Which five words best describe The War I Finally Won?
Kimberly Brubaker Bradley: Once safe, Ada can heal.
Which five words best describe The War I Finally Won?
Kimberly Brubaker Bradley: Once safe, Ada can heal.
Kiersten White’s And I Darken, first book in her new trilogy, is rich with historical detail and brutally believable characters. And I Darken represents the best of both the historical young adult fiction genre.
Tonya Bolden’s Crossing Ebenezer Creek is moving, beautifully-written, and powerful.
Susanna Chapman studied illustration at Rhode Island School of Design and now designs children’s books for a publisher outside Boston.
Karen English is a Coretta Scott King Honor Award-winner and the author of the Nikki and Deja and The Carver Chronicles series.
In The Quickest Kid in Clarksville, Pat Zietlow Miller perfectly captures the essence of little girls who adore a hero like Wilma Rudolph.
Which five words best describe Flashback Four #2: The Titanic Mission?
Dan Gutman: Exciting! Dangerous! Historic! Dramatic! Unbelievable!
Stepping into long-lost worlds with Liza Ketchum, author of The Life Fantastic (Merit Press).
The Golden Cap is a picture book story about Etje, a young girl living in Holland with her family in the late 1800s. At the start of the story, her father announces that the family is going to move to America, and from that point Etje’s world is turned upside down.
Recommended for teen readers that have an interest in history, A Buss From Lafayette, by Dorothea Jensen, is an enjoyable introduction to the post-Revolutionary War period in America.