Here’s a unique combination of alphabet book and poetry introduction. Harley provides readers with 26 poems and illustrations about tiny creatures, from ants to zebra butterflies. Each poem illustrates a different poetic form or technique, from alliteration to zejel, with forms defined at the bottom of each page. Additional poetic forms can be found in Harley’s companion book, Fly With Poetry (Boyds Mills, 2000).
Grade: 7
All books suitable for children in 7th grade.
Lincoln: A Photobiography
Today, Lincoln is considered one of the greatest leaders in American history. Yet, as Russell Freedman writes in his Newbery Medal-winning history, during the Civil War, Lincoln “was the most unpopular president the nation had ever known.” Through quotes, photographs, and excerpts from speeches, students will learn about Lincoln’s boyhood, marriage, professional life, and presidency. And they’ll also discover what it takes to be a true leader.
Lives of the Presidents: Fame, Shame (and What the Neighbors Thought)
This playful look at the presidents examines their hairstyles, diets, fears, sleep patterns, and attitudes from the perspective of their families and neighbors.
Love That Dog
Written as a series of free-verse poetic journal entries, this book features an encouraging teacher, a child’s blossoming love of poetry, and the loss of a dear pet. At first, Jack is reluctant to write poetry, “because boys don’t write poetry. Girls do.” As his teacher introduces works by various poets, including William Carlos Williams, Robert Frost, and Walter Dean Myers, Jack wonders about what the poems mean. Why does so much depend upon a red wheelbarrow and some white chickens? If the guy is in the snowy wood, why doesn’t he just keep going if he has so many miles to go before he sleeps? (The seven poems Jack mentions in his journals are printed in the back of the book.) But as Jack emulates the styles of these famous poets, he soon finds his own voice and a growing appreciation of poetry.
Lyddie
At the start of this novel, set in the 1840s, Lyddie Worthen’s father abandons the family in search of work. Fourteen-year-old Lyddie cares for her family until her mother gives her away as a servant in order to settle a debt. The kindness of her Quaker neighbors, a friend’s loan of five silver dollars, and a generously repaid debt from a runaway slave, help Lyddie to cling to her dream of saving her family’s farm. After years of toiling in a sewing mill in Lowell, Massachusetts, Lyddie earns enough to save the farm, but uses the money to save her siblings from a fate similar to her own. Just as the mill’s machinery passes thread from one loom to the next, the characters in the story pass gifts — tangible and intangible — to one another. This empowering novel about hardship, determination, giving, and love shows readers that the most beautiful aspect of humans is the humanity that lies within us.
Math Doesn’t Suck: How to Survive Middle-School Math Without Losing Your Mind or Breaking a Nail
As the math education crisis in this country continues to make headlines, research continues to prove that it is in middle school when math scores begin to drop-especially for girls-in large part due to the relentless social conditioning that tells girls they “can’t do” math, and that math is “uncool.” Young girls today need strong female role models to embrace the idea that it’s okay to be smart-in fact, it’s sexy to be smart!
It’s Danica McKellar’s mission to be this role model, and demonstrate on a large scale that math doesn’t suck. In this fun and accessible guide, McKellar-dubbed a “math superstar” by The New York Times-gives girls and their parents the tools they need to master the math concepts that confuse middle-schoolers most, including fractions, percentages, pre-algebra, and more. The book features hip, real-world examples, step-by-step instruction, and engaging stories of Danica’s own childhood struggles in math (and stardom). In addition, borrowing from the style of today’s teen magazines, it even includes a Math Horoscope section, Math Personality Quizzes, and Real-Life Testimonials-ultimately revealing why math is easier and cooler than readers think.
Maximum Ride: Saving the World and Other Extreme Sports
There’s one last chance to save the world in MAXIMUM RIDE: SAVING THE WORLD AND OTHER EXTREME SPORTS, the closing chapter of James Patterson’s thrilling trilogy. The time has arrived for Max and her winged “flock” to face their ultimate enemy and discover their original purpose: to defeat the takeover of “Re-evolution”–a sinister experiment to re-engineer a select population into a scientifically superior master race…and to terminate the rest. Max, Fang, Iggy, Nudge, Gasman, and Angel have always worked together to defeat the forces working against them–but can they save the world when they are torn apart, living in hiding and captivity, halfway across the globe from one another?
Maximum Ride: The Final Warning
Fourteen-year-old Maximum Ride and the other members of “Flock”–Fang, Iggy, Nudge, Gasman and Angel–are just like ordinary kids–only they have wings and can fly. It seems like a dream come true–except that they’re still being hunted by new threats at every turn.
This time, the US government wants to keep the Flock under observation, offering a safe haven and schooling in return. But after their incredible adventures in books 1-3, Max and Flock have grown to love freedom- -after all, haven’t grown-ups always found a way to ruin their lives? After escaping the control of the feds, they are surprised to find themselves allied with a group of environmental scientists who just might be trustworthy. Besides, what enemy could find them in one of the remotest locations on earth–Antarctica–on an expedition studying the effects of global warming up close?
There is one: The Uber-Director–literally, brains on a stick–an evil being who has developed mechanical soldiers far more frightening than Erasers. Their quest? To retrieve the Flock and sell them in a global auction for billions of dollars. Will the Uber-Director nab them before Max, Fang and the flock succumb to the dangers of the harsh Antarctic wilderness? Kids, parents and educators tuned into the issue of global warming will find this latest episode of the blockbuster Maximum Ride series not only a particularly riveting adventure beyond their wildest dreams, but also a motivating cautionary tale about a real-life peril that may affect their ownfuture.








