The second in the Zelah Green series of issue-driven, yet not heavy-handed books for young adults—Jodi Picoult for teens?"My name is Zelah Green—and I’m still here.?Summer's supposed to be good, right
I've just moved into a creepy old manor house with my family. And it feels like the house is waiting for something. I can't explain all the things that are happening here. The maids I hear sobbing...
Lilah May is always angry. So angry that she's on the verge of being excluded from school, her parents despair of her, and only one person in the world can put up with and understand her violent mood-
Lilah May used to be angry. VERY angry. But not any more. She's got her temper — and her life — back under control. Or has she? Things with her best friend, Bindi, are going from bad to worse. The whe
A prizewinning story of a girl whose serious?OCD starts to take over her life, how she conquers it with help and humor, and the friends with their own troubles whom?she meets along the way?"My Name is
My name is Inge. I am sixteen. I live in Munich. Food is rationed, though the war ended years ago. My boyfriend is Jewish. My parents would not approve, so I hide this from them. I think they are hidi
Thirteen-year-old Amelie Day loves to bake so she's thrilled when she's invited to compete in the Best Teen Baker of the Year contest. But Amelie has Cystic Fibrosis, and some days she can barely brea
Thirteen-year-old Amelie Day loves to bake, so she is thrilled to be invited to compete in the Best Teen Baker of the Year contest, and she is determined not to let her steadily worsening cystic fibro
Curtis, the founder of the Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, has written a biography of the writer that focuses on her relationships with women, particularly with her sister Vanessa, the artist
Thirteen-year-old Amelie Day loves to bake, so she is thrilled to be invited to compete in the Best Teen Baker of the Year contest, and she is determined not to let her steadily worsening cystic fibro