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Summer Reading for
Kids 2004
These books have been selected by Vermont public school
librarians, and are recommended for summer reading for children and young
adults. For more recommendations, see your school or public librarian.
2004 Caldecott Award Gerstein, Mordicai. THE MAN WHO WALKED
BETWEEN THE TOWERS. Millbrook Press.
2004 Newbery Award DiCamillo, Kate. THE TALE OF DESPEREAUX:
BEING THE STORY OF A MOUSE, A PRINCESS, SOME SOUP, AND A SPOOL OF THREAD.
Candlewick.
2004 Coretta Scott King Author Award 2004 Michael L. Printz
Award Johnson, Angela. THE FIRST PART LAST. Simon & Schuster.
2004 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award Bryan, Ashley.
BEAUTIFUL BLACKBIRD. Atheneum Books for Young Readers.
2004 Robert F. Sibert Award Murphy, Jim. AN AMERICAN PLAGUE: THE
TRUE AND TERRIFYING STORY OF THE YELLOW FEVER EPIDEMIC OF 1793. Clarion.
Grades K-4 Compiled by
Vermont-NEA member Ellen Drysdale, librarian at Waitsfield/Warren schools.
- Byars, Betsy. THE NOT-JUST-ANYBODY FAMILY. Yearling. With a
young brother in the hospital, a grandfather in jail, and their mother
traveling with a rodeo, its up to Maggie and Vern to try to settle family
problems. Add a missing dog and you have a not-to-be-forgotten read.
- Christelow, Eileen. THE GREAT PIG ESCAPE. Clarion. This
delightful romp by a Vermont author introduces a passel of pigs with
above-average IQs as they are loaded onto the truck to take them to market.
They cleverly escape, disguise themselves in clothes from many sources in the
village, and board a bus headed to Florida, leaving the clueless farmers and
villagers scratching their heads. Dont miss the sequel: THE GREAT PIG
SEARCH.
- Funke, Cornelia. PRINCESS KNIGHT. Chicken House. Violet is a
young princess who wishes she could show the world that she is just as brave
and strong as her brothers. When her strict father insists that she get
married, Violet decides to use her intelligence and bravery to show everyone
what shes made of.
- Gerstein, Mordecai. THE MOUNTAINS OF TIBET. HarperTrophy.
Created by this years Caldecott Award winner, this intriguing, spare
picture book outlines the life of a Tibetan woodcutter and the choices he makes
when faced with the chance to live his life over again. His choices are
varieda galaxy that looks like a great splash of milk, a star
that looks warm and golden, a planet that somehow looks like
home, and so on
until his final choice, which comes as a very
satisfying surprise.
- Jackson, Donna M. THE BUG SCIENTIST. Houghton Mifflin.
Summertime brings bugs, and this fascinating book examines the people who love
bugs and make their living by them. By following the footsteps of several bug
scientists, we take a closer look at the extraordinary bugs that crawl, swim,
and whiz past us. We visit the morgue, witness a bug bowl festival, and travel
to Costa Rica. Includes the recipe for Chocolate Chirpy Chip
Cookies.
- Keller, Holly. FARFALLINA AND MARCEL. Greenwillow. One lovely,
green springtime, a caterpillar named Farfallina and a gosling named Marcel
become fast friends. They play various games together, adapting the rules to
suit each others limitations. But one day everything changed. Can best
friends remain best friends no matter what happens? For Farfallina and Marcel,
who endure growing up and growing apart only to find that it brings them closer
together, the happy answer is yes.
- LaMarche, Jim. THE RAFT. HarperTrophy. Nicky is not happy about
spending the entire summer at a cottage in the middle of nowhere with only his
grandmother for company. Then he discovers a raft. The rest of the summer flies
by as he comes to appreciate the natural world around him, develops his own
artistic skills, and discovers his grandmother is a delightful companion. A
quiet, lovely story, which may inspire readers to start a summer sketchbook and
wander in the woods.
- Napoli, Donna Jo. THE PRINCE OF THE POND. Puffin. A fabulous
read-aloud! Having been turned into a frog by a hag, a frog-prince makes the
best of his new life as he meets the girl-frog (not toad!) of-his-dreams,
raises a family, and instills a new kind of thinking into his frog family. A
hilarious twist on the well-known fairy tale. n
- Paulsen, Gary. HARRIS AND ME. Yearling. A truly funny,
heartwarming novel about a city-lad come to spend the summer on his
cousins farm. When not doing farm chores or avoiding the attack rooster,
the boys are left to their own devices. Harris has a capacity for dreaming up
outrageous projects, but not necessarily the ability to think them through to
their logical, hilarious, and often painful consequences.
- McMillan, Bruce. NIGHTS OF THE PUFFLINGS. Houghton Mifflin.
This beautiful photo essay with clear, simple text tells the story of the
August tradition of Icelandic children rescuing the thousands of stranded young
puffins who dont make it to the ocean. The Icelanders have come up with a
solution that delights children: school is closed for two weeks, and the
children rescue the puffins confused by city lights, and release them to the
sea.
Grades 5-8 Compiled by
Vermont-NEA member Angelica Harris, school librarian at Alburg Education
Center.
- Arkin, Anthony Dana. CAPTAIN HAWAII. Harpercollins. While
vacationing in Hawaii, 15-year-old Arron becomes involved with a tour guide,
his beautiful daughter, and a ruthless developer who seeks an ancient secret
hidden on the island of Kauai.
- Choldenko, Gennifer. AL CAPONE DOES MY SHIRTS. Putnam. A
12-year-old boy named Moose moves to Alcatraz Island in 1935 when the
guards families were housed there, and has to contend with his
extraordinary new environment in addition to life with his autistic sister.
- Dueker, Carl. HIGH HEAT. Houghton Mifflin. Like the game of
baseball, life is quirky and unpredictable
When Shanes father is
arrested for money laundering at his Lexus dealership, the star pitchers
life of affluence begins to fall apart.
- Haddix, Margaret Peterson. ESCAPE FROM MEMORY. Simon &
Schuster. Allowing herself to be hypnotized, 15-year-old Kira reveals memories
of another time and place that may eventually cost her and her mother their
lives.
- Hidier, Tanuja. BORN CONFUSED. Scholastic. Seventeen-year-old
Dimple, whose family is from India, discovers that she is not Indian enough for
the Indians and not American enough for the Americans, as she sees her
beautiful, manipulative best friend taking possession of both her heritage and
the boy she likes. A funny, thoughtful story about finding your heart, your
culture, and your place in America.
- Ibbotson, Eva. THE SECRET OF PLATFORM 13. Puffin. Odge Gribble,
a young hag, accompanies an old wizard, a gentle fey, and a giant ogre on their
mission through a magical tunnel from their peaceful Island to London to rescue
the King and Queens son, who had been stolen as an infant.
- Mazer, Harry. A BOY AT WAR. Simon & Schuster. While fishing
with his friends off Honolulu on Dec. 7, 1941, teenaged Adam is caught in the
midst of the Japanese attack and through the chaos of the subsequent days tries
to find his father, a naval officer who was serving on the U.S.S. Arizona when
the bombs fell.
- Mikaelsen, Ben. RESCUE JOSH MCGUIRE. Hyperion. When 13-year-old
Josh runs away to the mountains of Montana with an orphaned bear cub destined
for laboratory testing, they both must fight for their lives in a sudden snow
storm.
- Pullman, Philip. THE RUBY AND THE SMOKE. Random.. Pursued by
villains and cutthroats at every turn, 16-year-old Sally Lockhart uncovers two
dark mysteries. One involves the opium trade; the other a stolen ruby of
immense value. Sally is the key to bothand its worth her life to
find out why.
- Shea, Pegi Deitz. TANGLED THREADS: A HMONG GIRLS STORY.
Clarion. After 10 years in a refugee camp in Thailand, Mai Yang travels to
Providence, Rhode Island, where her Americanized cousins introduce her to
pizza, shopping, and beer, while her grandmother and new friends keep her
connected to her Hmong heritage.
- SHELF LIFE: STORIES BY THE BOOK. Gary Paulsen, ed. Simon &
Schuster. Ten original short stories in which the lives of young people are
changed by their encounters with books. Contributing authors include: Gregory
Maguire, Marion Dane Bauer, and Margaret Peterson Haddix.
GRADES 9-12 Compiled by Vermont-NEA member Shannon Walters,
librarian at C.P. Smith School in Burlington.
- Brooks, Martha. TRUE CONFESSIONS OF A HEARTLESS GIRL. Farrar
Straus & Giroux. On the run after taking her latest boyfriends truck,
with a pocketful of stolen money and a heart full of pain, seventeen-year-old
Noreen Stall seems to invite trouble. And trouble comes soon enough as
Noreens new mistakes trigger calamities that shake the lives of the
residents of her new home.
- Donnelly, Jennifer. A NORTHERN LIGHT. Harcourt. In 1906,
sixteen-year-old Mattie, determined to attend college and be a writer against
the wishes of her father and fiancé, takes a job at a summer inn where
she discovers the truth about the death of a guest. Based on the true story
which also inspired Theodore Dreisers An American Tragedy.
- Easton, Kelly. THE LIFE HISTORY OF A STAR. Margaret K.
McElderry. In the era of Watergate, the Vietnam War, and David Bowie,
fourteen-year-old Kristin navigates the external and internal changes that come
at top speed.
- Going, K. L. FAT KID RULES THE WORLD. Penguin Putnam. Troy
Billings at 61", 296 pounds, is standing at the edge of a subway platform
seriously contemplating suicide when he meets Curt MacCraea sage-like,
semi-homeless punk guitar genius who changes his life irrevocably.
- Haddon, Mark. THE CURIOUS INCIDENT OF THE DOG IN THE NIGHTTIME.
Doubleday. Christopher Boone knows all the countries of the world and their
capitals and every prime number up to 7,057. He relates well to animals but has
no understanding of human emotions. He cannot stand to be touched. Although
gifted with a superbly logical brain, Christopher is autistic. When his
neighbors dog is impaled on a garden fork, he sets out to find the real
perpetrator in this bitter, funny novel.
- Hoffman, Alice. GREEN ANGEL. Scholastic. Haunted by grief and
by her past after losing her family in an apocalyptic fire, fifteen-year-old
Green retreats into her ruined garden as she struggles to survive emotionally
and physically on her own.
- Koja, Kaje. BUDDHA BOY. Farrar Straus & Giroux. The kids at
school call Jinsen Buddha Boy and condemn him as a freak. Being
friends with Buddha Boy isnt simple, and Justin is forced into a cruel
contest with the jocks who just cant seem to leave his new classmate
alone.
- Maynard, Joyce. THE USUAL RULES: A NOVEL. St. Martins
Press. Wendys world collapses in a single, awful instant, one day in
September 2001. Her mother goes to work that morning and doesnt come
back. Through 13-year-old Wendys eyes, we follow her slow and terrible
realization that her mother has died, and the familys struggle to carry
on with their lives. A poignant novel of love, loss and finding which rules in
life really matter.
- Pattou, Edith. EAST. Harcourt Childrens Books. Heroine
Rose solves a mystery, loses her heart, discovers her purpose, and realizes her
travels have only just begun. Fresh and original as only the best fantasy can
be, EAST is a novel retelling of the classic tale East of the Sun, West
of the Moon.
- Stroud, Jonathan. THE AMULET OF SAMARKAND. Miramax. Sure to be
popular with Harry Potter fans, this is a thrilling new trilogy about an
apprentice magician and the powerful djinni he summons. Nathaniel is a young
magician with only one thing on his mind: revenge.
This list was edited by Shannon Walters, librarian at C.P.
Smith Elementary School in Burlington, and published as a public service by the
Vermont-National Education Association, 10 Wheelock St., Montpelier, VT 05602
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