So until I can read children's books again at my usual speed and create more reviews, you'll just have to settle for some great suggestions.
Your Spectacular Six Week Reading List (Teen Edition)
1. Okay For Now by Gary Schmidt.
Doug Swieteck is stuck in a dismal town with no friends and a miserable family. His peers think he's a chump, his teachers think he's a thug, and everyone else judges him based on his cad of a brother. The way Doug sees it, he's got nothing going for him...until he meets Lil Spicer, an unanticipated force propelling him to find something he cares about. Throughout the story, Doug is pulled between his passion for drawing birds and living an apathetic existence, between finding happiness and giving up. The deeply embedded tension is what I like best in this coming of age story as it's a remarkably realistic take on the complications of growing up. Very compelling and nearly impossible to put down.
2. The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins.
I really can't say it enough. Read this book! I don't know how many times I've tried to explain the premise of the story only to feel as if my words fall flat. I simply can't do it justice - it's that good. In an annual deathly lottery, the lives of 12 children are placed in the hands of the Hunger Games, a ruthless and gruesome fight for survival in a meticulously manipulated arena. This year, it's Katniss's turn and she's not going down easy.

3. The Red Pyramid by Rick Riordan.
Carter and Sadie Kane thought they saw it all when their dad blew up the British Museum, but that's before they realized that the Egyptian gods were walking among them. Besides, it really didn't help that their dad accidentally released Set, an evil god determined to increase his own power and unleash chaos across the globe. The best part of the book is that it's formatted like an audio recording as Carter and Sadie, much to the reader's amusement, bicker constantly while telling their story. Very addicting. I admit, I may have been inclined to read up a little on Egyptian deities...but for the juicy stuff, you really should consult the Kanes.
4. The Book Thief by Markus ZusakTold from the perspective of Death, a witness to the horrors of Nazi Germany, comes the tale of a foster child in the outskirts of Munich. Liesel Meminger lives with a patient, kind-eyed accordionist who teaches her how to read and his sour wife who loads her up with laundry deliveries and calls her a saumensch every chance she gets. As Liesel gets acclimated to the Hubermanns' way of living, three things change her life. First she befriends Rudy Steiner, the boy next door and her partner in crime. Then she befriends Max, a jew hiding in her basement under the stairs. In the midst of this, she steals books and develops an unquenchable thirst for words. Zusak's storytelling is irresistibly poignant. Be prepared with a box of tissues for some heart-wrenching moments!
PLUS...
5. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J.K. Rowling. The movie is coming out. Harry Potter is amazing. What are you waiting for?!






