Thank you all who voted for your favorite book to win the
2014 Nutmeg Award. Votes are being
tallied as I type, and the winners will be announced by May 15th at
the latest. In the meantime, the 2015
Nutmeg Award nominees have been announced and are ready for your perusal in the
Teen Spot.
First up in the Teen category (that’s grades 7 and 8) is See You at Harry’s by Jo Knowles. This
is a sad sweet story about a middle child who feels invisible in her very busy
family. When unspeakable tragedy
strikes, the whole family struggles to stay together.
Next is Don’t Turn
Around by Michelle Gagnon. It’s a techie type thriller with a lot of action
and a little romance thrown in. Secrets
abound, and it’s a wild ride to the end!
Carley, the main character in One for the Murphys by Linda Mullaly Hunt is a foster child who has
never known a stable happy-ish family until she ends up in the Murphy family
temporarily. All runs pretty smoothly
until her mother shows up and wants her back. Now Carley has a difficult
decision to make.
Like fantasy with a bit of humor? Then The Last Dragonslayer by Jasper Fforde
is for you! Clever and funny, this one
is a quick, funny, enjoyable book to take to the beach. And you will end up wanting to own your very
own Quarkbeast by the end.
More thrills await in Kate Messner’s exciting book Eye of the Storm. Jaden’s dad is a scientist who has been
conducting mysterious weather experiments in Russia, experiments that were
banned in the United States. Fast-paced and full of action, this one is for
sci-fi fans and mystery fans alike.
March Madness basketball season is the topic in Paul
Volponi’s book The Final Four. More than just a sports book, this one looks
at the lives of four of the players and how they went from kids to being in the
biggest basketball tournament ever.
Guitar Notes by
Mary Amato is about a developing friendship between perfect student Lyla and
outsider Tripp. A sweet story with music as a backdrop.
More excitement and thrills in S.A. Bodeen’s great survival story The Raft. Robie and Max are stranded on
a life raft in the middle of shark infested waters after the plane they were on
crashes in the Pacific Ocean. A true
survival story, this one will keep you turning the pages.
Sci-fi fans will want to check out Insignia by S. J. Kincaid. Tom is training to be an outer space
soldier in this one. If you liked Ender’s Game, you will want to read this one.
It’s the first in a trilogy.
The False Prince by
Jennifer Nielsen is about a competition between four orphans to be the one to
impersonate the son of the king of Carthya, which is on the brink of civil
war. Very popular, this one was voted a
top ten for teens by the American Library Association.
The High School selections (for grades 9 through 12) have
something for every reader’s taste.
Boy 21 by Matthew Quick (of Silver
Linings Playbook fame) is a sports story that’s about so much more that you
almost forget the sports part! Troubled Russ is convinced that his dead parents
are coming back for him in a space ship. Only Matthew Quick could pull this one
off! Quirky and touching, it’s a
read-in-one-night book.
Historical fiction fans and those who are interested in
World War II will like Code Name Verity by
Elizabeth Wein. It is the story of a young female spy and her friend, a fighter
pilot, who have to fight for survival when a plane goes down in Nazi-occupied
France.
More historical fiction with some horror and a bit of
fantasy in Libba Bray’s atmospheric book The
Diviners. Set in the roaring twenties, seventeen year old party girl Evie
finds herself battling a supernatural serial killer in the dark streets of New
York City.
The main character in David Levithan’s fine book Every Day wakes up each day in a new body.
We never know if “A” is male or female, because the body “A” inhabits can be
either a boy or a girl. Interesting take on the “love has no gender” theme.
Cath Crowley’s Graffiti
Moon was written to be read in one sitting. The action takes place in one
night and is told from 3 points of view, Lucy, a mysterious graffiti artist
called Shadow and his poetry-writing friend Poet. Short and lyrical, this one’s
a winner!
Do you like verse novels? Get ready for a heartbreaker in
Martine Leavitt’s book My Book of Life by
Angel. Parts of this one are hard to read, and the theme is also difficult,
but give it a try.
The Khmer Rouge was a vicious rebel force in Cambodia during
the Viet Nam war. Not many fiction books are written concerning this tragic
period in history, and that is part of what makes Patricia McCormick’s book Never Fall Down stand out. This is based on the true story of a young
boy forced to become a child soldier in the Killing Fields.
Out of the Easy by
Ruth Sepetys is about Josie, a young woman who grew up in a brothel in 1950’s
New Orleans and dreams of attending Smith College in Massachussetts. You will
root for her as she struggles to gain her dream.
Horror fans, prepare to fall in love with the book The Reapers Are the Angels, a sleeper by
Alden Bell that won the Alex Award (given to a book written for an adult
audience but that has teen appeal).
Beautiful language abounds in this zombie apocalypse book whose
protagonist is an extremely strong 15 year old girl who has never known a world
without zombies.
Louise Erdrich (author of The Birchbark House among others)
is known for her stories of Native Americans. The Round House is a sad story told by 13 year old Joe Coutts who
is desperately searching for the truth about what happened the day his mother
was brutally assaulted in a sacred building on the reservation where he and his
family live. Atmospheric and beautifully written, this story will stay with you
for a long time.
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