Monday, April 30, 2018

Subject to Change by Karen Nesbitt

Subject to ChangeSubject to Change by Karen Nesbitt
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book just really shook me to the core- Declan is this 15 year old living in Quebec with many, many adverse things going on in his life...and he is just so tired. Declan is not a good student, skips detentions a lot, hates his older brother, suffers silently about his family's dysfunction since his parent's divorce. Declan does have a job at an ice skating rink to help his mom out with bills, his angry, angry older brother bullies him and asks for money, his mom (after the divorce) has a job in an animal testing lab that is awful and she really does not share much with Declan, but he is the only one staying in school. After being pulled into the principal's office for an infraction that could get him in a lot of trouble; the principal offers him a way out- being tutored in order to keep his grades up and graduate. He would be the first in his family, and even though he thinks Leah is Little Miss Perfect; Declan does begin to hand in assignments, study, and hope/wish he can be a better student. What really broke my heart was what his family did to him at the time of the split and then the divorce. No one spoke to him about what really happened so he really missed his father (for 5 years his father stays away) and the whole family disintegrates. He is really struggling with so many things but feels he can't talk about anything. Debut author, Karen Nesbitt did a great job of showing a struggling teen with a barely coping family- I rooted for Declan to ask for help and hoped he would not suffer anymore. Nesbitt did a great job with all the characters in the book- they were all kinds of teens (his best friends, his brother and his loser friends, Leah and his needy ex), adults that cared (principal, guidance counselor, Leah's grandmother, when he finally comes on the scene- his father!)Teens and reluctant readers will love this authentic book --highly recommended!


View all my reviews

Leah on the Offbeat (Creekwood #2) by Becky Albertalli

Leah on the Offbeat (Creekwood, #2)Leah on the Offbeat by Becky Albertalli
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I listened to Shannon Purser's spot on narration of Becky Albertalli's awesome book about Leah, who is a drummer in a band) but we never actually see her in concert or really practicing- she is much better at pencil sketches, and they are on her blog, on her bedroom walls and really, really good! Leah has a great, close group of friends, she speaks her mind and is kind of gruff, she has come out to her mom that she is bisexual (but none of her friends know) and she is looking forward to going to college. As her year progresses Leah has a guy in their group asking her to prom (and really likes her, according to their friends) but Leah just maybe liking someone she crushed on a year ago...where will this take Leah? Albertalli has written a very relatable teen book dealing with LGBTQ issues, social class, single parents, race and teens will gobble Leah (Simon and Bram- love them!!!) and her drama and root for her---to put her heart out there, no matter what! Highly recommended!

View all my reviews

Friday, April 27, 2018

Emergency Contact by Mary H.K. Choi

Emergency ContactEmergency Contact by Mary H.K. Choi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Totally awesome book! I would love to see this as a duology, there is so much more I want to know about Penny and Sam's journey and romance!!! Debut author, Mary H.K. Choi uses texts between 2 awkward characters as a way of forging a friendship. Penny is new to college and has a roommate who is rich, kind, has an annoying best friend who is selfish, and also an uncle, Sam, who works in a coffee house on campus. Penny and Sam have different kinds of issues, but they both seem to be in sync - for example, the first time they meet - they are both wearing the same shoes and black outfits!!! The college setting is great because the reader sees Penny in school, while Sam is struggling to stay in college. There are so many issues that were really effectively dealt with such as mothers and daughters, sexual assault, friendship, race, families, and finally the emergence of love. I loved this book so much but I still want to know more about their journey. The ending was awesome (so many YA books are downers and that makes me so sad, for teens - they deserve to see happy endings are possible) and hopeful, yay for Sam and Penny! A must-read, enjoyable and one teens will be discussing (especially with the social media, texting aspect). A favorite for me!!!

View all my reviews

Sing Unburied Sing by Jesmyn Ward

Sing, Unburied, SingSing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Oh did I love this audiobook, with awesome narrators Kelvin Harrison, Jr., Chris Chalk, and Rutina Wesley. The saga, both past and present, of a Mississippi family which includes loving grandparents, awful parents, and their children who cling to one another, was tough to listen to especially when Leonie narrated her chapters. She was someone who never should have had children! She was a drug addict, selfish, mean to her children, and rebuffing her parents, who were truly good people. The description of the harshness of their lives, with uncles (brothers, fathers) dragged to jail (called Parchment) for no reason at all and toiling for years under the repressive eyes and whips of jailers, also gives us the character, Richie, who is too young to be in Parchment, and the object of beatings who dies and returns as a ghost, fills out this story of the south, racism, prejudice, and the ties that bind and sour families. Jojo's chapters and his love for his baby sister Kayla, were so sad, truthful, horrific in detail and sentiment, but thankfully, they are both resilient and loved by their grandparents. Highly recommended!

View all my reviews

Sunday, April 22, 2018

Gone Rogue (Wires and Nerve Volume 2) by Marissa Meyer

Gone Rogue (Wires and Nerve, #2)Gone Rogue by Marissa Meyer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I Love, Love, Love this series- there is action, thrills, suspense, brawls but best of all is the crew from the Lunar Chronicles that have become tight-knit friends! Cinder, Kai, Scarlet, Iko, Cress and Thorne, Winter and Jacin are all working together for peace between the Lunars and Earth while Alpha Lysander Steele and his rogue wolf-soldiers want to be returned to normal and if Cinder can't do it, Steele will end her. There was lots of emotion going on in this 2nd of the Wire and Nerve series, bring more on, I can't wait! I can't get enough of these friends and their action packed lives!

View all my reviews

Saturday, April 21, 2018

Honor Girl; A Graphic Memoir by Maggie Thrash

Honor Girl: A Graphic MemoirHonor Girl: A Graphic Memoir by Maggie Thrash
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I listened to this graphic memoir as part of the 2018 HUB Reading Challenge and although I loved the story, the audiobook was not a good way to read this story. I have put in an order for the book at the local public library to get the graphic novel and read it. I found the characters very confusing because they did not mention names and since they are at a girls camp, everyone sounds the same. Maggie Thrash is a debut author and tells about her summer at a day camp she has gone to her whole life and how she begins to have feelings for a camp counselor.

View all my reviews

Flying Lessons by Ellen Oh

Flying Lessons & Other StoriesFlying Lessons & Other Stories by Ellen Oh
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I listened to Flying Lessons, a short story compilation about growing up diverse. I loved every story, they were so different; were middle school and high school stories, from awesome authors and some were even read by those authors (like Kwame Alexander and Meg Medina). Ten authors weave stories of growing up, diversity, many cultures, with friends, family and laughs. Not to be missed; you will love Kwame Alexander, Matt de la Pena, Meg Medina, Soman Chainani, Tim Federle, Tim TYingle, Jacqueline Woodson, Walter Deam Myers, and Kelly J. Baptiste's tales which stress the importantce of diversity and its universality.

View all my reviews

Sweet Black Waves (Sweet Black Waves #1) by Kristina Perez

Sweet Black WavesSweet Black Waves by Kristina PĂ©rez
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Thank you to NetGalley and MacMillan Children’s Publishing Group and Imprint for the advance reader copy Sweet Black Waves by Kristina Perez in exchange for an honest review. Oh did I revel in the fantasy and magic of this world of kingdoms, kings, queens, lords, and ladies. Based on the star-crossed lovers tale of Tristan and Eseult, Branwen is the cousin, friend and hand-maid of Princess Essy and narrator of this first in a series. I can’t wait for the 2nd book in the series but found the characters of Branwen and Essy difficult to take many times. Essy is a spoiled princess but also very honest that she wants to marry for love (which the king and queen can’t possibly allow) during a time when warring countries need a marriage guranteeing peace. Branwen is Essy’s level-headed cousin who is so consumed with what her country wants that she pushes down her own desires, hides her many lies from those she loves, and sees the course of history being changed (due to something she did). Branwen finds Tristan, half-dead in the sea and rescues him and as she falls for him, she realizes he is their enemy from Kernyv ( killed her parents) but an more importantly an accord between Iveriu and Kernyv will bring peace between their countries. The only true, strong, capable character is Tristan, who remains a force, genuine in his love for Branwen and his power to win Essy’s hand for King Marc, his relative. It is once Branwen uses magic to save Tristan that changes her to an ice queen like the Queen (which was disconcerting and alarming). Any happiness Branwen wants is second to what her country needs. Debut author, Perez is a fantastic world builder with beauty, desire, and danger galore. The ending was devastating, but I will be clamoring for the 2nd in the series!

View all my reviews

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Rescue & Jessica: ALIfe-Changing Friendship by Jessican Kensky and Patrick Downs Illustrated by Scott Magoon

Rescue and Jessica: A Life-Changing FriendshipRescue and Jessica: A Life-Changing Friendship by Jessica Kensky
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This children's picture book is for the young and the old- for everyone. Young Jessica has lost one of her legs and it is through a chance meeting she meets and learns about the service dog organization, NEADS, and applies for a service dog. The other great thing about this book is reading/seeing it through the service dog, Rescue's view. The Author's Note & Acknowledgments are important and the illustrator, Scott Magoon, wrote a post for the Nerdy Book Club on his use of symbolism in his art (https://nerdybookclub.wordpress.com/2...) An inspirational book about struggles and staying strong- as the title says - this book is about the life-changing friendship of Jessica and Rescue and it will change each reader too!

View all my reviews

Starfish by Akemi Dawn Bowman

StarfishStarfish by Akemi Dawn Bowman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book is just one example why I love the 2018 HUB Reading Challenge Challenge!!! This book is a Morris Award winner and one I might have missed but I loved it so much, I might have to read it again or listen to it- this is definitely a favorite. I read so many books and I am crushed by the horrors of violence, abuse, negativity, mean girls...but this debut author really knows how to write about the dysfunction that is Kiko's life (and teens will definitely relate) from an abusive mom, to a father who has a new family that has replaced Kiko's to remote brothers Kiko doesn't know how to talk to---this created the stifling isolation and socially awkwardness that is Kiko's life. Bowman's writing takes the reader into Kiko's head and heart and shows repeatedly how she is stunted by fear but Bowman also gives Kiko hope that she pins on her best friend, getting into art school, and then re-finding her childhood friend. I loved how her best friend tells her to grow lady balls in a note as she goes of to early admittance to college. This begins Kiko's challenging, growing self-awareness that she needs to depend on herself to change and grow... and by going out to California with Jamie to visit art schools, meeting famous painter who becomes her mentor, trying constantly to be STRONG, that the real Kiko begins to emerge. Some people have said that Jamie is too perfect but I think Bowman nailed it when she crafted him- when Kiko and Jamie were growing up (back then life was GOOD) they got each other, were best friends, and totally enjoyed each other. Now fast forward to running into him at a party---he is still the Jamie she knew and loved - but she is fractured and not the friend he remembered but like Adam rescues Julian in A List of Cages by Robin Roe, so Jamie rescues Kiko, but Kiko will complete the journey with her lady balls, while Jamie, always understanding her, will wait and understand. I loved this book so much!!!

View all my reviews

Sunday, April 15, 2018

Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi

Children of Blood and Bone (Legacy of OrĂŻsha, #1)Children of Blood and Bone by Tomi Adeyemi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Oh wow, what a thriller! I listened to this beauty of a book beautifully narrated by Bahni Turpin!!! I could not stop listening; the adventure, the magic, the horror of Zel and Zane's lives after their mother is killed by King Anan, and their race to bring back magic was thrilling, sickening, and pulse pounding. The world of Orisha is beautiful through Zelie's eyes but also stunningly sad and horrifically fearful as the diviners and maji are considered maggots and their magic died (King Anan killed all the maji and diviners) over 10 years ago. As princess Amari steals the scroll artifact and runs for her life; she runs into Zelie and asks for help. The stories and histories of both the royalty and Zelie and Zane was mesmerizing and beautiful. I was grief stricken by the violence throughout and rooted for Zelie but being chosen does not mean she is given an easy task at all. She is stubborn, honest and passionate, a great fighter, and not at all happy she has been tasked with the greatest task of all---constantly she is fearful and upset about the insurmountable odds thrown at her, Amari and Zane. I loved Tomi Adeyemi's world building, her rich characters, and her author notes at the end are so important to read---her book is a response to the violence in our world today. A must read, I can't wait for the second book; the cliffhanger left me with questions. Highly recommended.

View all my reviews

Saturday, April 14, 2018

Blood Water Paint by Joy McCullough

Blood Water PaintBlood Water Paint by Joy McCullough
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Joy McCullough's beautiful, devastating historical fiction novel in verse shows the life of Artemisia Gentileschi, guided by her mother's stories of strong women in the Bible, used by her father, raped by her teacher, all the while producing artwork that her father signed. The reader feels the highs and lows of Artemisia's life in Renaissance Italy as she toils in a dinghy room, mixing paints, drawing sketches for painting, and not feeling any love by her father, brothers and caretaker. She wants love, acknowledgment, and must, in the end, only count on the famous women of the Bible, to keep her strong as she tries to take back her life. Gripping, sensual, and breathtaking, highly recommended!!!

View all my reviews

Friday, April 13, 2018


https://www.slj.com/2018/03/books-media/read-woke-school-reading-challenge-makes-impact/
The Woke Book Challenge

Read Woke’ School Reading Challenge Makes an Impact


These are volatile times. Across the country, parents of color are having “the talk” with their kids about how to prevent the police from seeing them as a threat because of their skin color or how they dress. Families are being torn apart and deported. Each day on TV, we witness acts of social injustice. I come to school and talk about these events with my students, many of whom have opinions—but not much knowledge about their rights.
Every year I have a theme in my school library. In 2017, it was Harry Potter. In our current political and social climate, I knew that my students were hurting and needed something different this year. After coming across the Stay Woke edition of Essence magazine, I launched Read Woke at my library.
What is Read Woke? It’s a feeling. A form of education. A call to action, and our right as lifelong learners. It means arming yourself with knowledge to better protect your rights. Learning about others so you treat people with respect and dignity, no matter their religion, race, creed, or color.
I concluded that a Woke Book must:
• Challenge a social norm
• Give voice to the voiceless
• Provide information about a group that has been disenfranchised
• Seek to challenge the status quo
• Have a protagonist from an underrepresented or oppressed group
We started Read Woke in September. The students were asking questions in response to the many cases of unarmed black boys and men being shot by police officers. They wanted answers. They were angry. They staged a walkout, but that did nothing to appease their rage.
My school is more than 70 percent Latino. The day DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) was repealed, my students were crying and afraid. That made my movement even more relevant.
Students who read four recommended books from my Read Woke list can win a T-shirt, a free book, and post a photo on our Instagram. They may review titles, too. I also asked teachers to adopt Woke Books—they read them and use trivia questions to quiz the students on their knowledge of the titles.
Our most popular books are Dear Martin, I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter, The Book of Unknown Americans, and The Hate U Give. They all have characters who look like my students and face issues plaguing our society. There’s a waiting list for these titles, and our circulation has increased from 2,340 to 2,817. Faculty circulation shot up by almost 50 percent!
“Before this, I had never read an entire book,” one student commented. “I will keep reading woke books.”
Students are recommending books and engaging in serious dialogue.
I bought the books using my county-allocated funds. A student-run school T-shirt lab created the shirts in exchange for publicity.
When I started Read Woke, I asked myself how I could make an impact. A quote from The Librarian of Auschwitz exemplifies my mission: “The library has now become her first-aid kit, and she’s going to give the children a little of the medicine that helped her recover her smile when she thought she’d lost it forever.”
Let the healing begin.
Woke books
All American Boys by Jason Reynolds and Brenden Kiely
Dear Martin by Nic Stone
Girl Mans Up by M-E Girard
The Hate You Give by Angie Thomas
Hunger by Roxane Gay
I am Malala :The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban by Malala Yousafzai

Juliet Takes a Breath by Gabby Rivera
The Librarian of Auschwitz by Antonio Iturbe
Sugar by Deirdre Riordan Hall
The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander 
What’s on your Woke Books list? Let us know in the comments.

Cicely Lewis is a small-town girl from Mississippi with a passion for promoting literacy in nontraditional ways in her media center at Meadowcreek High School in Norcross, GA. Currently, she’s featured on the cover of the 2017 “The Power of Librarians” calendar.

The Way You Make Me Feel by Maureen Goo

The Way You Make Me FeelThe Way You Make Me Feel by Maurene Goo
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan Children’s Publishing Group and Farrar, Straus and Giroux (BYR) for the advance reader copy The Way You Make Me Feel by Maureen Goo in exchange for an honest review. What a great romance! Korean and Brazilian born, Clara has been raised by her dad, Adrian, since her mother is an online “influencer” (her parents never married) who travels ALL the time. Clara has a great life but it is one she controls; she loves pranks, doesn’t really take anything serious (except enemy, Rose Carver), has two guys for best friends and scathingly speaks her mind all the time. But Clara has some issues and they all come to call at the junior prom, where her prank goes all kinds of wrong; there is fake blood, a fire starts and Clara and Rose verbally and physically duke it out. What results is a summer where Clara must work with Rose on her father’s food truck, KoBra. Goo’s writing is funny, feel good, and honest about finding your true self. Clara was annoying and harsh, but she steps up, surprising herself and many others. What I really enjoyed were the great characters, funny moments, Clara’s love story with L.A., her passion for Korean and Brazilian food---sounded so delicious, I was salivating, and her redemption at the end. Clara and Hamlet’s relationship was awesome because she lets the reader know how not her type he is, but because Hamlet is so great, kind, thoughtful and exciting, she is quickly and thoroughly into him. Rose and Clara as enemies and then friends was so so nice to see as well as her father who might just be the best dad in the world. This book will be a hit with teens!

View all my reviews

Saturday, April 7, 2018

A Gentleman's Guide To Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee

The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue (Guide, #1)The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I listened to this amazing audiobook narrated by Christian Coulson as part of the 2018 HUB Reading Challenge and this book also won Best Fiction & Stonewall awards! Oh did I love this book!!! Monty, Percy, and Felicity were the best and strong protagonists in this 18th century adventure that shines a light on sexism (poor Felicity) racism (Percy and the pirates) and violence and abuse (toward Monty). Monty can't wait to tour Europe for a year - lots of drinking, women and men and the time to think over and over again how much he loves his best friend, Percy. Having grown-up with each other they have spent all of their time together. But as Monty gets into trouble- kicked out of Eaton- his father makes sure this will not be their FUN TOUR and sends a guide along to babysit them and make them endure all the culture and none of the fun. I loved seeing spoiled, brash, self-centered Monty step up- he really does take risks for others, while I did not like to see him so thoroughly drunk all the time because then he would do and say things that got them all into trouble. But when Monty learns Percy has kept a secret from him, he does not give up in trying to keep Percy with him, trying to save him, and also in the process becoming a new, improved Monty. I loved his optimism and joy of life and his can do spirit. A roaring great read/audiobook. I am so looking forward to the next book in the series about Felicity!!!

View all my reviews

Dear Martin by Nic Stone

Dear MartinDear Martin by Nic Stone
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Thank you to NetGalley and Random House Children’s and Crown Books for Young Readers, for the ARC, Dear Martin by Nic Stone. Debut author, Nic Stone, has crafted a realistic fiction and urban fiction novel all teens will be clamoring to read. With the ripped from the headlines news of teens being shot by police and police violence, Stone has written a powerful, hard hitting novel I could not put down. I ached for Justyce, a black teen in a mostly white prep school who is unjustly judged by a white cop; roughed up and handcuffed, as he tries to help his drunk, white girlfriend. The title, Dear Martin, comes from the letters Justyce writes to Dr. King as a project to himself, as he tries to emulate King’s style and words to sort through racism, oppression, and injustice he encounters. Justyce’s problems intensify as he becomes more and more embroiled in incidents that involve him, his school friends, and his neighborhood acquaintances. As Martin leans on friends, his debate teacher, and debate partner (love interest), he becomes more and more disillusioned. Stone’s writing, her characters, and plot were all powerful reminders that there is still a great divide in our world and she raises many valid questions about problems our society needs to solve. Justyce’s world and struggle brings many needed diverse voices and issues to all readers. Today’s teens care about the heated, frustrating questions and concerns Nic Stone tackles in her haunting debut novel. Highly recommended!

Review of AudioBook
I listened to this wrenching book for the #2jennsbookclub twitter chat to take place Thursday, April 12 at 8PM EST and Dion Graham's narration of the book, plot and character's was just authentic, moving, and once again plunged me to awful depths with Justyce's confusion and despair after he is arrested. Nic Stone has penned a book ALL must read- there is still so much that needs to be done - African American teens must not be profiled, violated, assaulted and killed...they deserve much better.

View all my reviews

Pashmina by Nidhi Chanani

PashminaPashmina by Nidhi Chanani
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I read this graphic novel filled with adventure as part of The HUB 2018 Reading Challenge and oh did I love it. Priyanka “Pri” Das is an Indian American teen who lives with her mother in California and knows nothing at all about her father or India, where her mother lived. Author Chanani's black, blue and white illustrations depict California while the mysterious, magic pashmina is brightly colored takes Pri to an India that is romanticized, while a talking elephant and bird show her the country's beauty. As Pri demands to know more about her mother, her father and India- a long lost aunt (her mom's sister) is newly pregnant and asks for Pri's help. I learned how restrictive women's lives were in India (can't even drive) and was rewarded with Pri's new outlook when she returns and really talks to her mother. For Pri's authentic search for identity this graphic novel is a must read!!!

View all my reviews

A Girl Like That by Tanaz Bhathena

A Girl Like ThatA Girl Like That by Tanaz Bhathena
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I read this book for a twitter chat book club, #yabookchat which will be discussed Sunday 4/8 at 9PM EST. This book devastated me, Zarin and Porus' life in Saudi Arabia, especially Jeddah was hell. Zarin is a strong female character (did I like her???, not really, but after they way she is treated by everyone, except Porus I saw her as a totally marginalized teen) who lives in a sexist, racist, judgmental world (school and home) that does not allow any freedom for teens in most aspects of life. The only character I truly loved and felt for was Porus. He is kind, has been raised right with a gentle father he desperately loves (and loses) and a revered mother. All of his goodness does unfortunately does not work for the love he has for Zarin. Time and time again, she is rude to him, with her mean, angry words she tries to push him away - she smokes, skips school and has a reputation (unearned) with guys resulting in her constantly being bullied by the girls in her school. She suffers physical abuse at her aunt's hands her whole life and her uncle turns a blind eye and eventually turns against Zarin when she will not tell anyone about the drugging and sexual violence by a classmate. There was no character (except Porus) that had any redeeming qualities, the religious police did not allow any normal teen relationships and society judged Zarin based on gossip, lies, and her own secrecy. I ached for this teen and when I finished the book, in the Author Note, Tanaz Bhathena summed up the awful life that existed for teens in Saudi Arabia in 2014, she revisits her own past over and over to write the book "My own story is different from Zarin's and Mishal's, Yet it does not make their stories any less true, not does it diminish the reality of living in a world that still defines girls in various ways without letting them define themselves. This book is a love letter to them all."
A must read but a devastating one nonetheless.

View all my reviews

Top 10 Picture Books for Secondary Students by Brett Vogelsinger (Nerdy Book Club)

https://nerdybookclub.wordpress.com/2018/04/07/top-ten-picture-books-for-secondary-students-by-brett-vogelsinger/#comment-74006

Top Ten Picture Books for Secondary Students by Brett Vogelsinger




Today’s Top Ten list shies away from graphic novels, as book lists on this topic have already appeared on this blog.  Instead, it explores wordless picture books, creativity manuals, engineering or nature explorations, and books that feature primarily photography. I call this shelf in my ninth-grade classroom library “Illustration, Photography, and Design.”


100 Diagrams That Changed the World by Scott Christianson

From the diagram for the first indoor toilet to the original Steve Jobs sketch of an iPod, this book shares the diagrams and sketches that changed human experience.  Each diagram has just a page of text to explain its origins and significance, making this an ideal flip-through book for your library but equally valuable as a read-through book for your budding engineers.  Some of my young male readers who claim to “hate reading” find a home in this book.




Show Me How: 500 Things You Should Know by Derek Fagerstrom, Lauren Smith, and the Show Me Team

This is basically WikiHow in a book.  Learn how to stretch before a workout, survive a shipwreck, properly mince ginger, or master simple juggling all with straightforward pictures and minimal text.  Students enjoy the randomness of this book, but at its heart, this book reminds all of us that no matter how experienced we think we are in life, there is always more to learn.  (One word of caution: the sections on “Drink” and “Love” have some PG-13 content, so I advise previewing this book to make sure it is appropriate for the students you teach.)


The Arrival by Shaun Tan

This book, the closest on the list to a graphic novel, contains only words and tells the story of an immigrant arriving in a new land.  The surrealist images and absence of words makes this book especially open to interpretation, and students who sign it out from my classroom library are always impressed with the level of challenge this wordless storytelling provides.  In the same way Chris Van Allsburg’s picture books challenge elementary students and push the bounds of reality to tell us something about ourselves, Shaun Tan’s masterpiece will engage and challenge teenagers.


The Shape of Ideas by Grant Snider

Grant Snider’s memorable comics about creativity, taken from his blog, are published here in book form.  Each comic explores one of the joys or frustrations of the creative process with both color and candor that students will enjoy.  There is a general smiling tone to this book, something students need in dark times.  Some of the comics are highly poetic, like the one below, which I have used as a Poem of the Day in my classroom.




How to Be An Explorer of the World: Portable Life Museum by Keri Smith

This book is by Keri Smith, a creativity guru of Wreck This Journal fame.  This book encourages explorative messiness with headings such as “The Shapes of Stains and Splotches” and “Found Writing Utensils.”   The premise of the book is that with the right habits of mind and skills of perception, we can turn the world around us on any given day into a museum.  The black-and-white photography, handwritten fonts, and clever visual arrangements will inspire any young reader to do just that.

The Elements: A Visual Exploration of Every Known Atom in the Universe by Theodore Gray, photographs by Theodore Gray and Nick Mann

When high school students study chemistry, they confront the periodic table of elements in the front of the classroom on a daily basis.  This book devotes two pages to each element on the periodic table, first to show what it looks like in its raw form and then to to briefly explain and show in photography how this element impacts our daily lives.  It is an excellent “flip through” book in my classroom library, but also one that students sign out and dog-ear quickly. The visuals are magnetic.


Pool by JiHyeon Lee

This wordless picture book tells the story of a boy in a crowded pool who makes a surprising discovery beneath the surface, and it works well to illustrate for secondary students how a story can operate on more than one level. In this previous post, I elaborate on how this book can be used to prompt literary discussion in English class, but even on their own, students enjoy reading it.  In a brief conference, I might ask, “How might we read this story symbolically instead of literally?” and see what they suggest.


Trees Close Up by Nancy Ross Hugo and photographs by Robert Llewellyn

This book is a collection of what the author calls “intimate tree details such as maturing acorns, unfurling beech leaves, and emerging walnut flowers.”  It encourages a “close reading” of the natural world around us, a skill parallel to the kind of detailed attention we want students to give to texts. Much like a museum, spectacular, nuanced visuals pull the reader into captions and text panels that encourage looking at nature beyond a casual glance. When students read this book in class, I invariably hear, “Hey look at this!” as they want to share what they observe and learn.


Go — A Kidd’s Guide to Graphic Design by Chip Kidd

Chip Kidd, the designer of iconic images such as the original Jurassic Park book cover, has crafted a visually engaging introductions to graphic design for young people, complete with ten design projects at the end of the book.  Readers will learn about scale, color theory, pattern, and juxtaposition on pages that are as visually striking as they are informative.  The book fosters a sense of fun and possibility, and the “how-to” nature of the text will inspire them to try new designs in their sketchbooks or writer’s notebooks.


Things Come Apart: A Teardown For Modern Living by Todd McLellan

Another book for the engineers and tinkerers in your class, this book disassembles common household objects and photographs their artistically arranged parts.  It also includes essays on the purpose and art of taking objects apart and what can be gained by it.  An engaging book talk for this book might include sharing one of the photographs on the screen to see whether students can guess what object has been dissected for the photograph.

Ultimately, books that feature primarily pictures may help a dormant reader reclaim a sense of wonder in their reading that they once had as a younger child when books were all about the illustration.  Or it may compel them to read more text to explain the pictures.  It may even encourage them to ask for a related book that is more text-heavy.  Try these books to expand the visual rigor and intellectual curiosity available in your classroom library.

Brett Vogelsinger teaches ninth-grade English at Holicong Middle School in Bucks County, PA.  He is the adviser of Sevenatenine, the school literary magazine, and publishes Go Poems, an annual event blog to help teachers use daily poetry during National Poetry Month.