|
--• Guy
Reads •--
These titles are located throughout the
library; please note the location in
the catalog.
Banks, Russell -
Rule of the Bone (390
pages) - Slipping into the dangerous world of drugs and
petty theft as a means of
rebelling against an abusive home life,
a teenaged Chappie takes on a new identity and encounters a host of unusual
characters, including a sexually victimized young girl.
Bloor, Edward - Tangerine (294 pages)
- Paul Fisher's older brother has always been the football-playing hero of
the family. But when the Fishers move to Tangerine,
Florida, Paul enters a place where weird is normal. And suddenly the blind
can see.
Chbosky, Stephen
- Perks of Being a Wallflower (213 pages) - Charlie is a shy, introspective freshman
who writes letters to a mysterious person about
his rise
to semi-popularity, his fall into depression and mental illness, and
slow recovery.
Cormier, Robert -
Tenderness (229 pages)
- Eighteen-year-old Eric has just been release from juvenile
detention for murdering his parents. Now
he's looking for
tendernessótenderness he finds in killing girls. Fifteen-year-old Lori
has run away from home again. Emotionally naive and sexually precocious, she
is also looking for tendernessótenderness that she finds in Eric. Will
Lori and Eric be each other's salvation or destruction?
Crutcher, Chris -
Chinese Handcuffs (202 pages) - Still troubled by his older brother's violent suicide,
eighteen-year-old Dillon becomes deeply involved in
the terrible secret of his friend Jennifer, who feels she can tell no one what
her stepfather is doing to her.
Fleischman, Paul
- Whirligig (133 pages)
- Sixteen-year-old Brian is so depressed that he tries
to kill himself, only to take the life of
another and has to face
the consequences.
Flinn, Alex - Breaking
Point (241 pages)
- Fifteen-year-old Paul enters an exclusive private school
and falls under the spell of a charismatic
boy who may be using
him.
Gee, Maurice - The
Fat Man (182 pages)
- Herbert Muskie is The Fat Man. When he catches skinny,
hungry Colin Potter stealing a chocolate bar, he forces
Colin
to become his partner in crime. This begins an ever-escalating cycle of dominance
fueled by Muskie's hatred of the people of Loomisóa grudge Colin doesn't
understand.
Giles, Gail - Shattering
Glass (215 pages)
- When Rob, the charismatic leader
of the senior class, turns the school nerd into Prince Charming, his actions
lead to unexpected violence.
Griffin, Adele -
Sons of Liberty (230 pages)
- When Rock Kindle's brother, Cliff, begins to talk about
rebelling against their father's
strict and demanding rules,
and their mother's weakness and escape from reality, Rock is forced to take
sides and decide whether he is a traitor or a patriot.
Hinton, S. E. - The
Outsiders (156 pages) - Ponyboy Curtis recounts the events
that led to his best friendís painful death.
Hobbs, Will - Downriver (204
pages) - Fifteen-year-old Jessie and the other rebellious teenage members of
a wilderness survival school team abandon their adult leader,
hijack his boats, and try to run the dangerous white water at the bottom of
the Grand Canyon.
Jenkins, A. M. -
Damage (186 pages) - Seventeen-year-old
football hero Austin, trying to understand the inexplicable
depression that has drained
his interest
in life, thinks that he has found relief in a girl who seems very special.
Lynch,
Chris - Iceman (181 pages) - Fourteen-year-old Eric, a ruthless hockey player
prone to violence on the ice, tries to reconcile his own needs with those
of his parents.
McDonald, Joyce -
Swallowing Stones (245
pages) - Seventeen-year-old Michael
deals with the aftermath of accidentally killing a classmateís
father.
Myers, Walter Dean
- Monster (281 pages)
- "Monster" is what
the prosecutor called sixteen-year-old Steve Harmon for his supposed role in
the fatal shooting
of a convenience-store owner. But was Steve really the lookout
who gave the "all clear" to the murderer, or was he just in the wrong
place at the wrong time?
Payne, C. P. - Youth
in Revolt (498 pages)
- The adventures of angst-ridden teen
protagonist Nick Twispówho starts out an honor student and ends up
a fugitiveóare chronicled in this uproariously funny epic. Here are the
journals of this most precocious diarist, whose ongoing struggles to make sense
out of high school, deal with his divorced parents, and lose his virginity result
in his transformation from unassuming high schooler to modern youth in open revolt.
Powell, Randy - Tribute
to Another Dead Rock Star (215 pages) - No longer able to live with his
grandmother, fifteen-year-old Grady Grennan has to find
a new
address. One option is to move in with his mentally disabled half brother,
Louie, in Seattle. But that poses a problem: Louie's adoptive
mother, Vickie, and Grady
are about as compatible as Mozart and heavy metal. Grady's in Seattle for a
concert tribute to his mother, a grunge-rock icon who died
three years ago. Grady has
been invited to speak at the tribute, but what is he supposed to say to thousands
of adoring fans about a mother who abandoned her sons in
favor of a musical career?
Thomas, Rob - Rats
Saw God (202 pages)
- Having failed English, eighteen-year-old Steve York must
generate a paper to get credit and
chooses to think and write
about his own sophomore and junior years of high school, during which he experienced
his first love and struggled with family relationships.
Weaver, Will - Striking
Out (272 pages) - Up until now, Billy's life has been full of nevers. Never
been to a movie or played baseball with a real team. Never
got over feeling guilty for the loss of his brother, which forever shattered
his Minnesota farm family. Urged on by the town's baseball coach, Billy discovers
he has talentóboth on the field of his family's farm and on the baseball
field.
Werlin, Nancy - Killer's
Cousin (229 pages)
- Recently acquitted of murder, seventeen-year-old David
has moved to Massachusetts to complete his senior year
of high school.
His aunt and uncle have offered him shelteróescape from the media and
from the uncertain glances of his neighbors and ex-friends. His attic apartment
doesn't feel much like a shelter, though. He sees ghostly shadows at night, his
aunt is strangely cold, and his cousin Lily is downright hostile. And as Lily's
behavior becomes more and more threatening, David can't help but wonder what
ugly secrets lurk within the walls of Lily's home. There's one thing David knows
with certaintyóthe more he learns about his cousin Lily, the harder
it is to avoid thinking about his own past.
Back
|