• Kate and the Horses

    Kate and the Horses

    Kate is used to being alone. When she’s welcomed into the fold by four-legged pals, will her new companions help her find her courage?

    Nine-year-old Kate Calloway’s one wish is to finally have a friend. Always struggling to find the right words, the socially awkward bookworm can’t forget the magical day years ago when a carriage horse spoke to her and made her feel special. So, when she unexpectedly sees him on a poster for summer camp, she’s determined to persuade her parents to let her attend and take the reins.

    Arriving full of excitement and stumbling upon a stable of talking horses, Kate can’t wait to tell her parents the names of her playmates… while cleverly hiding that they’re not actually human. But when the affectionate animals can’t help her bond with the other kids or avoid a super-mean girl, it’s up to the shy Kate to figure out by herself how to fit in.

    Can Kate learn to brave her fears and find love and acceptance?

    From author Wendy Ledger for Readers 8-11.

  • Ophie's Ghost

    Ophie’s Ghosts

    Ophelia Harrison used to live in a small house in the Georgia countryside. But that was before the night in November 1922, and the cruel act that took her home and her father from her. Which was the same night that Ophie learned she can see ghosts.

    Now Ophie and her mother are living in Pittsburgh with relatives they barely know. In the hopes of earning enough money to get their own place, Mama has gotten Ophie a job as a maid in the same old manor house where she works.

    Daffodil Manor, like the wealthy Caruthers family who owns it, is haunted by memories and prejudices of the past—and, as Ophie discovers, ghosts as well. Ghosts who have their own loves and hatreds and desires, ghosts who have wronged others and ghosts who have themselves been wronged. And as Ophie forms a friendship with one spirit whose life ended suddenly and unjustly, she wonders if she might be able to help—even as she comes to realize that Daffodil Manor may hold more secrets than she bargained for.

    Author Justina Ireland has written a really great book for kids 8 – 12.

  • Cookie of Doom

    Ben Yokoyama and the Cookie of Doom (Cookie Chronicles)

    Meet Ben, a literal-minded kid with a big heart and an even bigger sweet-tooth, who cracks open a fortune cookie and discovers that TODAY might be his last day on Earth! Perfect for fans of DIARY OF A WIMPY KID or THE TERRIBLE TWO.

    Live each day as if it were your last.

    When Ben reads his fortune-cookie fortune, he’s alarmed and inspired. Immediately, he begins drafting a bucket list of unfinished tasks and lifelong dreams (finish his 1000-piece model of the Taj Mahal, eat an entire cake, etc….). As Ben marches himself in and out of trouble, takes useful risks, and helps both his parents to see the bigger picture, readers discover how something that seems scary can instead be empowering–leading to friendships that might never have been made, neighbors that might never have been known, and apple pies that might otherwise never have been baked.

    Written by Matthew Swanson and illustrated by Robbi Behr this is for readers 8-12.

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  • Treasure Map

    Buried Treasure and Best Friends

    I had a best friend growing up named Dee Adams. We had many adventures together including building a fort in her backyard and trying to create a new language of our own.

    One adventure that I still remember so clearly was borrowing and gathering as many shiny valuables as we could from our moms’ and sisters’ old junk jewelry, decorating a shoe box, and burying it in the far end of my backyard. We made a careful map with a big X to mark where it was buried, then tried as hard as we could to forget about it.

    That only lasted a few days. We talked about it nonstop, though for all those days, wondering if someone had found it, whether maybe (we hoped) the fake jewelry had turned into real gold and gems. When we couldn’t wait any longer, on the tenth day we pretended we didn’t know where it was and followed our careful map, counting out steps and carrying Dee’s dad’s shovel.

    When we dug the box back up, I was more excited than I thought I would be. We had gathered and made the box and buried it and drew the map ourselves, so there shouldn’t have been any surprise.

    But the planning and waiting and re-discovery was so very exciting. It was like re-reading a book I loved. I knew how it would turn out, but the pleasure of going on that journey again was just as delicious.

    Maybe you and your best friend or friends could bury your own treasure. Ask your parents for any shiny objects you might borrow. Look in your family junk drawer (I have never been in a house that didn’t have one of these). Gather some coins and small toys and little treasures you have in your room.

    Find a small box and decorate it with lots of colors and shapes. If you have some stickers, this would be a great place to use them. Load up your treasure box and secure the top carefully.

    Plan with your friends where a good place to bury it might be. If you don’t have a yard, consider a closet that seldom gets used and bury it way in the back under old sleeping bags or shoes.

    Don’t forget to make a map. Draw as many details as you can so your return trip to dig up your treasure will last as long as possible. Include important items like the ceramic frog in your garden, or the big rock at the bottom of the hill, or the poster on the wall with a dragon. Count out the number of steps it takes to go from one place to the next. Put a big “X” to mark the spot where you buried your treasure. Wait as long as you can.

    Then, pretend you are pirates returning for your booty. Or treasure hunters on an adventure of a lifetime. Or maybe even a writer, looking for clues for your mystery novel.

    I hope you find treasure everywhere in your life, especially in books and in best friends.

    “There is more treasure in books than in all the pirate’s loot on Treasure Island.” Walt Disney

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