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plot- and character-driven stories for a 12 yr old girl
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Has she read Tuck Everlasting? It may very well fall below her reading level, but I myself still find it to be a rather enjoyable read. The characters are interesting and the story, while a little fantastic, does not venture into fantasy.


Stacy - I have The Hunger Games on the shelf - my only concern there is the dystopian element, but then again, I am trying to give her some variety as I'm not sure what's really grabbing her right now.
Is there a Wilbur A. Smith that you'd recommend to start?
Sparrow, TKAM is a stroke of genius. Thanks!!!

The Education of Little Tree
The Book Thief
The Spellman Files
Big Stone Gap
The Grass Dancer

She loved the Anne Rice Interview with a Vampire series when she was younger, but that might have been an anomaly.

Sparrow, yeah - I'm definitely going to give her Catcher in the Rye (although I realize I'm going heavy on stuff she is going to probably "have" to read - still, they're classics for a reason, right?). Breakfast at Tiffany's is an interesting choice. Lemme think about that.
Jane Eyre was the single-most important book I read as an early teen - I'm almost afraid to give it to her, lest she not love it as I do.
Also, this kid is not really angst-ridden or capital-R romantic. She's more adventure oriented. She loves horseback riding, staying fit, she plays the piano, her fave subjects are math/science.
I'm also trying to think of biographies that might grab her -- like Amelia Earhardt or Marie Curie or something. Adventurous, trailblazing, iconic female role models. Not that disappearing into thin air or dying of radiation poisoning is all that inspirational - you know, what happened BEFORE that. :-p

Yeah, I'm with you on not recommending favorites. It's tough. I always think of Jane Eyre as more of an adventure than a romance, but maybe you were more generally talking about her tastes.

Johnny Tremain
is a book "for boys" but it's a historical novel about the american revolution, I loved it as a kid.
Go Ask Alice
again there is adult content but she might like it.
I second to kill a mockingbird (I see it on the shelf) and maybe some of the shorter steinbeck Of Mice and Men
The other thing she might like (I did as a kid) are the classic novels that were written for children like Hans Brinker.
How To Steal A Car
is one of the better real life YA I've read recently.

But ... I am freakin' appalled at the dearth of selection. This is a major bookstore, albeit a chain, in a major Canadian city. I was standing there absolutely spitting with fury in the "teen" section.
Row after row; shelf after shelf; secton after section of Twilight and Twilight rip-offs. I am talking about no less than 75% of the entire teen section being vampiric.
No offense to anyone here who loves Twilight - but I mean REALLY?!? Really, this is all there is for teen girls? (Never mind teen boys - you are *completely* out of luck.) THIS is the extent of choice there is to open up young girls' minds to the joys of reading!?!
REALLY???!!!!??????!!!!!
I am FROTHINGLY angry. I had a true moment of batshit-crazy-lady-muttering-and-swearing-outloud as I searched HIGH AND FREAKIN' LOW for some of the books - classics - on my list.
And I can't even blame the store - because they are book marketers and they are merely selling what people want.
REALLY?!?!?!?!?!?! THIS IS WHAT PEOPLE WANT? This is ALL people want?!?
I managed to FINALLY find The Book Thief and The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian in the teen section - right beside one another (A and Z - huh???) Shelved way away in the far corner, on the top shelf, not in any kind of alphabetical order and not featured in any way. It was totally accidental that I found them, and only because I knew what I was looking for. Teens would never find these two books if they even made it that far into the store, what with being weak and unable to raise their heads after having clawed their way through the sparkling blood-suckers.
To Kill A Mockingbird and Jane Eyre were nowhere to be found in the teen section - sob!! - I found TKAM on an end display in the so-called 'adult' section; I'm going to give her my copy of JE.
I am so disheartened, but also I am personally going to see that this child knows about way more of what's out there than flippin' Chapters would have her know.

I hope she likes Jane Eyre!! It is so nice of you to take the risk with that!

If it's Chapters' merchandising to blame here, I'll be even more pissed and might consider ditching them entirely solely because of this. It would be the final straw - I frequently come up short on books I want to read, but it's pretty much the only game in town. There are so few independent booksellers left. :-(



I also loved James Herriot's four-book set All Creatures Great and Small and all the horse books by Marguerite Henry, especially Justin Morgan Had a Horse and King of the Wind because I had the joy of learning about horses and history.


But ... I am freakin' appalled at the dearth of selection. This is a major ..."
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian- YES!

http://www.breitlinks.com/my_libmedia...


If it's Chapters' merchandising to blame here, I'll be even more pissed and mi..."
As a 100% Canadian store, Chapters should have the YA books that received awards from the Canadian Library Association. Here's a link to the list of award winners.
Canadian Library Association YA Awards
Perhaps you'll find something suitable for her on that list, and if Chapters doesn't have it you really have a right to complain about it. You might have better luck with Amazon.ca . I just got a very interesting Canadian book from them that wasn't available from other sources.


Miriam, that one looks particularly good - not sure if a bit young for her, but we`ll see.
Out of everything I gave her, she has gravitated to The Book Thief. I`ve since found out she hasn`t read The Diary of Anne Frank, so that`s now on the list too.
This is a 2012 project, so keep those recs coming! :-)

I also liked The Earth Hums in B Flat.

I also liked The Earth Hums in B Flat."
hmmm have you ever noticed buying books for children is much more complicated than buying books for adults. I mean my sister is a total pain in the butt when I try to recommend her books she turns her nose up at everything.


You might also try these classics/ classic young adult + middle grade novels:










More recent young adult/middle grade:


And I haven't read War Horse, but it's gotten great reviews and since she likes horses...



she's still finishing The Help ... and I can't bring myself to start it. At this rate, I have enough books to last her until she's 25! hah!

Here are a few of my daughters' (12 & 14) recent favs:
Greyhound-Piper
The Book Thief
A Complicated Kindness-Toews
The Girls-Lansen
Stargirl
Matched series
Hunger Games
Alice, I Think-Juby
The Red Tent
To Kill A Mockingbird
Jade Peony - Choy
Snow Flower and the Secret Fan
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Fahrenheit 451
Jim the Boy -Earley
Three Views of Crystal Water - Govier
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i just read one that is coming out in this country in september - it is already out in the UK, but it was just perfect and i wish it had been around when i was little:
Rooftoppers
it is a great story with a great female protag, and it is just gorgeously written. it is the perfect smart book for smart no-nonsense little girls. and me.
Rooftoppers
it is a great story with a great female protag, and it is just gorgeously written. it is the perfect smart book for smart no-nonsense little girls. and me.
Books mentioned in this topic
Rooftoppers (other topics)Bridge to Terabithia (other topics)
A Corner of the Universe (other topics)
The Dubious Salvation of Jack V.: A Novel (other topics)
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Katherine Paterson (other topics)Marguerite Henry (other topics)
Anne Rice (other topics)
J.D. Salinger (other topics)
Wilbur Smith (other topics)
She has recently completed a book report on The Outsiders and came to love it. She liked the fact that "there were lots of things happening" (which I take to mean - a compelling plot).
She is now reading The Help and loving it. She has mentioned that she's interested in biographies and in stories about real people, or those that take place in a real or historical setting. I'm imagining that means she is oriented to character-driven stories, and possibly historical fiction.
I've created a shelf with some ideas for her - I've promised her that I will read some of the same books as she is so that we can talk about them (neither of her parents are particularly avid readers).
(Good grief, this means I need to read The Help).
Any ideas to flesh out the choices I've got for her so far would be much appreciated!
Do you guys think that Middlesex might work for her? She's 12 going on 13, but I think a little naive, so not sure if that content might be too mature.