Libertad
By Alma Fullerton
Alma’s my co-faculty at the Novels in Verse workshop! |
The Crossover
By Kwame Alexander
Also check out Booked! |
Brown Girl Dreaming
By Jacqueline Woodson
There’s a reason it has all those stickers on the cover — a LOT of reasons. |
Silver People: Voices From the Panama Canal
By Margarita Engle
Having just visited the Panama Canal, this really enlightened and touched me. |
Audacity
By Melanie Crowder
Thinking of the beautiful audacity of Loree Griffin Burns who refused to let me be stranded at Logan airport last night and coordinated a grand rescue plan despite the snowstorm… |
Love That Dog
By Sharon Creech
If you have a 9 year old who thinks he doesn’t like to read–or can’t read– give this to him and watch him mark up the pages (in a good way) with his thoughts. |
A Time to Dance
By Padma Venkatraman
Padma’s our special guest at the Novels in Verse workshop! |
Words With Wings
By Nikki Grimes
I LOVE that it has Mr. (Ed) Spicer in it. |
Serafina’s Promise
By Ann E. Burg
I often use this in talks to show how we authors pile problem after problem on our characters’ shoulders. |
Coaltown Jesus
By Ron Koertge
Hilarious and poignant. |
Dust of Eden
By Mariko Nagai
Powerful Japanese internment camp story. |
What My Mother Doesn’t Know
By Sonya Sones
A classic and I love the updated cover! |
The Red Pencil
By Andrea Davis Pinkney
How art and creativity can transcend even the most horrifying events. |
The Watch That Ends the Night
By Allan Wolf
Epic tale (thoroughly researched) of the Titanic, which sank 105 years ago. |
How I Discovered Poetry
By Marilyn Nelson
This is one of those “how can so few words say so much?” novels. |
Paper Hearts
By Meg Wiviott
So beautifully done I didn’t want it to end. You know that feeling? Yup, that. |
Death Coming Up the Hill
By Chris Crowe
It HAD to be the choice for the 17th — read the novel and you’ll understand why. |
Caminar
By Skila Brown
A way to see a different country and a different life (makes things like rush hour traffic or the wrong kind of toilet paper seem suddenly as unimportant as they are). |
Sold
By Patricia McCormick
I always use her books as examples of the extraordinary research it takes to create an authentic story. |
Becoming Billie Holiday
By Carole Weatherford
The poignant and beautiful story of Eleanora. |
Inside Out and Back Again
By Thanhha Lai
With immigration an issue again–or still– this is a particularly beautiful story. |
May B.
By Caroline Starr Rose
Great, fast, survival story for any young reader, especially reluctant ones. |
Etched in Clay
By Andrea Cheng
Dave the Potter for the older crowd; beautiful. |
Witness
By Karen Hesse
I love the voices — great example of how to make distinct characters even in a brief verse novel. |
House Arrest
By K.A. Holt
Wow. Really powerful, poignant and funny. And great voice. |
October Mourning: A Song for Matthew Shepard
By Leslea Newman
Oh, so painful and hard to read but so necessary. |
Full Cicada Moon
By Marilyn Hilton
This was named a Jane Addams Peace Award Honor Book! |
CrashBoomLove
By Juan Felipe Herrera
The words are almost spat out in frustration. In the end, even a tough teen needs his mom. |
Under the Mesquite
By Guadalupe Garcia McCall
Beautifully written and the ultimate strong girl book! |
The One and Only Ivan
By Katherine Applegate
For animal lovers of all ages. |