HMS Summer Reading

Students entering Grades 6-8

 

 

The Mysterious Benedict Society

Trenton Stewart

 

After Reynie Muldoon responds to an advertisement recruiting "gifted children looking for special opportunities," he finds himself in a world of mystery and adventure. The 11-year-old orphan is one of four children to complete a series of challenging and creative tasks, and he, Kate, Constance, and Sticky become the Mysterious Benedict Society. After being trained by Mr. Benedict and his assistants, the four travel to an isolated school where children are being trained by a criminal mastermind to participate in his schemes to take over the world. The young investigators need to use their special talents and abilities in order to discover Mr. Curtain's secrets, and their only chance to defeat him is through working together. (School Library Journal)

 

 

The Mother-Daughter Book Club

Heather Vogel Frederick

 

Four sixth-graders sign up for a book club, in which they'll read Little Women with their moms. In alternating chapters, each of the four girls describes a meeting. There is aspiring poet Emma, whose librarian mother started the group; Jess, Emma's best friend, who lives on an organic farm; hockey-playing Cassidy, daughter of a former supermodel; and popular Megan. Despite their initial resistance to the club, the girls experience joys and sorrows and develop a closer bond, just like the characters that they grow to love.  (Booklist)

 

 

The Wednesday Wars

Gary D. Schmidt

 

On Wednesday afternoons, while his Catholic and Jewish schoolmates attend religious instruction, Holling Hoodhood, the only Presbyterian in his seventh grade, is alone in the classroom with his teacher, Mrs. Baker, who Holling is convinced hates his guts. He feels more certain after Mrs. Baker assigns Shakespeare's plays for Holling to discuss during their shared afternoons. Each month in Holling's tumultuous seventh-grade year is a chapter in this quietly powerful coming-of-age novel set in suburban Long Island during the late '60s. The slow start may deter some readers, and Mrs. Baker is too good to be true: she arranges a meeting between Holling and the New York Yankees, brokers a deal to save a student's father's architectural firm, and, after revealing her past as an Olympic runner, coaches Holling to the varsity cross-country team. (Booklist)

 

 

Elsewhere

Gabrielle Zevin

 

This coming-of-age novel by Gabrielle Zevin (Farrar, 2005) has a unique twist. Although Liz is maturing, coping with disappointments, and controlling her anger, she is getting younger. Having been killed by a hit and run driver, she now lives in Elsewhere with the grandmother who died before she was born. After death, the residents get younger until they become babies and are reborn onto Earth again. Initially mad at the driver and sad that she will not have a boyfriend and attend the prom, Liz misses her family and is sullen and depressed. Gradually, she begins to realize that life is not so bad in the hereafter.  (School Library Journal)

 

 

No talking

Andrew Clements

 

Dave Packer's fifth-grade classmates are so boisterous and difficult to quiet down that the teachers have dubbed them "The Unshushables." Dave has just read about Mahatma Gandhi and learned that the man practiced silence one day a week to bring order to his mind. Though Dave likes to talk nonstop, he's determined to give the idea a try. An encounter with Lynsey, another chatterbox, sparks the boys and girls into challenging each other to a no-talking contest for 48 hours. They can answer direct questions from adults with three-word sentences but must otherwise remain silent. The teachers are bewildered at the extreme change in the kids until several of them figure out what's going on. Principal Hiatt demands that the quiet students return to their normal behavior. When the children continue with their silent ways, Dave finds himself at the center of the controversy. (School Library Journal)

 

 

Regarding the… Series

Kate Klise

           Regarding the fountain

           Regarding the Trees

           Regarding the bees

           Regarding the sink

           Regarding the bathrooms

 

 

Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices from a Medieval Village

Laura Amy Schlitz

 

Using a series of interconnected monologues and dialogues featuring young people living in and around an English manor in 1255, Schlitz offers first-person character sketches that build upon each other to create a finer understanding of medieval life. The book was inspired by the necessity of creating a play suitable for a classroom where "no one wanted a small part." Each of the 23 characters (between 10 and 15 years old) has a distinct personality and a societal role revealed not by recitation of facts but by revelation of memories, intentions, and attitudes. Sometimes in prose and more often in one of several verse forms, the writing varies nicely from one entry to the next. Historical notes appear in the vertical margins, and some double-page spreads carry short essays on topics related to individual narratives, such as falconry, the Crusades, and Jews in medieval society. Although often the characters' specific concerns are very much of their time, their outlooks and emotional states will be familiar to young people today.  (Booklist)

 

 

The Invention of Hugo Cabret

Brian Selznick

 

Twelve-year-old orphan Hugo lives in the walls of a Paris train station at the turn of the 20th century, where he tends to the clocks and filches what he needs to survive. Hugo's recently deceased father, a clockmaker, worked in a museum where he discovered an automaton: a human-like figure seated at a desk, pen in hand, as if ready to deliver a message. After his father showed Hugo the robot, the boy became just as obsessed with getting the automaton to function as his father had been, and the man gave his son one of the notebooks he used to record the automaton's inner workings. The plot grows as intricate as the robot's gears and mechanisms...  (Publisher’s Weekly)

 

 

Hot Hand: Mike Lupica's Comeback Kids

Mike Lupica

 

10-year-old Billy's parents have recently separated, and his father, Joey, has moved to another house. Joey is also Billy's demanding, hot-headed basketball coach, constantly criticizing his son for shooting rather than passing during games. Billy's well-intentioned mother works long hours as a lawyer and travels frequently. Younger brother Ben, as passionate about the piano as Billy is about basketball, becomes increasingly withdrawn and, alarmingly, begins to skip piano lessons. Billy comes to Ben's rescue when a school bully picks on him, but resents feeling that his often-absent parents expect him to take care of his vulnerable brother. Tensions peak when Ben's piano recital and Billy's championship game occur at the same time; their mother is called out of town, and their father refuses to miss the game for Ben's recital.  (Publisher’s Weekly)

 

 

Ranger’s Apprentice Series

John Flanagan

                      Book One: he Ruins of Gorlan

Will hopes to become a knight; instead, he winds up as a Ranger's apprentice, joining the secretive corps that uses stealth, woodcraft, and courage to protect the kingdom. His aptitude and bravery gradually earn the respect of his gruff but good-hearted master. When the kingdom is attacked by evil magic forces, Will helps track down and defeat a couple of particularly nasty beasts. This closing episode sets the stage for a good-versus-evil war that will likely be at the heart of future volumes. In this opener, though, most of the story focuses on the learning process that Will goes through as an apprentice. Descriptions of Ranger craft are fascinating. Exciting confrontations with bullies and wild boars help to establish the boy's emerging character. Side stories involving a rival Battleschool apprentice and the identity of Will's father are woven in smoothly.  (School Library Journal)

 

 

The Lightning Thief (Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 1)

Rick Riordan

 

                      Another great series.  Description of book 1:

At first glance, Perseus Jackson seems like a loser (readers meet him at a boarding school for troubled youth), but he's really the son of Poseidon and a mortal woman. As he discovers his heritage, he also loses that mother and falls into mortal danger. The gods (still very active in the 21st-century world) are about to go to war over a lost thunderbolt, so Percy and sidekicks Grover (a young satyr) and Annabeth (daughter of Athena) set out to retrieve it. Many close calls and monster-attacks later, they enter Hades's realm (via L.A.). A virtuoso description of the Underworld is matched by a later account of Olympus (hovering 600 floors above Manhattan). There's lots of zippy review of Greek myth and legend, and characters like Medusa, Procrustes, Charon, and the Eumenides get updates. Some of the Labors of Heracles or Odysseus's adventures are recycled, but nothing seems stale, and the breakneck pace keeps the action from being too predictable. Percy is an ADHD, wise-cracking, first-person narrator. Naturally, his real quest is for his own identity. Along the way, such topics as family, trust, war, the environment, dreams, and perceptions are raised.  (School Library Journal)

 

 

Love, Stargirl

Jerry Spinelli

 

This brilliant sequel to Stargirl takes place a year later. Now living in Pennsylvania, Stargirl, 15, continues to pine for Leo, who dumped her, and struggles to make a place for herself in her new community. Fortunately, her eclectic neighbors, who include Dootsie, a five-year-old "human bean"; Betty Lou, an agoraphobic divorcée; and Perry Delloplane, an amiable thief, draw her back into life and happiness. Written in diary format-the "world's longest letter," as Stargirl calls it-this novel is as charming and unique as its sensitive, nonconformist heroine. Addressing loss, growing pains, and staying true to oneself, this stellar follow-up is both profound and funny.  (School Library Journal)

 

 

Septimus Heap Series

Angie Sage

 

The seventh son of the seventh son, aptly named Septimus Heap, is stolen the night he is born by a midwife who pronounces him dead. That same night, the baby's father, Silas Heap, comes across a bundle in the snow containing a new born girl with violet eyes. The Heaps take this helpless newborn into their home, name her Jenna, and raise her as their own. But who is this mysterious baby girl, and what really happened to their beloved son Septimus?

The first book in this enthralling new series by Angie Sage leads readers on a fantastic journey filled with quirky characters and magykal charms, potions, and spells. Magyk is an original story of lost and rediscovered identities, rich with humor and heart.

 

 

Also, be sure to check out the current Nutmeg Nominee books, the Newbery Award books, and The Coretta Scott King award books.

 

 

These titles were recommended by Mrs. O’Connell’s 2006-2007 LA classes…

 

You remind me of you by Eireanne Corigan

Baseball bloopers: world’s fuinniest errors by Bill Gutman

Harry Potter and the sorcerer’s stone by J. K. Rowling

My 13th season by Kristi Robert

The rules of survival by Nancy Werlin

Where the red fern grows by Wilson Rawls

Let’s get lost by Sara Manning

Fatal tide by Iris Johanson

The DaVInci Code by Dan Brown

Click here by Denise Vega

It’s not easy being mean by Lisi Harrison

Parallel worlds by Michio Kaku

The lightning thief by Rick Riordan

Missing Abby by Lee Weatherly

The voyage of Patience Goodspeed by Heather Vogel

Eldest by Christopher Paolini

Chicken soup for the kids soul by J. Canfield

Trickster’s choice by Tamora Pierce

Raven’s gate by Anthony Horowitz

Cool stuff and how it works by Chris Woodford

Cherub by Robert Muchamore

The perks of being a wallflower by Steven Chbosky

Heartland series #14 Sooner or later by Lauren Brooke

Touching spirit bear by Ben Mikaelsen

Perfect by Natasha Friend

The pretty committee strikes back by Lisi Harrison

The time capsule by Lurlene McDaniel

The great blue yonder by Alex Shearer

The invisible man by H.G. Wells

Bud, not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis

Uglies by Scott Westerfield

Crique du freak: Hunters of dusk by Darren Shan

Not as crazy as I seem by George Harrar

Pretties by Scott Westerfield

The cheat by Amy Goldman Koss

Soldier boys by Dean Hughes

Harry Potter and the goblet of fire by J.K. Rowling

Chicken soup for the teenage soul 4 by Jack Canfield

Homeland by R. A. Salvatore

Wolf brother by Michel Paver

My side of the mountain by Jean Craighead George

The joy of snorkeling  by Steve Blount and Herb Taylor

Inside Delta force by Eric L. Haney

Assassin by Ted Bell

New moon by Stephanie Meyer

Missing by Catherin McPhail

Fright time: Creatures from the ice by Eve Marko