe’s hero’s journey is a definite twist on the traditional version. ((High School)
Girl Meets Boy
Here’s a delightful rarity in the mythological world: A happy ending. In the original, Iphis is a girl raised as a boy who falls in love with Ianthe — the goddess Isis changes Iphis into a biological male so that the two can get married. In Ali Smith’s retelling Girl Meets Boy, Anthea and Robin get to live a trans-affirming version of this story in our modern world. (High School)
Piranesi
Piranesi is the only inhabitant of a mysterious, labyrinthine house with no apparent entrances or exits. He spends his days wandering the endless procession of passageways, which include oceans, crowds of statues, and levels covered in clouds. It’s as a mysterious as any Underworld — and as eerily lyrical as Orpheus’s journey. (High School)
An Orchestra of Minorities
In An Orchestra of Minorities, Chigozie Obioma transposes the Orpheus myth to Umuahia, Nigeria. When a young farmer is pulled into the life of a young woman, he finds himself pulled into a fate he never expected. (High School)
What to Read Next If You Loved Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse as a Kid
Nobody’s perfect, but we all have the power to be better tomorrow than we were yesterday. These tales of forgiveness and redemption remind us that we are better together.
Nobody’s perfect, but we all have the power to be better tomorrow than we were yesterday. These tales of forgiveness and redemption remind us that we are better together.
Forget the perfectly behaved children of mid-century children’s books — one of the best things we can show our children is that it’s OK to mess up — and that there are real ways to move on from our mistakes. Lilly is every kid who’s ever been too excited to settle down. Nobody’s perfect, but we all have the power to be better tomorrow than we were yesterday. These tales of forgiveness and redemption remind us that we are better together.
Because of Mr. Terupt
Mr. Terupt’s fifth grade class isn’t like other classrooms — it’s actually fun, and the seven kids whose perspectives shape Because of Mr. Terupt enjoy being there. But when a tragedy changes everything, no one knows how to move forward. How can you be forgiven for something unforgivable? Sometimes it’s weird to ready school-y books like this one with homeschooled kids, but Because of Mr. Terupt is a great reminder of the personal relationship that’s at the heart of good learning — and of our homeschools. (Middle grades)
Bob
Wendy Mass and Rebecca Stead teamed up with illustrator Nicholas Gannon for Bob, which would honestly be enough to put this slim volume on my middle grades reading list. Bob has been waiting in the closet for five years for his friend Livy to return — but when she finally does, she’s almost completely forgotten her imaginary friend. This is a lovely meditation on growing up and changing friendships that taps into the essential me-ness at the heart of all us. (Middle grades)
New Kid
Seventh-grader Jordan is the New Kid at his prestigious private school, but being one of the only Black students in a privileged bubble is hard. Being one of the few kids in his neighborhood enrolled at a fancy school is hard, too, and Jordan often feels like he doesn’t fit in anywhere. (Like middle school isn’t hard enough!) One of the best things about this book is how realistic it is: Jordan is about to confront some of the problems with the system, but he can’t dismantle them by himself. (Middle grades)
Ida B... and Her Plans to Maximize Fun, Avoid Disaster, and (Possibly) Save the World
This book — about a homeschooler! — tackles the tough question of what to do when your whole life falls apart — and you don’t react in the best possible way. Ida B. gets a major life upheaval after her mom’s cancer diagnosis, and it takes time for her to make peace with her new normal. Homeschool characters in middle grades books can be complicated for actual homeschooler, but this one doesn’t feel unrealistic. (Middle grades)
I’ll Give You the Sun
In I’ll Give You the Sun, Noah and Jude have gone from being super-close twin siblings to barely speaking to each other — and they’re both carrying burdens of loss and guilt in the wake a family tragedy. Jude and Noah alternate telling the story of their lives, including a tangle of misunderstandings that must be unraveled for them to move on. (High school)
Early Departures
In Early Departures, Jamal has the chance to make things right with his ex-best friend Q — something he never expected since Q died two years into their estrangement. But thanks to new technology, Q can be reanimated for a short time, and Jamal may be able to make amends. Unsurprisingly, the result is an emotionally heavy book — hopeful but heartrending — so read accordingly. (High school)
Darius the Great Is Not Okay
Darius the Great is not, in fact, okay: He’s about to take his first trip to visit family in Iran, but he fully expects to be as lonely, depressed, and disappointing to everyone in his life as he is at home. Then he meets boy-next-door Sohrab, who turns out to be the friend Darius has been waiting his whole life for. This is a lovely reminder that sometimes we need someone else to really see us before we can find ourselves. (High school)
Autobiography of Red
A reimagining of the myth of Herakles, Autobiography of Red is novel-in-verse from the perspective of Geryon, a winged red monster who is also a boy. Part love story, part bildungsroman, part myth, this is a compact, dense tale that rewards slow reading. (High school)
Cry the Beloved Country
Cry the Beloved Country is a novel about two South Africas and about two men on either side of South Africa’s color line. When Stephen goes to Johannesburg to find his sister and his son, he finds more sorrow and hope than he could have imagined. This is one of the most profound books about the cycle of violence, the effects of systemic justice, and whether hope is enough without action. (We have a reading guide for this one.) (High school)
The 57 Bus
Sasha and Richard were co-passengers for about eight minutes every weekday on The 57 Bus — eight minutes where Sasha’s white, private school life intersected with Richard’s experiences as a Black public high school student in Oakland, California. That eight minutes, though, was long enough to lead to a tragedy that would change both their lives forever. (High school)
A Prayer for Owen Meany
John and Owen are unlikely best friends who grow up together in A Prayer for Owen Meany — gravel-voiced, short-statured, peculiarly superstitious Owen isn’t always an easy friend to have, but John can’t imagine his life without him. (High school)
What to Read Next If You Loved Miss Rumphius
Miss Rumphius wants to make the world a more beautiful place, a legacy that comes with a deep connection to nature. These books take up that project, showing that family, home, and nature can change us for the better.
Miss Rumphius wants to make the world a more beautiful place, a legacy that comes with a deep connection to nature. These books take up that project, showing that family, home, and nature can change us for the better.
The Complete Brambly Hedge
The illustrations are the real stars of The Complete Brambly Hedge, a collection of old-fashioned stories about very civilized mice living the cottagecore life across the four seasons. (All ages)
The Secret Garden
Nature has the power to change more than the environment in The Secret Garden. Bitter, guarded Mary Lennox doesn’t find a warm welcome when she’s sent to live at her uncle’s Yorkshire manor, but she does gradually find herself. (All ages)
The Becket List
In The Becket List, Becket is determined that her new life on Blackberry Farm will be the best ever — but the reality never seems to live up to her expectations. Slowly, she realizes that loving herself — just the way she is — is the key to living the life of her dreams. (Middle grades)
Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer
In Unusual Chickens for the Exceptional Poultry Farmer, Sophie adjusts to her new life on a rural farm by writing lots of letters — many of them to Redwood Farm Supply, which specializes in the “unusual” chickens that suddenly seem to be everywhere — and doing all kinds of strange things. (Middle grades)
Across the Pond
Callie’s family movies to a castle in Scotland in Across the Pond, and Callie takes on sexism in the local birding troop with the help of some new friends, thanks in part to an old birdwatching journal she discovers in a locked trunk. There’s a core of real sweetness in this book that I loved: We all sometimes feel like we don’t belong, and we’re all delighted when we discover that we’ve found a community. For birding enthusiasts, for middle grades readers who enjoy realistic fiction, for anyone who’s ever wished for that castle in Scotland — you’ll want to pick this one up. (Middle grades)
All Creatures Great and Small
Small town English country life between the world wars is illuminated through one veterinarian’s adventures in All Creatures Great and Small. Suzanne says, “My love affair with these books — All Creatures and its sequels — goes back over 30 years. In them, Herriot tells stories of his days as a Yorkshire veterinarian working on both farm animals and pets, beginning when he is just out of school in the 1930s and has joined the practice run by eccentric Siegfried Farnon, assisted (more or less) by Siegfried’s hapless brother, Tristan. The tales are sometimes tragic, as when a farmer loses both his livestock and his livelihood, and sometimes hilarious (“Mrs. Pumphrey’s Tricki Woo has gone flop-bott again”), while always being warmly affectionate and self-deprecating. Supposedly these are Herriot’s real-life experiences — ‘James Herriot’ is the pen name of Alf Wight — but over the years there have been different opinions on how much is real and how much is fiction, so that I’ve moved my own copies from the ‘memoir’ shelf to ‘fiction’ and back again, but when the writing is this enjoyable it doesn’t really matter where they end up.” (Middle grades)
The War that Saved My Life
In The War that Saved My Life, Ava is evacuated from her cramped London apartment to the British countryside — where she discovers that even in wartime, life can be happier than she ever suspected. (Middle grades)
Far from the Madding Crowd
Bathsheba Everdeen is smart, capable, and ready to take over her uncle’s farm in 1830s rural Essex in Far from the Madding Crowd, Thomas Hardy’s least depressing novel. If only all those suitors would leave her alone and let her focus on her work. (Spoiler: They will not.) (High school)
Cold Comfort Farm
Orphaned socialite Flora decides Cold Comfort Farm sounds like a perfect spot for a little adventure in this tongue-in-cheek satire of British rural life in the 1930s. (High school)
Miss Buncle’s Book
Who wrote the book about Silverstream and its inhabitants? Nobody suspects meek, 30-something Barbara Buncle of the skewering story, but it is indeed Miss Buncle’s Book, and it launches Miss Buncle and the folk of Silverstream on a series of adventures. (High school)
What to Read Next If You Loved The Phantom Tollbooth
Milo’s adventure in the Lands Beyond is full of witty wordplay and curious characters. Get a similar taste of brainy unpredictability from these delightfully eccentric books like The Phantom Tollbooth.
Milo’s adventure in the Lands Beyond is full of witty wordplay and curious characters. Get a similar taste of brainy unpredictability from these delightfully eccentric books like The Phantom Tollbooth.
Your Next Picture Book:
Harold and the Purple Crayon
Harold and the Purple Crayon by Crockett Johnson celebrates the power of pure imagination with this story of a boy and his favorite art supply.
Your Next Chapter Book
The Little Prince
The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupery explores some of the same big questions and ideas as The Phantom Tollbooth within a similarly whimsical premise.
Your Next Readaloud
The Princess Bride
The Princess Bride by William Goldman has a ripping good story — it’s better than the movie, and that’s saying something — and a narrator whose literary asides will have you giggling with glee.
Your Next Teen Read:
Your Next Grown-Up Book
Gentlemen of the Road
Gentlemen of the Road by Michael Chabon is full of weird characters and curious situations. The twist: It’s all taking place in the real world, circa C.E. 1000.
What to Read Next If You Like Harriet the Spy
Harriet the Spy was our first rebel heroine, a smart girl who spies for the sheer pleasure of it. These other renegade girls are worthy follow-ups to her literary legacy.
Harriet the Spy was our first rebel heroine, a smart girl who spies for the sheer pleasure of it. We’ve rounded up a Harriet-inspired reading list for every level starring other renegade girls are worthy follow-ups to her literary legacy.
Your next picture book
Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse by Kevin Henkes
Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse by Kevin Henkes features an equally likable little rebel. Like Harriet, Lilly accidentally creates conflict with people she cares about; like Harriet, she has to figure out how to make things right while still being true to who she is.
Your Next Chapter Book
Anastasia Krupnik by Lois Lowry
Anastasia Krupnik by Lois Lowry also focuses on a budding writer who sometimes finds herself at odds with life. Anastasia’s artsy parents are a little more in touch than Harriet’s, but Anastasia and Harriet share an independence and introspection that make them literary soul sisters.
Your Next Readaloud
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley
The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie by Alan Bradley is usually shelved in the adult section, but its 11-year-old chemist heroine has plenty of Harriet-style spunk. Flavia sees the world through her own particular lens, making observations and connections that the adults around her don’t always see.
Your Next Teen Read
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks by E. Lockhart
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau Banks by E. Lockhart, the tale of a plucky teen who infiltrates the all-male secret society at her snooty boarding school. This seems like your typical teen high school novel, but once you start reading, you realize it’s a whole lot more — not unlike its intrepid heroine.
Your Next Grown-Up Book
The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery
The Elegance of the Hedgehog by Muriel Barbery focuses on precocious Paloma’s life in a Parisian apartment building, where — driven by loneliness and monotony — she vows to commit suicide on her thirteenth birthday.
What to Read Next If You Love Downton Abbey
An Edwardian family faces a changing world in this British drama of manners that’s a little bit Austen, a little bit soap opera, and entirely satisfying. Get your Downton fix with historical fiction featuring rich details and nuanced character development.
An Edwardian family faces a changing world in this British drama of manners that’s a little bit Austen, a little bit soap opera, and entirely satisfying. Get your Downton fix with historical fiction featuring rich details and nuanced character development.
The Age of Innocence
Edith Wharton’s The Buccaneers may have been an inspiration for Downton Abbey, but it’s Wharton’s The Age of Innocence that really channels the wistful privilege of Edwardian life, right down to the not- entirely-happy ending. (High School)
The Davenports
In 1910 Chicago, the four Davenport daughters are among the wealthiest Black families in the United States. This novel, like Downton Abbey, is definitely lighter on the history than the romance (even though it’s based on the real-life Patterson family, who are totally rabbit trail-worthy, if you are so inclined), but it’s still really cool what it was like to be part of the Black one-percent during the early 20th century. And yay for historical fiction about Black joy and Black success, which I always personally love to see. (High School)
The Remains of the Day
In The Remains of the Day, Kazuo Ishiguro explores the slow decline of the aristocracy in the early 20th century from the perspective of a faithful — perhaps, ultimately, too faithful — butler. (High School)
Sense and Sensibility
Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen is set in an earlier time, but its story of two very different sisters, an entailed inheritance, and the problems of class and wealth will resonate with any Downton fan. (High School)
Jeeves and the Wedding Bells
Sebastian Faulks brings back Bertie Wooster in Jeeves and the Wedding Bells, a lighthearted peek at the Edwardian aristocracy featuring a perpetually befuddled young gentleman and his unflappable valet. (High School)
Hetty Feather
Hetty Feather is set at the end of the Victorian era, but Jacqueline Wilson’s novel about a girl who escapes from the Foundling Hospital to find her family is full of as many dramatic twists and turns as the best Downton episodes. (Middle Grades)
What to Read Next If You Love Into the Woods
Fairy tales get complicated in these twists on tradition. You’ll never read “happily ever after” the same way again.
Fairy tales get complicated in these twists on tradition. You’ll never read “happily ever after” the same way again.
Interrupting Chicken
Interrupting Chicken just wants everybody to get a truly happy ending — which they would, if they would just listen to his very good advice! This is a fun read aloud for anyone who’s ever wanted to interrupt the story to steer its characters in a better direction. (All Ages)
Egg and Spoon
A case of mistaken identity lies at the center of Egg and Spoon: Elena, a peasant living in the Russian countryside, changes places with wealthy Ekaterina who is on her way to see the Tsar in Saint Petersburg. Along the way, the two girls match wits with Baba Yaga, uncover a prince in disguise, and explore a world full of Russian folklore. (Middle Grades)
Rumaysa: A Fairytale
What would traditional western fairy tales look like through the lens of another culture? Radiya Hafiza retells the stories of Rapunzel, Cinderella, and Sleeping Beauty in the surprisingly delightful Rumaysa: A Fairytale, which begins when imprisoned Rumsaya lowers her hijab out a tower window to escape to freedom. (Middle Grades)
Spinning Silver
In Naomi Novik’s Spinning Silver, a moneylender’s savvy daughter gains a reputation for turning silver into gold — bringing her to the unwanted attention of the king of the Staryk. It’s a brave new Rumpelstiltskin. She’s not the only young woman who sees an opportunity to rewrite her life for the better in this layered story. (High School)
Cinder
In futuristic New Beijing, Cinderella is a cyborg mechanic who gets caught up in struggle for the crown. Cinder lives with discrimination against cyborgs from her society, but her stepmother never misses a chance to remind her that she’s not a real person. When she’s caught up in a power struggle around Prince Kai, Cinder has to decide what her own happy ending might look like. (High School)
Kissing the Witch: Old Tales in New Skins
I’m always recommending Kissing the Witch: Old Tales in New Skins because it’s one of my favorite books from high school. Emma Donoghue reimagines 13 fairy tales in new, feminist queer retellings, including one in which (finally!) a Beauty realizes that she cannot change the beast. (High School)
What to Read Next If You Like Lemony Snicket
If you loved The Bad Beginning, Lemony Snicket's hilariously tragic chronicle of the sad adventures of the Baudelaire orphans, add these titles to your library list this summer.
If you loved The Bad Beginning, Lemony Snicket's hilariously tragic chronicle of the sad adventures of the Baudelaire orphans, add these titles to your library list this summer.
Your Next Picture Book
Pierre: A Cautionary Tale in Five Chapters and a Prologue by Maurice Sendak
Pierre: A Cautionary Tale in Five Chapters and a Prologue by Maurice Sendak is a delightfully subversive story about a bratty boy who gets a lion-sized comeuppance.
Your next chapter book
The Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken
The Wolves of Willoughby Chase by Joan Aiken pits bold Bonnie and her orphaned cousin Sylvia against an evil governess.
Your next readaloud
Dial-a-Ghost by Eva Ibbotsen
Dial-a-Ghost by Eva Ibbotsen turns the traditional ghost story on its head by introducing sympathetic specters who rescue young Oliver from his nefarious cousins.
Your next teen read
Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman
Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman makes the Apocalypse a comedy of errors, complete with a reluctant Antichrist, a hellhound who just wants to be a Good Boy, and a set of prophecies that are a little too accurate.
Your next grown-up book
The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde
The Eyre Affair by Jasper Fforde puts Special Ops literary detective Thursday Next into perilous situations both in and out of classic literature.
What to Read Next If You Loved The People Could Fly
There’s a kind of magic in imagining worlds shaped from non-European culture and myth — and these books paint possibilities powerful and profound.
These books celebrate Black storytelling traditions.
There’s a kind of magic in imagining worlds shaped from non-European culture and myth — and these books paint possibilities powerful and profound.
The People Could Fly by Virginia Hamilton
When The People Could Fly was published in 1985, it heralded a movement toward more diverse literature — Virginia Hamilton called her work “Liberation Literature,” and one of its goals was to preserve Black culture and memory through books and stories. We may be living in a golden age of diverse literature, and if you loved The People Could Fly, add these empowering books based on Black history and culture to your homeschool reading list.
Zahrah the Windseeker by Nnedi Okorafor
Zahrah the Windseeker isn’t like the other kids in the Ooni kingdom — her long green dadalocks made her an object of fear for many in her techno-nature community. But when Zahrah’s best friend’s life is in danger, she is the only one who can venture into the forest to save him. (Middle grades)
The Jumbies by Tracy Baptiste
Corinne La Mer isn’t afraid of anything, including The Jumbies — but maybe she should be. One of these Haitian folk monsters is after her family, and Corinne must channel her own unexpected magic to save the day. (Middle grades)
Hurricane Child by Kacen Callender
Being a Hurricane Child is believed to be bad luck — and it’s certainly been that way for Caroline, who’s been despised by her classmates and abandoned by her mother. But a new student inspired Caroline to channel her inner courage, and they set out on an adventure that may restore Caroline’s lost luck — and her mother. (Middle grades)
Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky by Kwame Mbalia
A whole world of African folklore and legend opens up in Tristan Strong Punches a Hole in the Sky, when Tristan accidentally unleashes evil on the MidPass and discovers that he is one in a long chain of Storytellers with the ability to shape reality through stories. (Middle grades)
The Gilded Ones by Namina Forna
In The Gilded Ones, girls with golden blood are considered impure — and subject to all kinds of abuse. Deka is one of them, but an unlikely opportunity presents itself: If she joins the emperor’s elite military force, full of girls with the same golden blood, all her sins will be forgiven. Of course, it’s much more complicated than she knows. (High school)
Children of Bone and Blood by Tomi Adeyemi
In Children of Bone and Blood, Zélie has just one chance to bring magic back to Orïsha and take down the ruthless monarch who is determined to eradicate it forever. (High school)
Shadowshaper by Daniel Jose Older
Sierra discovers that she’s a Shadowshaper, a person who has the ability to connect with spirits through art, music, and stories — a discovery that comes just in time, since another Shadowshaper is attempting to channel all their power for himself. (High school)
What to Read Next If You Love Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys
If you love solving mysteries with Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys, we’ve got a reading list of detective stories from picture books to adult novels you’ll love.
Let’s face it: Few things are as fun as racing to put together the clues before your favorite intrepid detective solves the case. We think these books make worthy follow-ups (or lead ups!) to the adventures of Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys.
Nancy Drew and the Hardy Boys set the standard for grade-school mysteries, but even with all those titles in the series, you may reach a point when you need something more. These mysteries — from picture books to adult novels — also ask you, the reader, to put together the clues to solve the case, using your eye for details and creative problem-solving abilities. Most of these are part of a series, since part of the fun of the Drew-Hardy world is the luxuriously long list of titles.
Your next picture book
Alphabet Mystery by Audrey Wood
In Alphabet Mystery by Audrey Wood, the lowercase letters must team up to find little x, who’s gone missing just before his mom’s big birthday bash. This is a great book for practicing letter recognition, since you’ll be hunting for all the letters on every page — but it’s not a great learning-the-alphabet-in-order book because the letters don’t appear in order. It’s a fun picture book mystery, though, with a sweet message about how we may be more important than we realize — even if it doesn’t always feel that way.
Your next chapter book
Mudshark by Gary Paulsen
Mudshark by Gary Paulsen introduces Mudshark, a kid whose reputation as a great problem solver is challenged by a case of disappearing erasers at his school. He’s also got unexpected competition — in the form of a librarian’s apparently psychic pet parrot. (This one should maybe go on an “if you loved Encyclopedia Brown” reading list, too, because it does a similar vibe with lots of small episodic mysteries around the bigger one.)
Your next readaloud
Sammy Keys and the Hotel Thief by Wendelin Van Draanen
Sammy Keys and the Hotel Thief by Wendelin Van Draanen kicks off a mystery series about a 12-year-old detective who finds trouble wherever she goes. In this book, Sammy, who lives with her grandmother in a seniors-only complex, spies a thief in action. Unfortunately, the thief sees her, too. So Sammy does what any intrepid kid detective would do — she waves at the thief. Smart, quick-thinking Sammy is always on the case. A lot of mysteries for kids lean into the formulaic, and that’s fine, but this Edgar-award winning series has some genuinely surprising plot twists.
Your next teen read
Virals by Kathy Reichs
Virals by Kathy Reichs starts another series, when sci-phile teens led by Tory Brennan rescue a dog from a medical testing facility, kicking off a chain of events that will put them hot on the trail of a not-so-cold case and launch a surprising new phase of their lives. This series comes from the author of the definitely-for-adults Bones series — the protagonist is Temperance Brennan’s niece and has definitely learned a thing or two from her forensic anthropologist aunt. (Sometimes maybe unbelievably a lot? But also we all know that when kids are genuinely obsessed with something, they can become in-depth experts, so I’ll allow it.)
Your next grown-up book
The Crocodile on the Sandbank by Elizabeth Peters
The Crocodile on the Sandbank by Elizabeth Peters is the first book in the delightful Amelia Peabody mysteries, in which an eternally curious 19th-century spinster decides to take her inheritance to Egypt, where she falls in love with Egyptology and becomes caught up in an old-fashioned whodunnit. Amelia’s romance with a grumpy amateur archaeologist has some entertaining moments, but it’s the mystery — set in an Egyptian dig site and featuring all kinds of fascinating period archaeological details — that makes this first-in-the-series book a great follow-up to Nancy Drew.
What to Read Next If You Love Swallows and Amazons
Summer means adventure in these old-fashioned stories about independent children making their own fun.
Summer means adventure in these old-fashioned stories about independent children making their own fun.
Of course you should schedule a screening of the recent movie adaptation (pictured above), but even if you've read the whole series through multiple times, you can get a similar taste of old-fashioned summer adventure with these books. The reading levels skew on the younger side if you’re worrying about Lexiles — but it’s summer, and your kid wants to read! Why are you worrying about Lexiles?
The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, and a Very Interesting Boy by Jeanne Birdsall
Four sisters spend their summer exploring the grounds of a neighboring estate in this delightfully nostalgic summer story. Modern day independent kids look a little different from the free range kids of the past, but there’s still plenty of adventure and self-discovery in this surprisingly sweet tale. Like Swallows and Amazons, it sometimes feels more like a meandering journey than a Big Plot working toward a climax, but frankly, that is part of its charm — and why it’s a great readaloud for summer, when you may need to put down a book for several days at time.
Half Magic by Edward Eager
Jane, Mark, Katharine, and Martha find a magic talisman on their way home from the library one summer afternoon, but it only grants wishes in halves. My kids found it really fun that the kids in the book were imagining what magic in the modern world might look like — in a world that seemed very old-fashioned to them! The adventures the siblings go on with the aid of their magic talisman — including a visit to Camelot and being able to communicate with their very disgruntled cat — are equal parts zany and practical.
Like Bug Juice on a Burger by Julie Sternberg
At first Eleanor’s excited to spend the summer at Camp Wallunmwahpuck — but the annoying bugs, disgusting camp food, and especially swimming class soon change her mind. Summer camp is maybe the closest modern day kids get to the free range adventures of the Swallows crew, and I like that Eleanor does not immediately love the adventure she’s on. Not all of us are cut out to live in the wild for weeks at a time, however charming books may make it sound!
How Tia Lola Saved the Summer by Julia Alvarez
Summer seems like it’s going to be a bummer for Miguel and his sister — until his aunt Lola steps in and sets up a summer camp full of seasonal adventures. Tia Lola feels like a kinder, Latinx version of Mary Poppins, but the adventures she sends the siblings on definitely have the free-spirited, open-possibilities vibe you get in Swallows and Amazons. This one may ultimately be a little more emotionally resonant than Swallows and Amazons, but that really just made us like it more.
Gone-Away Lake by Elizabeth Enright
Discovering the abandoned remains of an old summer community — and its two last inhabitants — makes for a magical summer for Portia and her cousin Julian. It’s doubly old-fashioned: Portia and Julian are charmed and delighted by the turn-of-the-century childhoods of their new friends; my kids were just as charmed and delighted by the 1950s adventures of Portia and Julian. There’s something really delightful about the nerdy enjoyment these cousins take in the world around them — they’re as fascinated watching a colony of ants abscond with their sandwich scraps as they are learning about the history of the philosopher’s stone.
Linnets and Valerians by Elizabeth Goudge
The author of The Little White Horse also wrote this charming tale of four siblings who run away from their ruthless grandmother to live at their uncle’s country manor. Nan, Robert, Timothy, and Betsy find a mix of everyday magic (bees, cats, and gardens) and suspiciously magical magic (witches and disappearing families) at their uncle’s ramshackle country house and its surrounding village. There’s also a nice nod to homeschooling — the children are all required to spend a certain amount of time every day studying with their uncle, but then they’re free to spend the rest of the day however they like.
What to Read Next If You Liked Diary of a Wimpy Kid
Who can resist the perfect combination of words and pictures? Add a spunky hero with a few problems, and you’ve got worthy Wimpy Kid follow-ups.
Who can resist the perfect combination of words and pictures? Add a spunky hero with a few problems, and you’ve got worthy Wimpy Kid follow-ups.
Your next picture book
Luke on the Loose
In Luke on the Loose, a boy follows a flock of pigeons in an increasingly wild chase out of New York’s Central Park, through Manhattan, and all the way across the Brooklyn Bridge.
Your next chapter book
The Brilliant World of Tom Gates
The Brilliant World of Tom Gates is the Diary of a Wimpy Kid gone British, with a doodling, diary-ing hero who just wants to make it through middle school alive.
Your next readaloud:
Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made
Timmy Failure would like to believe that he’s the greatest detective in the world, but he’d be wrong. Timmy Failure: Mistakes Were Made has delightful illustrations on every page but enough story to make reasonable for a readaloud.
Your next teen read
Your next grown-up book
Sacred Heart
In the weird, unresolved Sacred Heart, teenager Ben is just trying to survive adolescence while her parents—and all the other adults in town—are off on a four-year pilgrimage. This coming-of-age story nails the awkward ordinariness and utter strangeness of being a teenager.
What to Read Next If You Love Anne of Green Gables
Home in these books takes many forms, but it’s always the place where you just belong.
Home in these books takes many forms, but it’s always the place where you just belong.
Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson
When 16-year-old Hattie inherits her uncle’s Minnesota homestead claim, she sets off to build a home for herself in pioneer country. (Middle grades)
When Mischief Came to Town by Katrina Nannestad
After her mother’s death, Inge Maria goes to live with her grandmother on a tiny Danish island where the grown-ups and her new school are stricter than she’s accustomed to. But Inge Maria’s curiosity, intelligence, and tendency to making mischief may be just what the little island community needs—and Inge Maria discovers that she has more in common with her grandmother than she expected.
Perfectly balancing tenderness and humor, this is pretty much a textbook example of a heartwarming story. Inge Maria is utterly lovable, and the island town is peopled by funny, interesting residents. Bonus: This book is full of yummy food. (Elementary)
Bright Island by Mabel Louise Robinson
Island-reared Thankful wants to be a sea captain like her grandfather, but her parents send her to boarding school on the mainland. (High School)
My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George
Sam runs away from his crowded New York City apartment to live—alone—in the Catskill Mountains. Shelli says, “When I was a young girl, I read My Side of the Mountain, and it instantly became one of my favorite books. I wanted to be Sam Gribley, a fifteen-year-old boy who lives alone in a tree in the Catskill Mountains. He learns to live off the land, and he captures and raises a peregrine falcon, named Frightful, to help him hunt. He also becomes friends with The Baron, a weasel, learns the ways of other forest animals, and meets some interesting people, too.” (Middle grades)
Turtle in Paradise by Jennifer L. Holm
In this quintessential summer story, 11-year-old Turtle goes to live with her aunt in Key West, Fla., when her mom’s new housekeeping job proves kid-unfriendly. (In the middle of the Great Depression, you have to take the jobs you can get, but Turtle’s mom hasn’t always made the best life choices.) As Turtle explores her new community and makes friends with her wild cousins, who call themselves the Diaper Gang, she discovers the joys of family and of standing up for what you really want.
Holmes really captures both the beauty and the hardship of life in 1930s Florida—this book is a great jumping-off point for reading more about the Great Depression. Turtle is a tough, likable protagonist, and her cousins’ antics are pretty hilarious. (Bonus: Now you have a fun excuse to look up Shirley Temple and Little Orphan Annie on YouTube.) (Middle grades)
The House at World's End by Monica Dickens
Four siblings create a home of their own in a rundown old inn when they’re sent to live with their wealthy-but-unpleasant relatives while their mother is recovering in the hospital. (Middle grades)
The Nutmeg Tree by Margery Sharp
Suzanne says, “I’m a long-time fan of Sharp, having read through her Rescuers series several times over as a kid (the Disney adaptations are a lot of fun but be sure to check out the books!), but this is the first time I’ve tried one of her adult novels and it was CHARMING. Julia is broke and not quite sure what to do next when she is contacted by her adult daughter, who she hasn’t seen in years (after giving up custody to her posh in-laws). The daughter needs help with a romance: she’s determined to marry a young man that her grandparents don’t entirely approve of, but slightly disreputable Julia may not be the best person to ask for advice. Did I mention that this novel is CHARMING? Julia is a delightful character and she gets a romance of her own and now I’m off to find the rest of Sharp’s novels.” (High school)
On Turpentine Lane by Elinor Lipman
Lipman writes warmly affectionate stories about screwed-up but still loving families, both those we are born into and those we create along the way. In this one, our heroine moves into a new home and soon gets caught up with (1) a decades-old possible murder mystery, and (2) a handsome new housemate. Lipman’s characters are funny and actually try to be nice to each other and she’s never let me down — highly recommended for comfort reads (and getting over any mean-spirited and spiteful novels you may have accidentally read).
What to Read Next If You Love Stranger Things
Small towns with spooky secrets, friends who face down evil, and a little retro charm give these books the same vibe as the sleeper series hit.
Small towns with spooky secrets, friends who face down evil, and a little retro charm give these books the same vibe as the sleeper series hit.
The Twisted Ones by T. Kingfisher
Many of the reader reviews for this one contain some variation on the line: “You’ll never look at rocks the same again,” and they don’t mean that in a “Wow, geology is cool!” sort of way. After her grandmother’s death, our protagonist, Mouse, is tasked with cleaning out her house, which is made more difficult by the fact that (1) her grandmother was a terrible person and was estranged from the rest of the family, and (2) she was a hardcore hoarder. Also, there may be Things Lurking in the Woods outside. (SPOILER: There absolutely are.) Fortunately, Mouse has her dog Bongo to keep her company and — this is not a spoiler because the author gives us this incredible gift up front — we know that Bongo comes out okay at the end, so we don’t have to spend the whole book worrying about what happens to the dog! HURRAY! This is an original and very creepy take on the ‘haunted woods’ idea and I’ve been seeing this book on various best-of-the-year lists, so congratulations to T. Kingfisher, who you may already know as Ursula Vernon, author of (among many other wonderful works) the delightfully Eva Ibbotson-esque Castle Hangnail. (High school)
Locke & Key Vol. 1: Welcome To Lovecraft
This series began publication in 2008 but is already considered a classic of modern horror. After a tragedy, a mother and her three children move into the old family home (located in Lovecraft, Massachusetts, so you know that’s not good), where strange keys can be found hidden away in various cracks and crevices. The kids soon discover that if they find the lock that matches a particular key, something magic will happen—a key may make you giant-sized, or turn you into an animal, or allow others to see your thoughts. Unbeknownst to the new occupants of the Keyhouse, however, a demon is stalking their family, trying to gather keys for its own dark purposes. The story is compelling and the artwork is gorgeous (and includes a very unexpected but lovely Calvin & Hobbes tribute), and I highly recommend it to all horror fans. Warning: this is not a series for younger readers as it does contain some intense violence. Locke & Key, Vol 1: Welcome to Lovecraft is a great place to start, or you could spring for the entire six-volume set as a gift for yourself or, say, your favorite Library Chicken blogger. (High School)
Summer of the Mariposas
Five sisters set out on a Homer-inspired Odyssey in Summer of the Mariposas, family story infused with the supernatural and Mexican folklore. (Middle Grades)
The Boys of Summer
Todd wakes up from a coma after four years in The Boys of Summer, going from 9 to 13 years old overnight, but the world doesn’t feel the same. (High School)
Fever Dream
In Fever Dream, a short novel by an Argentinian author, a woman and a boy try to make sense of the woman’s imminent death. (High School)
Meddling Kids
A group of Scooby gang-like former teen detectives (including one who’s dead) reunite in Meddling Kids for one last case. (High School)
What to Read Next If You Love The Hunger Games
Get your rebellion on with these books set in dystopian worlds that are just asking to be burned down.
Get your rebellion on with these books set in dystopian worlds that are just asking to be burned down.
The Maze Runnder by James Dashner
You may like this book if: You liked Divergence, Percy Jackson
You may not like this book if: You don’t like it when bad things happen to kids
When Thomas wakes up in the Glade, he has no memories of his previous life and no idea how to solve the life-size maze he and his fellow Gladers must exit to escape. (Middle Grades)
Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve
You may like this book if: You liked The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, The Golden Compass
You may not like this book if: You’re not a fan of steampunk
It’s a city-eat-city world in Reeve’s futuristic London, where cities engage in a form of Municipal Darwinism, floating above the ground and lying in wait for vulnerable flying cities they can consume. Most people never set foot on the ground — including third-class apprentice Tom, who’s not happy to find himself walking the surface of the world for the first time, trying to get back to his city in the sky. (High School)
Noughts & Crosses by Malorie Blackman
You may like this book if: You liked Uglies, My Sister’s Keeper, Matched
You may not like this book if: You’re looking for a happy ending
Sephy and Callum live in a very different world, where people with dark skin (Crosses) have historically enslaved and segregated themselves from people with lighter skin (Noughts). Prejudice is everywhere, and it’s almost impossible to imagine that a relationship between a Nought and a Cross could have a happy ending. But Sephy and Callum can’t stop themselves from falling in love. (High School)
Tunnels by Roderick Gordon and Brian Williams
You may like this book if: You liked Gregor the Overlander, Found
You may not like this book if: You don’t like books that end on a cliffhanger
When Will’s excavation-nut dad goes missing on one of his digs, Will’s determined to find him — but he’s not expecting to find an entire colony living underneath the Earth’s surface. (Middle Grades)
Incarceron by Catherine Fisher
You may like this book if: You liked The Maze Runner, Graceling
You may not like this book if: You don’t like dystopian stories
Inside a bleak futuristic prison, inmate Finn dreams of the world outside — a world he’s told he’s never seen. Outside the prison, the Warden’s daughter Claudia dreams of freedom from the stifled life of a well-bred young lady. When they accidentally meet, the two dreamers hatch a plan that may forever alter the world as they know it. (High School)
The Knife of Never Letting Go by Patrick Ness
You may like this book if: You liked Ship Breaker, The Maze Runner, Brave New World
You may not like this book if: You’re bothered by creative grammar and punctuation
Todd can hear what people are thinking — but that’s no surprise. All the men in Prentisstown can. The women could, too, he supposes, if the germ that caused the telepathy hadn’t also killed all the women in the world. But one day, Todd hears something strange: silence. Seeking its source, he learns that it’s possible to keep dark secrets, even when your mind is an open book. (High School)
Museum of Thieves by Lian Tanner
You may like this book if: You liked 100 Cupboards, The Search for WondLa, The Sixty-Eight Rooms
You may not like this book if: You don’t like children in peril
Goldie is always in trouble — which is pretty impressive, really, since she’s chained to a Guardian twenty-four hours a day to protect her from all the tragedies that can befall innocent children. She manages to break free and escape to a mysterious museum, where the rooms shift and change, and where she may be able to save her city from its gloomy fate. (Middle Grades)
What to Read Next if You Love Black Mirror
Technology meets humanity with unpredictable results in these works of speculative fiction.
Technology meets humanity with unpredictable results in these works of speculative fiction.
The Flinkwater Factor
Ginger is the only one who can save her very-plugged-in hometown from its rebellious robots in The Flinkwater Factor. (Middle Grades)
Never Let Me Go
Technology’s seamy underbelly is as genteelly managed as a British manor house in Never Let Me Go. (High School)
More Than This
A boy wakes up, naked and alone, in an empty world with no idea how he got there in More Than This. (High School)
Stories of Your Life and Others
Ted Chiang’s questions launch a world of possibilities in Stories of Your Life and Others: What if we built a tower to heaven? What if math was actually not predictable fact? (High School)
Children of the New World
The short story collection Children of the New World eerily channels the dark possibilities of modern life, from robot siblings to memory-making emporiums to population control strategies targeting the unliked. (High School)
What to Read Next If You Like Roald Dahl
If you love the fantasy, fun, and humor of Roald Dahl, you’ll enjoy these books that capture some of that same playful spirit.
Madcap hijinks and memorable characters are the best ways to celebrate the (not uncomplicated) writer who brought us Willy Wonka and the BFG.
The Adventures of Nanny Piggins by R.A. Spratt
When miserly Mr. Green hires a pig to nanny his three children in an effort to save money, he has no idea what hilarious adventures await them with the sassy, sharp-dressed caretaker. Mr. Green is a classic Dahl-esque villain (his job involves helping rich people avoid paying taxes, and he has zero interest in spending time with his children), and Nanny Piggins brings a Pippi Longstocking-style madness to the Green children’s lives — she’s definitely not a real-life role model, but this isn’t supposed to be a real-life kind of book. As with so many of Dahl’s books, that’s part of its wacky charm. (Early Grades)
Karlson on the Roof by Astrid Lindgren
Fun and chaos ensue when Eric spots a funny man with a propeller on his back who happens to live on Eric’s rooftop. Karlson is very rude and annoying — he kind of reminds me of the cat in Dr. Seuss, who runs around making chaos and messes without ever having to deal with the consequences (I had no idea I could identify so much with a fish!), but that kind of whimsical chaos is definitely the stuff of Dahl. (Early Grades)
The Perilous Princess Plot by Sarah Courtauld
There’s nothing predictable about this fractured fairy tale, starring two sisters from The Middle of Nowhere who end up on a wacky adventure. Lavender is obsessed with being a princess, but when she’s kidnapped by an ogre, her little sister Eliza (who does not want to be a princess or discuss princesses at all, thank you very much) sets off on a rescue mission — whether Lavender wants her to or not. The sibling dynamic is a big part of the fun here. (Early Grades)
The Scandalous Sisterhood of Prickwillow Place by Julie Berry
When someone murders the decidedly unpleasant headmistress of St. Etheldreda's School for Girls, the school’s young-ladies-in-training decide to cover up the crime and keep the school going. I love the idea of Victorian “bad girls” (who are interested in devilish things like science and finance) going rogue and taking over their school to run it the way that suits them, even if it means going to great lengths to convince their community that their headmistress is still alive and chaperoning them appropriately. (Middle Grades)
Mr. Stink by David Walliams
Chloe befriends the town tramp and hides him in her backyard garden shed in this story from Little Britain star Walliams that’s equal parts funny and touching. (How can you resist a book with lines like “Mr Stink stank. He also stunk. And if it was correct English to say he stinked, then he stinked as well…?”) This is one of those readalouds that you have to stop mid-sentence to let the giggles subside. (Middle Grades)
You're a Bad Man, Mr. Gum by Andy Stanton
The truly terrible Mr. Gum has the prettiest garden in town in this darkly hilarious novel. Mr. Gum is as deliciously awful as the best Dahl bad guys, but there are also of other delightfully weird characters, including the enormous dog Jake who is a particular target of Mr. Gum’s rage and Jammy Grammy Lammy F’Huppa F’Huppa Berlin Stereo Eo Eo Lebb C’Yepp Nermonica Le Straypek De Grespin De Crespin De Spespin De Vespin De Whoop De Loop De Brunkle Merry Christmas Lenoir (you can call her Polly). The fairy who smacks Mr. Gum with a frying pan when she’s angry at him was a favorite in our house. (Early Grades)
Groosham Grange by Anthony Horowitz
Horowitz’s absurd horror story centers around David, whose awful parents ship him off to an equally awful—and deliciously creepy—boarding school. You might think this book is borrowing from Harry Potter — a magical school reached by train, students teaming up to fight evil forces, a boring history teacher who is actually a ghost — but Groosham Grange was actually published first. Horowitz, like Dahl, enjoys leaning into the dark side and laughing. (Middle Grades)
Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman
I will never stop recommending this collaboration by two of my favorite British writers—a rip-roaringly funny apocalyptic story. When the Antichrist ends up being raised in a typical British town, a Witchfinder-in-training falls for one of the witches he’s supposed to be investigating, and a demon and an angel team up to save humanity from the Apocalypse, you know some crazy things are going to happen. (High School)
The Importance of Being Earnest by Oscar Wilde
Wilde’s wacky tale of intentional and accidental mistaken identity in very proper society is a delightful romp. Jack and Algernon both have secret lives that crash into each other spectacularly at a Very Polite country house weekend. My high school students laugh out loud the whole time we’re reading this play. (High School)
Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes by Jonathan Auxier
When a blind boy who happens to also be a master thief steals three sets of magical eyes from a mad haberdasher, he’s propelled into an unexpected adventure. This has a little bit of a weird fairy tale vibe, but the fantastic characters and often-surprising plotting will definitely appeal to Dahl fans. (Middle Grades)
Which Witch? by Eva Ibbotson
Evil enchanter Arriman must find a bride if he hopes to ever retire, so he sets up a wicked contest to discover his witchy mate. White witch Belladonna, who is desperately trying to convince everyone she’s wicked, has a Dahl heroine’s plucky sensibility, and the real wicked witches are delightfully evil.
(Middle Grades)
The Joys of Summer Reading
Serious reading time should be at the top of your summertime to-do list.
Serious reading time should be at the top of your summertime to-do list.
These days I read in bits and pieces. I take a book with me everywhere I go, so I can grab 15 minutes while I’m waiting in the dentist or 10 minutes waiting in the car for the kids to finish class. (I’d read at stoplights if I could.) Our family readaloud time can also get fragmented. We have a strict policy of reading together every night — except when dinner plans didn’t go as planned and we eat an hour later than normal, or someone isn’t feeling well, or we had a rough day homeschooling and my readaloud voice is shot, or whatever. On those nights we might cut our reading time in half, or forgo it altogether in favor of a group viewing of the latest episode of So You Think You Can Dance.
It sometimes feels like my reading progress can be measured in paragraphs instead of pages, so this time of year, I think back with longing to my childhood summers, when I could read uninterrupted for hours at a stretch. I’d pick the thickest books I could find, or check out every book in a series and stack them up beside me, devouring them like potato chips. With few distractions, I could get absorbed in a book in a way that’s much more difficult for me today. I can remember exactly where I was sitting in my grandmother’s living room, heart pounding, as Madeleine L’Engle’s A Swiftly Tilting Planet blew my mind. Another time I was reading science fiction in the hammock on the porch at home and suddenly looked up, startled and alarmed at the idea that I was outside breathing open air — until I remembered that I was on planet Earth and the air was okay to breathe.
A while ago, I was talking with a friend I’ve known since third grade (we bonded over The Chronicles of Narnia) and I said that while I was enjoying reading The Lord of the Rings with my kids, it was a much different experience from reading it on my own, on the long summer days, when I didn’t do much of anything but hang out in Middle Earth and worry about Ringwraiths. “I wish I’d been able to do that,” my friend said wistfully. I didn’t understand what she meant. I knew she was at least as big a Tolkien-nerd as I was, and we’d read the books about the same time.
“Don’t you remember?” she said. “My parents thought I read too much, so after half an hour I had to go play outside.” (My friend was much too well-behaved to do the logical thing and sneak the book out with her.) Clearly, if I had ever known about such traumatic events, I had blocked them from my memory. Of course, now that she is a grown-up with a full-time job and a household to support, it’s very nearly impossible for my friend to go back and recreate the summers she should have had, visiting other worlds and inhabiting other lives.
I’ve used her sad story as a cautionary tale in my own life. Whether we take a summer break or homeschool year-round (we’ve done both), I try to take advantage of the unique flexibility of homeschool life to make sure that my kids have the time and space to find their own reading obsessions. This year my younger son is tracking down The 39 Clues as quickly as the library can fulfill his hold requests, my 11-year-old daughter is matriculating at Hogwarts for the umpteenth time, my teenage daughter is spending a lot of time in various apocalyptic wastelands, and my teenage son is hanging out in small-town Maine with terrifying clowns. I can’t always join them (no way am I voluntarily reading about scary clowns), but I do try to schedule some marathon readaloud sessions, so that we can finally finish the His Dark Materials trilogy or get started with our first Jane Austen.
Occasionally (oh, happy day!) the kids will even ask me for reading suggestions, so I can pull out some recent favorites from the children’s/YA shelf. At the moment that list includes Museum of Thieves by Lian Tanner, about a fantasy world where parental overprotectiveness has been taken to such extremes that children are literally chained to their guardians. Leviathan, by Scott Westerfeld, is an alternate-history steampunk retelling of World War I, where the heroine disguises herself as a boy to serve on one of the massive, genetically modified, living airships in the British air force. Garth Nix’s Mister Monday envisions all of creation being run by a vast, supernatural bureaucracy, which our 12-year-old hero must learn to navigate to save his own life and ultimately the world (encountering quite a bit more adventure and danger along the way than we usually find in, say, the average DMV office). Each of these books is the first in a series, fulfilling my requirements for appropriate summer reading.
And as much as possible, I try to carve out some time for myself to grab my own over-large summer book — maybe Susannah Clarke’s Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell, or Hilary Mantel’s Tudor epic, Bring Up the Bodies, or maybe I’ll finally tackle Anthony Trollope’s Chronicles of Barsetshire— and snuggle next to the kids to do some side-by-side reading, ignoring deadlines and household chores to get lost in a book together.
Looking for a YA Thriller? These Books Will Keep You Turning Pages
If you’re looking for a twisty turner teen thriller, these recent YA books about teens in dangerous situations may be just what you’re looking for.
If you’re looking for a twisty turner teen thriller, these recent YA books about teens in dangerous situations may be just what you’re looking for.
The Follower by Kate Doughty
If you've ever watched HGTV while listening to a true crime podcast, The Follower is for you! The Cole triplets are an Instagram sensation, following their house-flipping parents from one dramatic renovation to the next and racking up sponsorships along the way. It’s a glamorous life — but not always a fun one, since every moment has to be painstakingly captured in a succession of filters and the teens always have to have their camera faces on. Cecily is burned out on being the pretty one, brother Rudy just wants to keep everything rolling smoothly, and Amber can’t help but notice that her plus-size body gets edited out of family photos too often. Plus there’s the problem that their parents’ Instagram-famous renovations aren’t doing much to put a dent in the family’s giant debt.
Now they’re on their biggest project yet: a huge mansion in a small town which is famous for the gruesome murders that took place there — and rumors that it might be haunted. The triplets play up the haunted house angle for the camera, but they can’t help noticing that weird things ARE happening. Stuff goes missing, suspicious shadows move along the hallway, and that’s just the beginning. Someone doesn’t want the Coles in this house.
The triplets are interesting people in their own right and not a homogenous lump, which is nice. Amber, especially, finds that their new small town life suits her: She starts stepping out from behind her picture-perfect sibs (with lots of support from them, which is lovely), finds a girlfriend, and starts to find herself. The trio’s relationship is believably complicated but mostly warm and supportive — they’re different people, but they love each other. The Cole parents are kind of terrible in the parents-using-their-kids-as-Instagram-moneymakers vein, and there’s a lot of (fair) criticism of online culture in the book. It does get a little wonky plot-wise, especially with the haunted house bits, and several things (including — warning! — violence toward adorable household pets) are predictable stalker-angry ghost tropes. (Even the ending is kind of obvious if you’ve read many books in this genre.) Still, it’s a fun, fast YA thriller, and I enjoyed it.
The Glare by Margot Harrison
The Glare is all the warnings about screen time rolled into one otherworldly drama: Hedda has been living off the grid with her mom for a decade, ever since a childhood incident convinced her parents that computers made her “off-kilter.” Hedda can’t remember anything about what happened, but she’s grown up protected from “the glare” of computer screens. Now, though, Hedda’s headed back to the real world to live with her computer game designer dad and his new family, and technology is everywhere. Practically her first night in the real world, she ends up playing an oddly familiar first-person shooter game on the dark web, and memories of the past slowly start to return. The game, it turns out, is part of an urban legend: Die 13 times on level 13, and you’ll die in the real world. It seems ridiculous — until gamers start dying around her, and Hedda’s cell phone starts receiving threatening messages. Is her mom right that technology is making her a little crazy? Or is something even more sinister going on?
It’s a cool idea, and I found the first half of the book, setting all of this up, fairly interesting, but then it seems to skid off the rails a bit. It starts out all Black Mirror-ish, critiquing technology even as it embraces its possibilities, but that’s not where it ends up — which is fine, but the transition feels clumsy and unfinished. And while the idea that the darkness inside us is the real villain is always interesting, it’s kind of undermined by the fact that there is an actual villain, lurking in the shadows, doing villain-y stuff for ill-explained reasons. Still, some of the early scenes with the game bleeding into the real world are deliciously creepy, so if that’s your thing, you should totally pick this one up.
The Mary Shelley Club by Goldy Moldavsky
OK, so one of my YA literature pet peeves is when it turns out that everything in the story has always been about the heroine, and that means there is no way I was not going to be annoyed by The Mary Shelley Club. Which is a shame, because I loved the title and the idea of a secret teen club dedicated to pulling off terrifying pranks.
Rachel’s the new kid at Manchester Prep, and all she really wants is a fresh start after a traumatic event made her notorious in her old town. Manchester Prep is full of entitled kids whose allowances are bigger than her family’s rent, but Rachel quickly becomes part of a secret club dedicated to fear — specifically, each member has to scare a scream out of a chosen target. But Rachel can’t help feeling like there’s something going on she doesn’t know about, and it may be a lot more than a prank in the planning.
The book starts off strong and builds to a shivery middle, but the end collapses a bit into melodrama and the aforementioned need to make everything ultimately about the heroine. Worth reading? Sure, if it sounds like your thing, but it’s not my favorite. Mary Shelley deserves better.
The Murder Game by Carrie Doyle
In The Murder Game, Luke’s bad boy roommate Oscar is the prime suspect in their teacher’s murder, and no one seems interested in proving his innocence but Luke. The title (and cover) may make you think there’s more than one murder in store for you or some kind of game, but nope, it’s kind of a typical boarding school teen murder mystery. There’s a cast of suspects (the teacher’s husband, who also happens to be the dean; the dean’s ex-wife; the teacher’s ex-husband; etc.), and a loner girl with a secret past who teams up with Luke to solve the murder. The adults feel like caricatures (though I suspect teens often see adults that way), and the students aren’t super well-developed. Luke, for instance, has a crazy backstory, in which he was apparently held captive in the woods but escaped using his survival skills, but even though that seems more interesting than the actual murder mystery plot, that backstory is never really developed. And, really, failing to get into this story kind of meant that Luke was a pretty static character — we can’t see him grow if we don’t know who he is.
This sounds critical, but every book doesn’t have to be a classic. If you’re in the mood for a fast, fun YA mystery, this one might just fit the bill.
You Owe Me a Murder by Eileen Cook
The thing about rewriting a Hitchcock classic thriller is that you really need something to set your story apart from the original — to make it feel like you’ve made the story your own. Sadly, You Owe Me a Murder doesn’t manage this, and it ends up feeling like a watered-down YA version of Strangers on a Train.
When freshly dumped Kim meets Nicki, a stranger on a plane, she’s ready to murder her ex, who not only broke her heart but also managed to break it just in time for Kim to be stuck on a class trip to London with him and his new girlfriend. Nicki’s got her own problems with her mom, and when she suggests they swap murders, Strangers on a Train style, Kim laughs it off — until her ex-boyfriend turns up dead, and Nicki starts blackmailing Kim to hold up her end of the bargain.
Kim is an unreliable — and increasingly unlikable — protagonist, and I do like that she’s not just a Good Girl in a Bad Situation. The book is definitely fast-paced — which is handy, since we all already know the major plot beats. But I did not like the gratuitous love interest, I did not like the sheer predictability of the story, and I especially did not like the resolution, which fell flat after all the tension-building. Maybe I would have liked it more if I hadn’t watched the movie (and read the book on which it was based) so many times? But this one fell pretty flat for me.
Five Total Strangers by Natalie D. Richards
Five Total Strangers is obviously about a group of people who turn out NOT to be total strangers, and while I am down for a Hitchcockian thriller, this one relied a little too heavily on coincidence to keep me engaged. Mira’s on her way from her fancy California art high school back home to her mom, who’s still a bit of wreck a year after her twin sister — Mira’s aunt — died from cancer. Mira’s not doing so great either — and she’d probably be doing even worse if she knew that she’d been being stalked for the past year. Lucky (??) for her, she doesn’t know because her stalker has been sending mail to the wrong address — but that’s okay, because Mira’s stalker is on her flight, and when the airport shuts down during a snowstorm, Mira’s stalker is one of the FIVE TOTAL STRANGERS who agree to rent a car and drive together. I mean, OK, Mira’s stalker is biding their time, and this opportunity just kind of presents itself, but this seems like an increasingly big reach as the squad of teens gets into a series of snow-related accidents, gets chased down by an angry convenience store owner with a gun, and keeps running into the same creepy hitchhiker wherever they stop. Because Mira has no idea she’s being stalked, the big reveal is basically her discovering a stack of letters addressed to her in the trunk of the car, freaking out, and immediately getting into a cliffside shove-off with her stalker. It’s pretty unsatisfying, especially since the letters from her stalker are sprinkled throughout, hinting at a more nuanced resolution. If you can get over the more and more unlikely incidents and just relax into the drama, this is an entertaining soap opera-y stalker story (but with none of the psychic dread of actually being stalked), but it broke my willing suspension of disbelief pretty early and never got it back.
I Hope You’re Listening by Tom Ryan
When she was seven, Dee went into the woods with her best friend Sibby. Sibby never came back — Dee watched her abduction and told the police everything she could, but Sibby was gone.
A decade later, Dee is still haunted by the loss of her childhood friend and obsessed with missing persons cases — so much so that she’s become the (heavily disguised) voice behind the popular Radio Silent true crime podcast. Dee and her team of internet detectives have even racked up an impressive record of solved cases — bringing the podcast to the attention of mass media, which Dee definitely doesn’t want. Meanwhile, another little girl goes missing from Dee’s family’s old house, and Dee can’t helping making the connection to Sibby’s disappearance all those years ago. Could this be her chance to finally find out what really happened to her best friend?
I enjoyed I Hope You’re Listening, which was fast-paced, engaging, and peopled with likable characters. The plot got away from itself here and there and it felt over-written in places — have editors just stopped actually editing books? Is that not a thing anymore? — but I liked Dee enough to stick with her, and I’m glad I did. So much of what happens to us as kids and teenagers shapes who we become and the ways we choose to live, and I loved watching Dee realize that, accept it, and counter it on her own terms. Not all of us deal with being the spare kid in an abduction scenario, obviously, but we’re all tangled in our own history, often in ways we don’t realize. I think the book did a nice job of illuminating that. And, of course, I loved the Radio Silent community — there’s a part at the end where they play kind of a big role, and I’m not going to lie, I got a little weepy thinking about the way that strangers can be friends thanks to the connections we forge on the internet.
So a solid read for me, even with some sloppy storytelling. I’d recommend it for your YA reader obsessed with true crime.
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Great Books for Kids Who Want to Start Their Own Business
If you have a kid who dreams of starting a business, these readalouds will help inspire them.
If you have a young entrepreneur, you’ll want to add these books — about kids who launch their own small businesses — to your homeschool reading list.
Camila’s Lemonade Stand by Lizzie Duncan
When Camila can’t afford a ride on the Ferris wheel, a friend suggests that she start a business to finance her fun. This book has great tips on the steps kids need to take to get their first business up and running, but kids will especially enjoy the story of how two friends with competing businesses deal with their conflict. (Elementary)
The Toothpaste Millionaire by Jean Merrill
Sixth-grader Rufus Mayflower’s determination to save money on toothpaste makes him a millionaire in this breezy guide to capitalism from The Pushcart War author. This was published in the 1970s and is set in 1960s Ohio — it’s not surprising that Rufus (who is Black) has to deal with racism from neighbors and competitors, and the book doesn’t shy away from this though it’s not a main focus. A plus: The book encourages kids to work through some of the starting-a-business math as they read — inflation may have changed the numbers in the problems, but doing the math gives kids a clearer understanding of the financial side of business. (Middle grades)
Billy Sure Kid Entrepreneur by Luke Sharpe
Kid entrepreneur extraordinaire Billy Sure organizes a contest to find the next great kid inventor. Billy’s riding a middle school success train as the inventor of the All Ball (which can change into any sports ball with the press of a button) and the CEO of Sure Thing, Inc., which he runs with the help of his best friend (and CFO) Manny. This is definitely a little silly and over-the-top, but that’s probably why it makes such a fun readaloud. (Elementary)
Lunch Money by Andrew Clements
Rivals team up in a mini comic-publishing business that hits a bump when their principal outlaws comic books at school. This one is fun because it reminds kids that creativity can build a business — Greg’s talent for drawing comics is what makes his business work — and while his goal is to make money, he learns that business is about more than that. Kids can practice their math skills right along with Greg and Maura and learn from them how to approach adults about their business ideas and how to deal with obstacles. (Elementary)
Lawn Boy by Gary Paulsen
An inherited lawn mower sends an ordinary boy into a whole new tax bracket. If your kids are interested in understanding how capitalism and the U.S. economy actually work — Paulsen’s version is so idealized as to be ridiculous, but that’s what makes it so great as a conversation starter. The more you read and discuss, the more problems you’ll discover. (Elementary)
The Lemonade War by Jacqueline Davies
A people-smart boy and his math-smart sister compete to see who can build the most successful lemonade stand empire. This book really gets into the nitty-gritty of what makes a business work, from the skills people need, to the accounting side, to things like marketing and public relations, and it does this in a way that recognizes that there’s no one right way to run a business. Bonus points for navigating a challenging but loving sibling relationship that turns a little too competitive. (Middle grades)
Kristy's Great Idea by Ann M. Martin
Kristy, Claudia, Mary Anne, and Stacey start their own business, complete with officers, advertising, and a dedicated phone line. I feel like so many of us loved the Baby-Sitters Club because they managed to run a hugely successful business while still being normal middle school girls (and later Logan!) with regular middle school girl interests. A lot of books for entrepreneurs focus on what could be considered a very white male-centric version of economic success, and while that appeals to some kids, it’s definitely not the only way to go into business. The Baby-Sitters Club offers a different version of business success. (Middle grades)
Henry Reed’s Baby-Sitting Service by Keith Robertson
Henry and Midge team up for a summer of baby-sitting for profit in this sequel to Henry Reed, Inc. Yes, there’s some weird 1950s gender stuff going on, but it’s still a lot of fun: Expat Henry is visiting family in New Jersey and determined to get a summer business going — and when his market research suggests that baby-sitting is where the customers are, he dives into childcare with lots of enthusiasm and only the tiniest bit of actual experience. Henry’s thinking around business decisions is interesting, and he takes the details of his business very seriously — which gives kids a framework for how they might want to approach some of their own business making decisions. (Middle grades)
Not for a Billion Gazillion Dollars by Paula Danziger
Matthew’s got a million ideas to make big bucks on his summer vacation—but entrepreneurship may be harder than he thought. It’s got that 80s movie vibe (including some bits that might be considered a little racy by modern standards), but I’ve included it because even though it does end up with a successful business big, Matthew fails A LOT (and often hilariously) along the way, which is something a lot of entrepreneurs experience. (Middle grades)
This list is adapted from the summer 2016 issue of HSL. (We’re Amazon affiliates, so if you purchase something through an Amazon link, we may receive a small percentage of the sale. Obviously this doesn’t influence what we recommend, and we link to places other than Amazon.)
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