By: Ashley Wolff
Children and their teacher share the names for their lively and loved grandparents in two books. Names for grandparents from different countries are noted on endpapers.
Young boy sitting with his pet
By: Soyoung Pak
Illustrated by:

Juno can barely wait to open the letter that has arrived from his grandmother in Seoul, but he needs his parents to read it since it's written in Korean! Finally he decides he can wait no longer and he finds inside a leaf and a photo of a cat.

By: Patricia Reilly Giff
Sam is almost 11 when he discovers a locked box in the attic above his grandfather Mack's room, and a piece of paper that says he was kidnapped. There are lots of other words, but Sam has always had trouble reading.
By: Diane Lee Wilson

From the day a horse stepped on her tiny foot and crippled her, Oyuna's life has been intertwined with these animals.

By: Kelly Bingham
For older, horror-loving teens: a blank-verse horror tale about werewolves in Los Angeles.
By: Jen Bryant
This slight novel tells of near 13-year-old Georgia, still grieving the loss of her mother six years before. An anonymous benefactor gives her a museum membership, hoping that her love of art will be the cure for her sadness.
By: Helen Frost
At-risk teenagers congregate at a safe house, and we gradually learn what brought each of them there—an unplanned pregnancy, harassment about sexual orientation, and an unloving foster parent.
Blurry lights in the city
By: Juan Felipe Herrera

Mexican-American poet Herrera wrote one of the first novels in verse for the teen audience. Sixteen-year old Cesar is the son of migrant workers, and he shares his coming-of-age experiences.

By: Ellen Hopkins
Hopkins has become the leading author of novels in verse, mainly due to her gritty, unflinching subject matter. Crank, her first novel, deals with Kristina/Bree and her addiction to crystal meth.

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