Anonymous wrote:Good girls guide to murder
The naturals
False Prince
A wrinkle in time
Maze runner, hunger games, divergent series
Let her see you reading a physical book, or out loud an audiobook.
Is her school supportive? Our school is amazing for 6th and 7th grade and it catches them at an important time. Provides a non-graded reading period all year. Best thing.
If school is stealing all her free time, off load one honors course. I think it’d be better for less school pressure + reading as a pasttime than to lose a love of reading because there is no time.
That sounds amazing... but no, her school does not do this, OP here. And I do think that to some extent, her schoolwork
did edge out her reading, since homework consumes way too much time for DD, like many ADHD kids. And I agree that this is not necessarily the balance I would strike were it up to me--though as I am currently posting on an online "Book Club," my biases are probably clear

...
I have been pleased though that at least school has been assigning a lot of full books (which sadly is not always the case in public middle school). One of those was Hunger Games, and DD was only meh about that--which kind of made me mildly despair since
surely that should have been at least a quick read...
She did like Good Girls Guide to Murder--perhaps the Last Thing He Told Me would work, since I agree Gone Girl may be a bit much?
Hadn't heard of Maze Runner which I may try as well (and if nothing else, my 12 yo DS may like (?), who I've managed to keep on the reading train much better!)