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Summer Reading List for our Audubon Roadrunners and Their Siblings

   Each year books are chosen by California's Young Readers.  If you are interested in finding great books for your student to read over the summer, click here to go to the official homepage of the California Young Reader Medal website.

Another resource for finding good summer reading books is below:

Here you will find a list of books that cover a wide range of readers.  Each book will have the targeted grade range for the reader and one, two, three, or four frogs to show my opinion of the book being reviewed.  Have a great summer and happy reading!!!!!

 =Fabulous   

= Great

 = Okay

 = Bad

 

Historical fiction

  WARRIOR GIRL: A Novel of Joan of Arc
                Pauline Chandler

                Grades 9 – 12

  = Great

       Mariane became mute after witnessing her mother's murder at the hands of English raiders. Left voiceless and devastated, Mariane is sent away from her home because it is too dangerous for her to stay.  While staying with her aunt, uncle, and cousin Jehanne, Mariane begins to feel a close bond with her cousin, but has noticed that sometimes she acts strange and appears to be talking to herself. She then discovers that Jehanne wants to travel to the Dauphin and convince him to rally the French to chase away the English. Jehanne claims that God has spoken to her through the saints and has asked her to become his "warrior" and "his archangel."
     She doesn't know what to make of her cousin's claim, but insists that Jehanne take her along.  As time passes, Mariane realizes truths far more upsetting than her mother’s murder and begins to unravel family secrets.
       This retelling of Joan of Arc might enlighten young female readers about the heroics of some brave young girls.  The only downfall is that the author does not always clarify between the history and the made up fiction.

 

Book cover Journey to the Bottomless Pit: The Story of Stephen Bishop &   

               Mammoth Cave
                      
Elizabeth Mitchell (2004)

                 Grades 7 - 12
                

= Great

 
       The Mammoth Cave of Kentucky is the site for this historical fictionalized account of Steven Bishop's life as a cave guide. In 1838, at the age of seventeen, a young slave named Stephen Bishop was given the opportunity to act as a guide for tourists through the caves his master had purchased. It was his job to lead the group through what seemed like endless tunnels by candlelight. Stephen enjoyed his job and even discovered new passages and rivers that ran through the miles and miles of the cave. Stephen was the first to discover the eyeless fish. His enthusiasm to learn all about the cave gives him the drive to learn to read. In 1842, Stephen was asked to draw and map the passages of the entire cave system.  Stephen became the leading expert on the Mammoth Cave.

 

Realistic fiction


 Book coverThe Seven Wonders of Sassafras Springs
                    
Betty G. Birney (2005)

                Grades 4 - 8
               
 = Great

      In the year 1923, eleven-year-old Eben McAllister wanted to travel and see things outside of Sassafras Springs, Missouri. After reading a book about the Seven Wonders of the World and sharing it with his father, his desire for traveling grew. Eben's father challenged him to find seven wonders in Sassafras Springs in seven days.  If he could, he would earn a train ticket to the Colorado Mountains. When many people in Sassafras Springs wanted to share their own wonders with Eben, he began to realize that it was going to be a much harder job than he first thought.  Will Eben ever make it to the Colorado Mountains?

 

Classic fiction

 Cover Image  Of Mice and Men

                   by John Steinbeck

                   Grades 9 -12

= Great

     Originally published in 1937, Of Mice and Men is a timeless story of George Milton and Lennie Small, ranch hands who drift from job to job, always one step ahead of the law and a few dollars from the poorhouse. George, who is small and has a sharp tongue, acts as a father figure to Lennie, who is extremely large, but a little slow. 

     When they find work on a ranch in California's Salinas Valley, the dream of owning their own farm finally seems within reach. However, in a tragic twist, Lennie commits murder accidentally and George is left trying to make it right.  Will it work out in the end, or will their dreams of owning a small farm go up in smoke?

   

 Cover ImageAdventures of Tom Sawyer

                  by Mark Twain

                   Grades 4 - 6

 

 =Fabulous   

     First published in 1876, Mark Twain tells a story of a mischievous boy growing up in a small town on the Mississippi River.  He relives part of his own childhood as he tells of a boy who gets out all of his worldly possessions and examines them.  Bits of toys, marble, and trash could buy an exchange of work, but there was not enough to buy even a half an hour of freedom.
   Tom Sawyer immediately catches the attention of the reader with his bad behavior and incredible adventures. Whether he is throwing dirt balls at his brother, faking Gangrene, or simply trying to convince the world that he is dead, Tom's energy and great since of humor shine through.

 

Multicultural literature

Cover Image  The Hunchback of Notre Dame

                       by Victor Hugo

                       Grades 6 - 12

  =Fabulous   

      Before Disney created a movie about a hunchback that rang a bell in a tower, Victor Hugo wrote The Hunchback of Notre Dame.  It has thrilled generations of readers with its highly emotional story of Quasimodo, the deformed hunchback who lives in a bell tower of one of Paris’s most famous cathedrals after being abandoned by his mother.
     Feared and hated by all, Quasimodo is looked after by Dom Claude Frollo, a stern, cold priest who ignores the hunchback even when plagued by public torture. Someone finally steps forward to help, a beautiful gypsy named Esmeralda, whose single act of kindness fills Quasimodo with love. Frollo becomes enraged with jealousy, first at Esmeralda’s love for Phoebus and then by her growing friendship with Quasimodo. Can the hunchback save the lovely gypsy from Frollo’s evil plan to have her hung at the gallows, or will it be the end of Esmeralda and Quasimodo?
 

Cover Image  Samurai Shortstop

                          by Alan M. Gratz

                          Grade 7 - 11

 = Great

        Filled with mixed emotions, Toyo joins the other new students at his boarding school. He is happy to be far away from his family since his Uncle Koji committed suicide. Suicide was Koji's way of defying the disbanding of the samurai. Toyo is relieved to be far away from the memories of Koji's death. Like every school, there are rumors about what is in store for the new students at Ichiko Academy by the upperclassmen. To make matters worse, at first Toyo is not permitted to play on the baseball team even though he has great talent. Eventually, Toyo proves himself worthy of a place on the team, where his training in bushido (Samurai Warrior training) will help both Toyo and his teammates become better players and better men. Toyo applies the rules of bushido to help his teammates function as a team. During his journey, he still has to deal with hazing from older students, and his father’s disapproval of his passion for baseball.

 

Adventure

 Book coverAlex Ryan, Stop That!
                      
Claudia Mills (2003)

                    Grades 5 - 8

 = Great

      As Alex Ryan’s seventh-grade year comes to an end he continues to pull pranks and tell jokes.  He enjoys attracting people with his humor, but one prank leads Marcia, one of his estranged friends, to injury. Seventh-grade camp is approaching fast and Alex’s dad has volunteered to chaperone which makes Alex uncomfortable. His dad is also a jokester who likes to use his son for a punch line. 
   Will Alex be able to build a better relationship with his father and after Marcia’s injury, will he learn from his pranks and give up his jester ways?

 

Book coverEragon
                      
Christopher Paolini (2003)

                   Grades 6 - 12

= Great

     When Eragon finds a beautiful blue stone he has no idea that he has discovered a dragon’s egg! When the egg hatches, Eragon’s quest begins. It is a journey that will lead Eragon into a world of closely guarded secrets in search of a way to right the wrongs in Alagaesia. Joining Eragon and his dragon on their quest is Brom, a storyteller, whose own story may turn out to be more interesting than any he could ever tell. Will Eragon and Brom join the Varden - a secret society set up against the evil King Galbatorix?  And if so, will they survive?

 

Mystery

  From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

                     Konigsburg, E.L. (1968)

                     Grades 3 – 6

  =Fabulous   

        As the oldest of four children, Claudia Kincaid felt that she was being taken advantage of. To her, leaving home was the best way to make her family appreciate her.  She decided to live in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, NY.

      Claudia knew that this would be a difficult task and quickly realized that she would need another person to go with her on this adventure.  Claudia chose Jamie, one of her three siblings.  Jamie was a great choice because of his ability to save money and spend wisely. 

    With clothes-filled instrument cases in hand, the two set off on a journey that would not only lead to self discovery, but turn into a quest to find the creator of a mysterious marble statue named Angel that was on display at the museum.   Neither Claudia nor Jamie realized that their lives were about to change forever. 

 Awards:    1968 - The Newbery Medal

                  1968 - Lewis Carroll Shelf Award

                  1970 - William Allen White Children's Book Award

 

This book was also made into a movie in 1973 and re-released as a made-for-TV movie in 1995:

From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler (1995) (TV)

From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. FrankweilerOverview

Director:

Marcus Cole                                                                         

Writers (WGA):

E.L. Konigsburg (novel)
Betty Goldberg (teleplay)

Release Date:3 June 1995 (USA) more

Genre:Comedy / Drama / Family more

Plot Outline:

Two runaway kids hide in a museum. Once they are locked inside overnight, they try to solve a mystery about a statue supposedly carved by Michelangelo, known as "The Angel." Will they solve the mystery in time?

  

Book coverEncyclopedia Brown and the Case of the Jumping Frogs
                   
Donald Sobol (2003)

                Grades 2 - 5
 

= Great

      Jumping frogs and lawn mower races are only a few of the types of cases that Encyclopedia Brown tackles in this book. In the main case, Buddy Mayfair (Ribbet) hops into the Brown Detective Agency and invites Sally Kimball and Encyclopedia to be part of a frog-hunting event. Everything is going fine until someone discovers that Ribbet’s camera has been stolen. As this mystery unfolds, can you find the thief along with the detectives?

 

Supernatural-fantasy-science fiction-utopias

 

Book coverAlphabet Mystery
                     
Audrey Wood (2003)

                  Grades Pre-K - 1

      =Fabulous   

       Charlie realizes that his little x is missing. Little x has run away because he feels like the most unused letter in the alphabet. When the other letters set out to find him, they discover him in a castle happily dancing on a xylophone. The letters convince him that he is needed back home for birthday surprise for Charlie's mom. Will little x return with Charlie and his letter friends or will he stay at his new found castle?

 

 ANANSI BOYS

                        Neil Gaiman
                       William Morrow

                        Grades 9 - 12
 

= Great

                     
       Mr. Nancy is Fat Charlie's dad and the African trickster god, Anansi. When Mr. Nancy dies, Charlie flies to Florida to pay his respects, having never known that his father was more than just an annoying man with the ability to make his life miserable. As things begin to go wrong, Charlie learned of his father's powers, and that he has a brother. The only way he can meet him is to summon him, and to do so he must ask a spider to bring him by the house. Lacking sincere faith, Charlie speaks to a spider and requests his brother to come by.

Imagine Charlie's surprise when his brother, Spider, stops by, bringing with him a series of downward spirals that hurl Charlie headlong into disaster. With the world on the precipice of doom, Charlie seeks help to enter the spirit world and set right all that has begun to go wrong.

 Another book that the reader may like is AMERICAN GODS.

 

 

Non-fiction

 Book coverI Am America
                            
Charles R. Smith, Jr. (2003)

                         Grades Pre-K - 1 

 =Fabulous   

      Who or what is America? America is made up of lots of different people. They like different kinds of music, practice different religions and belong to different cultures. All the kids in this book are different, yet they are still Americans. As you see the children’s bright, colorful photos and read about them in, you just might see yourself. Have you figured out why the book is called, “I Am America,” I think I have?

  

Book coverThe Magic School Bus Explores the Senses
                         
Joanna Cole (1999)

                     Grades 2 – 5

  =Fabulous   

     What’s yellow and can shrink so small that it can travel through your brain? The Magic School Bus, of course! But where is Ms. Frizzle?   The new assistant principal, Mr. Wilde, is driving the bus and the class is scared! Join them as they go in and out of a policeman’s eye, a dog’s nose, a little boy’s ear, different brains, and much more.  Can you handle the ride?

 

  Cover ImageThe Green Book: The Everyday Guide to Saving the Planet One Simple Step at a  

                    Time by Elizabeth Rogers, William McDonough, Thomas M. Kostigen, Cameron Diaz,

                    Thomas M. Kostigen

                    Grades 9 - 12

     =Fabulous   

 

      Ellen DeGeneres, Robert Redford, Will Ferrell, Jennifer Aniston, Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, Martha Stewart, Tyra Banks, Dale Earnhardt, Jr., Tiki Barber, Owen Wilson, and Justin Timberlake give us some great ideas on how to save our environment!  This book is packed full of ways to save our Earth.  As you read, try not to get overwhelmed though!  The book is not saying that you have to do everything you read about, it is just giving you some simple, and some not so simple, ways to help out everyday!

 

 

Cover ImageSespe Wild: Southern California's Last Free River

              by Bradley John Monsma      

              Grades 9 -12

= Great

 

       Sespe Creek, the last un-dammed river in Southern California, flows through some of the wildest territory in the state to its mouth less than fifty miles northwest of downtown Los Angeles. Monsma’s attention ranges from the physical to geological attributes that shaped it. The Sespe is also home to the nearly-extinct condors, grizzlies, mountain sheep, steelhead trout, and red-legged frogs. Monsma connects the tensions between preservation and management of wildlife and wilderness, the ecology of fire, the connections between species, and the incredible way that the Sespe has escaped the fate of other Southern California streams that have been dammed or carved up into canals by land development.

 

Biography

 Book coverLou Gehrig: The Luckiest Man
                            
David Adler (1997)

                        Grades 3 - 6

     =Fabulous   

       This is a touching story about a great New York Yankee’s baseball player. Lou Gehrig was born to German immigrant parents on June 19, 1903, in a poor section of New York City called Yorkville. His incredible career began while he attended high school. Despite illnesses and obstacles, Lou Gehrig was always tried his best. His dedication to the game even earned him the nickname "Iron Horse." Not only was he dedicated to the game of baseball, he was dedicated to the fans as well.

  

Book coverRosa
                  
Nikki Giovanni (2005)

              Grades 4 – 6

  =Fabulous   

       Rosa Parks was a quiet woman who had no idea that she was about to change history. She was hard-working and was an accomplished seamstress. She took care of all the small details of a garment until it was as close to perfect as it could be. She was a happy, but tired woman, who got on the bus one afternoon after a hard day's work. Too tired to walk to the back of the bus where African-Americans were supposed to sit, she began a revolution that would change her life and other’s forever.

 

 Cover ImageCoach: Lessons on the Game of Life

                by Michael Lewis

                 Grades 9 - 12

 

 = Great

 

           Taught early in life by his coach, Coach Fitz, Lewis learned to fight through hard times and resist the temptation to take the easy way out.  Coach Fitz was strict, but he made such an impression on his students, that 25 years later, alumni at the New Orleans Private School, want to name a new gym after him.   Unfortunately, the parent’s of today’s students aren't as wowed by Coach Fitz's tough love. They complain that Coach Fitz is too mean to their children. A desire to set these new parents straight may be the underlying reason for Lewis's slight book.

 

Inspirational literature

  BECKHAM: Both Feet on the Ground - An Autobiography
                   David Beckham and Tom Watt
                    Grades 3 – 7

 = Great

      Beginning with Beckham’s childhood this book reveals his love for soccer. He had enormous talent at a young age, which was fostered by his family and friends. As Beckham grows from a shy, soft individual to the man he is today, he takes us through some of the most important moments in his life.  One of his childhood dreams was to sign up with Manchester United, a soccer team. Later he met and married the woman of his dreams, became a father, and, of course, continued playing soccer.  This book is very motivational and is sure to inspire even the youngest of readers!

 

Cover ImageChicken Soup for the Preteen Soul: 101 Stories of Changes, Choices and Growing up for Kids

                by Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen, Patty Hansen, Irene Dunlap, Mark Victor Hansen

                 Grades 4 - 7

  = Great

       This book is written by and for preteens.  What a great way for pre-teens to relate, than by having a book that is written from their own point of view?  This book includes an inspiring collection of stories that touch on the emotions and situations they experience every day: making and losing friends, fitting in while keeping their personal identity, discovering the opposite sex, dealing with pressures at school, including violence, and coping with family issues such as divorce.  Many children this age are hesitant to approach their parents on these tough issues, so why not give them a great resource and let them have the piece of mind that they are not alone.

Another great book is Seven Habits of Highly-Effective Teens.

 

Poetry

 Book coverWham! It's a Poetry Jam: Discovering Poetry Performance
                  
Sara Holbrook (2002)

                Grades K – 2

  =Fabulous   

     Teachers, parents, and kids can bring poetry alive with this unique collection of poems designed to be acted out. Express yourself as an individual as you learn to use attitude, voice, movement, and rhythm to present poetry. Team up with partners or venture out on your own. With seventeen incredible chapters of poems and tips, this book is a great tool for budding actors, poets or anyone who enjoys having fun with words.

 

Book coverEric Carle's Animals Animals
                       
Eric Carle (1989)

                    Grades K – 2

  =Fabulous   

      Eric Carle has selected a variety of animal poems and rhythmical sayings and illustrated them with his well-known artwork. Many of the pictures take up two pages and the rainbow of colors that he uses are breathtaking. The book includes poems about birds, mammals, reptiles, fish, insects, and other living creatures. Readers will enjoy reading the poems because they are all amusing and interesting.  Many will even make you laugh out loud.

 

 Cover ImageThe Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou

                        by Maya Angelou

                 Grades 9 - 12

= Great

     With poetry spanning from 1971 to 1993, Angelou's work never fails to grip the imagination. In this collection, she talks about love, traveling, and aging. Through her poetry, she speaks the truth; real, raw, and uncut she tells it like it is. She speaks about a lot of historical and cultural realities, such as, slavery, segregation, torture, and discrimination.  Some of these things continue in today’s society, but through education and understanding, maybe we can finally put an end to it.

  

Cover ImageSolid Ground

                        by Writerscorps

                   Grades 9 - 12

      = Great

       This book of poems has taken the works of young writers who talk about their individual experience, and about the world we share. They describe the stresses that impact their lives and the strength and compassion born from their efforts to succeed in a turbulent world. Since 1994, WritersCorps teachers have met with thousands of youth in public schools, detention centers, halfway houses, and after-school programs. A lot of pressures are put on our youth today.  In order to fully understand what they have to say, to themselves, to each other, and to parents, teachers, police and presidents, we must first open our ears and listen. This collection provides the perfect opportunity.

  

 Drama

Cover ImageJames and the Giant Peach

                      by Roald Dahl

                      Grades 4 – 6

  = Okay

     James Henry Trotter, a poor orphan, ends up being raised by two horribly-mean aunts. James finds magic crystals that transform him, a small peach and several bugs that happen to get sprinkled as well.  Soon he is off on a great adventure on a giant peach with new friends who are, to say the least, unique. Sharks, seagulls, and angry cloud people add interest along the way. Join in and find out what happens to James and his giant peach!

 James and the Giant Peach (1996)

James and the Giant PeachOverview

Director:

Henry Selick

Writers (WGA):

Roald Dahl (book)
Karey Kirkpatrick (screenplay) ...
more

Release Date:

12 April 1996 (USA) more view trailer

Genre:

Animation / Adventure / Drama / Family / Fantasy / Musical more

Tagline:

If you really don't go to the movies, you won't see... more

Plot Outline:

An orphan with terrible aunts for guardians, befriends human like bugs who live inside a giant peach, who take the boy on a journey to New York City. more

  

Cover ImageWizard of Oz

                 by Dan Coates

                 Grades 3 – 6

  =Fabulous   

      Dorothy falls asleep and has a crazy dream, so she thought.  When she wakes up, Dorothy realizes that a tornado has transported her and her little dog, Toto, to the land of OZ. Dorothy must seek out the great wizard in order to return to her home in Kansas.  Along the way, Dorothy encounters an evil witch, a good which, some unlikely friends, and a magical pair of shoes but will she, and her dog, ever make it home? 

  

Teen-pop culture

 Cover ImageThe Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants

                  by Ann Brashares

                  Grades 7 – 9

 = Great

        How can one pair of jeans that are worn, dirty, and speckled with bleach look so wonderful on four different girls with dramatically different figures? Is it magic?  Who knows, but "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" is born when the girls, who are getting ready to say their goodbyes for the summer decide to send the jeans to each other no matter where they might be. They promise to rotate the jeans among them and, write their favorite adventures on the pant legs.   Will the girls reunite at the end of the summer, or will the pants be lost forever?

  

Cover ImageThe Princess Diaries (Princess Diaries Series #1)

                 by Meg Cabot

                 Grades 7 – 12

 = Great

         Raised in a Greenwich Village loft in New York City by her flaky-but-loving artist mother, ninth grader Mia Thermopolis is shocked to learn from her father that she is the heir to Genovia, the tiny European kingdom he rules. Her grandmother, the Queen, further disrupts Mia's life when she comes to town to mold the girl into a princess. Mia goes from a frizzy haired teenager who wears glasses and mismatched clothes to a proper and well-mannered princess in training. Mia, with her miraculous make over, gains the attention of a previously unattainable boy, but he isn't all he appears to be and Mia’s true friend, whom she takes for granted, turns out to be Mr. Right.  This story may not be exactly like the movie, but it is well worth reading!

The Princess Diaries (2001)

Overview

Director:

Garry Marshall

Writers (WGA):

The Princess DiariesMeg Cabot (novel)
Gina Wendkos (screenplay)

Release Date:

3 August 2001 (USA) more view trailer

Genre:

Family / Comedy more

Tagline:

She rocks. She rules. She reigns.

Plot Summary:

A socially awkward but very bright 15-year-old girl who is being raised by a single mom discovers that she... more

 

The movie information was taken from:

"The Internet Movie Database." 2007. 28 Jul 2007 <http://www.imdb.com/>.