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Dystopian Matched by Ally Condie
Descendants novels if she likes the movies. |
| Kasie West author |
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There's a bunch of YA that she'd like by Rainbow Rowell, maybe start with Eleanor and Park?
Or the School of Good and Evil. |
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Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants, The Fault in Our Stars (and other John Green books), The Princess Diaries series.
But at this age kids should be venturing beyond YA and reading widely. Hemingway, Austen, Tolstoy are all pretty accessible and enjoyable. If she's a less advanced reader, Little Women and Anne of Green Gables are also great. |
What would one read after Keeper of the Lost Cities? My daughter had read the series twice through in succession. |
It's The War That Saved My Life, and the sequel is The Wat I Finally Won. Definitely a book that has turned non-readers into readers!!! Also highly loved by 6th and 7th graders by the same author is Fighting Words. It's set in the present time and takes on very serious issues. Girls pass it to each other. Also totally un-put-down-able: Alone by Megan Freeman The Canyon's Edge by Dusti Bowling The newest Dusti Bowling, Across the Desert, is also gaining popularity The Flight of the Puffin |
You're joking. My 11 year old boy read Heartstopper with me this year and it's completely appropriate for 12-13. |
My 12 year old DD loves these books. |
Agree with this (though I could only bring myself to read the "peace" parts of War and Peace at age 12, the war parts were incredibly boring). Non-YA Lovely War (yes it's historical and has Greek gods in WWII France, but it's not hitting you over the head with the history and you don't really have to know the mythology to get into it) Try Agatha Christie if she might be into mysteries. YA Gary Schmid books like The Wednesday Wars, Okay for Now, and Just Like That Meet the Austins series The Mother-Daughter Book Club The Westing Game The Inheritance Games series |