In the World of Books: 25 Boys Who Stand Out For Kellee

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When Carrie Gelson shared her post about the 25 girls and 25 boys who stood out to her in young adult and middle grade literature and asked us to join in by writing our own, Ricki and I knew we had to. We read hundreds of books each year, but there are certain characters that stay in your heart year after year. Last week I highlighted the 25 girls who stand out for me, and today I will highlight the boys. Just as with the girls, I had a much longer list than 25 (56 originally to be exact), so narrowing it down to 25 was so difficult; however, I am very proud of the 25 young men who I did choose. They are a special bunch who I hope have affected you as much as they’ve affected me, or you feel inclined to read their book because of this list.

25 Boys Collage
**Click on any book title below to see my review or the Goodreads summary of the book**

  1. Matt Cruse from Airborn (Series: Matt Cruse) by Kenneth Oppel
  2. Aristotle and Dante from Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz
  3. Nate Foster from Better Nate Than Ever (Series: Better Nate Than Ever) by Tim Federle
  4. Tater Henry from Call Me By My Name by John Ed Bradley
  5. Patson from Diamond Boy by Michael Williams
  6. Nick from Everlost (Series: Skinjacker) by Neal Shusterman
  7. Augustus Waters from The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
  8. Albert and Travis from Fish in a Tree by Lynda Mullaly Hunt
  9. Cole (Coltrane) from Ghetto Cowboy by G. Neri
  10. Jonas from The Giver (Series: Giver Quartet) by Lois Lowry
  11. Ben from Half Brother by Kenneth Oppel
  12. Zenji from Hunt for the Bamboo Rat (Series: Prisoners of the Empire) by Graham Salisbury
  13. Luis and Sam from Jumped In by Patrick Flores-Scott
  14. Todd Hewitt from The Knife of Never Letting Go (Series: Chaos Walking) by Patrick Ness
  15. Josh from Living with Jackie Chan (Series: Jumping Off Swings) by Jo Knowles
  16. Logan Bruno from Logan Likes Mary Anne! (Series: The Baby-Sitters Club) by Ann M. Martin
  17. Jack from Love that Dog (Series: Jack) by Sharon Creech
  18. Mal from Mal and Chad: The Biggest, Bestest Time Ever! (Series: Mal and Chad) by Stephen McCranie
  19. Arn Chorn-Pond from Never Fall Down by Patricia McCormick
  20. Rafe from Openly Straight by Bill Konigsberg
  21. Matt and Curtis from Personal Effects by E.M. Kokie
  22. Navin from The Stonekeeper (Series: Amulet) by Kazu Kibuishi
  23. Alex Rider from Stormbreaker (Series: Alex Rider) by Anthony Horowitz
  24. Luc from Threatened by Eliot Schrefer
  25. Ali and Needles from When I Was the Greatest by Jason Reynolds

Who makes it on your list?

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Check out Ricki’s list of 25 girls that stand out for her.

Check out Ricki’s list of 25 boys that stand out for her. 

In the World of Books: 25 Boys Who Stand Out For Ricki

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When Carrie Gelson asked Kellee and I to join her post about 25 boys who stand out in middle grade and young adult literature, we jumped at the opportunity. Last week, I shared my 25 girls who stand out, and this week, I am excited to share the boys. Kellee and I devour hundreds of books each year, yet we find that there are characters who stick with us through the years. Just like the girls, it was difficult for me to narrow my list down to just 25 boys, but I am very proud of this group of brave, young men. Just like the girls, they don’t always make the right choices,  but they really stand out for me. I hope you find (or have found) these boys to be just as as special as I have.

25 boys Ricki

  1. Arnold “Junior” Spirit from The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie
  2. Aristotle and Dante from Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz
  3. Theodore Finch from All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven
  4. Sticky from Ball Don’t Lie by Matt de la Peña
  5. Karl Stern from The Berlin Boxing Club by Robert Sharenow
  6. James Whitman from Dr. Bird’s Advice for Sad Poets by Evan Roskos
  7. Augustus Waters from The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
  8. Andrew Zanskey from Food, Girls, and Other Things I Can’t Have by Allen Zadoff
  9. Craig Gilner from It’s Kind of a Funny Story by Ned Vizzini
  10. Hassan from The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
  11. DQ from The Last Summer of the Death Warriors by Francisco X. Stork
  12. Ishmael Beah from A Long Way Gone by Ishmael Beah
  13. Miles “Pudge” Halter from Looking for Alaska by John Green
  14. Marcelo from Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco X. Stork
  15. Danny from Mexican WhiteBoy by Matt de la Peña
  16. Steve Harmon from Monster by Walter Dean Myers
  17. Arn Chorn-Pond from Never Fall Down by Patricia McCormick
  18. Pierre-Anthon from Nothing by Janne Teller
  19. Charlie Scorsoni from The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky
  20. Kip from Right Behind You by Gail Giles
  21. Sam from The Rock and the River by Kekla Magoon
  22. Shawn McDaniel from Stuck in Neutral by Terry Trueman
  23. Tyrell from Tyrell by Coe Booth
  24. August “Auggie” Pullman from Wonder by R. J. Palacio
  25. Malcolm Little from X by Ilyassah Shabazz and Kekla Magoon

Who makes it to your list?

RickiSig

Check out Kellee’s list of 25 girls that stand out for her.

Check out Kellee’s list of 25 boys that stand out for her.

Children Growing Up with War by Jenny Matthews

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Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday

Nonfiction Picture Book Wednesday is hosted by Kid Lit Frenzy and was started to help promote the reading of nonfiction texts. Most Wednesdays, we will be participating and will review a nonfiction text (though it may not always be a picture book).
Be sure to visit Kid Lit Frenzy and see what other nonfiction books are shared this week!

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Children Growing Up with War
Author and Photographer: Jenny Matthews
Published October 14th, 2014 by Candlewick Press

Goodreads Summary: Through personal narrative and candid photographs, a photojournalist chronicles young lives upended by violence and strife.

The right to adequate nutrition and medical care.
The right to free education.
The right to a name and nationality.
The right to affection, love, and understanding.

In conflict zones around the world, children are denied these and other basic rights. Follow photographer Jenny Matthews into refugee camps, overcrowded cities, damaged villages, clinics, and support centers where children and their families live, work, play, learn, heal, and try to survive the devastating impact of war. This moving book depicts the resilience and resourcefulness of young people who, though heavily impacted by the ravages of war, search for a better future for themselves, their families, and their cultures.

Kellee’s Review:  This was a very tough book to read. I thought I’d be able to sit and read it all in one sitting, but I couldn’t. As a mother and a teacher, I love children, and it truly saddened me to see the situations that these children are in.

Fortunately, as an American, very few wars touch our lives. Unfortunately, our news doesn’t focus on many of the tumultuous conflicts that are active throughout the world, so we have become detached from reality. Our students are even more detached. That is why this book is important. It puts it all into perspective and really makes me feel and think. We rarely look at the humans that are being affected by the wars, we always focus on getting the bad guy. This book puts faces to the people, specifically the children, being affected every day.  I found it very interesting how the author set up the book. You can tell she is a photojournalist because it is set up to give information in the most impactful way.

Ricki’s Review: When I was teaching high school, one of my main goals was to provide my students with a more global perspective. I wish I had had this incredible text available at the time because it evoked powerful emotions in me. I know it would do the same for my students. The balance of photography and words is very well done, and I will admit that I took many breaks because these images and words hit me to my core. This is an important book that belongs in classrooms. It is a good length that teachers will easily be able to use it as a pairing with other texts about war and genocide. It is important to learn about our past, but it is just as important to understand the wars that persist today—which is foundational to this book. I wish I could meet this author to thank her for writing a text that moved me so deeply.

Teachers’ Tools for Navigation: This book presents many different discussion opportunities (e.g., the affects of war on children throughout the world, different active wars,Rights of the Child, importance of journalism). It would be fascinating to read with students and hear their perspective on the very tough topics and perspectives shared in the book.

Also, the book sets up nicely for a jigsaw discussion. The author set up the book to look at the different ways lives are affected: home & displacement, family, health, work, and school & play. Within each of these sections, she also looks at different places in the world such as Tunisia, Jordan, Afghanistan, Uganda, Rwanda, Gaza, and Kurdistan. She also includes different Rights of the Child throughout the book. The teacher could jigsaw either with the topic, the places, or the Rights and have students dig deeper.

Another way to look at this book is from a journalistic/photography point of view. I [Kellee] teach journalism, and I already plan on using Photos Framed as part of my photography unit, and I think this book will add an even deeper look into the importance of photography/journalism and with a topic (children’s lives) that my students can connect with.

Discussion Questions: How does Jenny Matthews’s photos, books, and stories help children who are growing up with war?; Why would Jenny Matthews choose to go into such dangerous situations?; If you had to choose one single photo to sum up Children Growing Up with War, which of these would you choose? (p. 42); Which of the UN’s Rights of the Child are affected when war is involved?; In what different way does war affect the children growing up in the conflict area?

We Flagged: “How would you feel if you lost your home and had to flee from your own country? Imagine losing some or all of your family, either as a direct result of fighting or indirectly through illness or disease. You might have to work to support your family or fight and kill other people just to survive. And how can you go to school if it’s being used as an army command outpost and all the books have been destroyed?

This is the reality for too many children and their families in the world. Today, children are still growing up with war—the consequences of which they’ll live with for the rest of their lives” (p. 3).

Read This If You Loved: Photos Framed: A Fresh Look at the World’s Most Memorable Photographs by Ruth Thomson
This would be an excellent nonfiction companion to: Never Fall Down by Patricia McCormick, Endangered by Eliot Schrefer, Caminar by Skila Brown, The Other Side of the Wall by Simon Schwartz, The Milk of Birds by Sylvia Whitman, or Son of a Gun by Anne de Graaf.

Recommended For: 

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Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite Fairy Tale Retellings

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Top Ten Tuesday is an original feature/weekly meme created at The Broke and the Bookish. The feature was created because The Broke and Bookish are particularly fond of lists (as are we!). Each week a new Top Ten list topic is given and bloggers can participate.

I went a little rogue on the topic. We missed the fairy tale retellings last week because we were celebrating a book birthday, and I really wanted to feature it. So, when we saw that this week’s topic (Authors We’ve Read The Most From) was very close to a past TTT (All-time Favorite Authors), I decided to visit last week’s topic instead. Enjoy! 

 Today’s Topic: Ten Favorite Fairy Tale Retellings

I love reading books that fracture, twist, and retell fairy tales. These are my favorites (in no particular order)!

Kellee

1. The Cat, the Dog, Little Red, the Exploding Eggs, the Wolf, and Grandma by Diane Fox

the cat the dog

Such a hilarious picture book! Cat is reading “Little Red Riding Hood” to her friend, Dog, but he keeps interrupting asking questions that Cat is not prepared, or doesn’t want, to answer. Dog is so funny, and Cat’s reactions really make the book.

2. Rump: The True Story of Rumpelstiltskin by Shurtliff, Liesl

rump

This retelling of Rumpelstiltskin jumped immediately to the top of my favorite retellings list because I felt that she has made a wonderful, fantastical world and was able to see Rumpelstiltskin as more than just an antagonist. I also felt that the book did have a moral, as all fairy tales should, but it is one that creeps up on you at the end and is such a great discussion starter.

3. The League of Princes Series by Christopher Healy

Hero's Guide

Christopher Healy’s series is just plain HILARIOUS and well done! It reminds me a bit of Shrek except I liked the humor in The League better because I feel it is a very smart funny. Just the concept is funny and smart- the four Princes Charming from the “Snow White,” “Cinderella,” “Rapunzel,” and “Sleeping Beauty” stories star in this book (unlike the original stories where they don’t even get credit with their real name!) and the Princes each have such a fun, unique personality.

4. A Tale Dark and Grimm by Adam Gidwitz

tale dark and grimm

In this combination of versions of Grimm fairy tales, Adam Gidwitz takes you through Hansel and Gretel’s full adventure. In this bloody and gruesome tale, they face the devil, a dragon, a warlock, a witch, death, and many other adventures.

Gidwitz has other companion books in the series, but I have not read them yet; however, I am sure they are as well done as this one.

5. Princess of the Midnight Ball by Jessica Day George

princess of the midnight

Princess of the Midnight Ball retells the Grimm tale of The Twelve Dancing Princesses and is quite the adventure filled with fantasy and romance.

6. Ice by Sarah Beth Durst and Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow by Jessica Day George

Ice sun and moon

These two books are retellings of the same Norwegian fairy tale (that is a bit like Beauty and the Beast); however, they are very much separate and independent novels even if there is a little bit of overlap. Ice deals more with the romance and love of the fairy tale while Sun and Moon… deals with loyalty and trust.

7. Into the Wild by Sarah Beth Durst

Into the wild

Into the Wild starts out of the wild. All of the fairy tale characters can finally live normal lives and not have to rely on their story to tell them what to do, but only as long as the wild is contained. When it is unleashed, it is up to Rapunzel’s daughter Julie to save her family and friends from being caught in their story.

8. Fables series by Bill Willingham

Fables1

In Willingham’s series, fairy tale and fable characters have been exiled and have to disguise themselves as normal citizens in New York; however, they are anything but normal.

9. Rapunzel’s Revenge by Shannon Hale

rapunzel's revenge

Rapunzel kicks some major butt in this one. Rapunzel’s story takes place in the Wild West in Hale’s retelling of the classic.  After Rapunzel escapes her “mother’s” imprisonment, revenge is on her mind.

10. Briar Rose by Jane Yolen

briar rose

A mix of historical fiction and a fairy tale retelling. Becca is a journalist and when her grandmother, Gemma, dies, she promises her that the will find out the truth behind her grandmother’s constant retelling of “Sleeping Beauty” as her life story. All Becca has is the story that Gemma told, a box of photos and documents, and the promise. With this, Gemma begins to learn more and more about her mysterious grandmother.

Which fairy tale retellings have you enjoyed the most? 

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? #IMWAYR 8/10/15

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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? From Picture Books to YA!

It’s Monday! What are you Reading? is a meme hosted by Sheila at Book Journeys. It is a great way to recap what you read and/or reviewed the previous week and to plan out your reading and reviews for the upcoming week. It’s also a great chance to see what others are reading right now…you just might discover the next “must-read” book!

Jen Vincent, of Teach Mentor Texts, and Kellee decided to give It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? a kidlit focus. If you read and review books in children’s literature – picture books, chapter books, middle grade novels, young adult novels, anything in the world of kidlit – join us! We love this meme and think you will, too.

We encourage everyone who participates to support the blogging community by visiting at least three of the other book bloggers that link up and leave comments for them.

Last Week’s Posts

cold war maplewood 9780763676889 Temple of Doubt

Ricki 25 girls 25 Girls Collage

Tuesday: Review and Author Interview!: Cold War on Maplewood Street by Gayle Rosengren

Wednesday: Windsnap Wednesday! Blog Tour, Giveaway, and Author Interview: Emily Windsnap by Liz Kessler

Giveaway open through Wednesday!

Thursday: 25 Girls Who Stand Out (in Middle Grade and Young Adult Literature) for Ricki

Friday: 25 Girls Who Stand Out (in Middle Grade and Young Adult Literature) for Kellee

Sunday: Author Guest Post!: “How Settings Help Shape Characters’ Character” by Anne Boles Levy, Author of The Temple of Doubt

**Click on any picture/link to view the post**

 Last Week’s Journeys

Kellee: As my summer is coming to a close, I really hoped to be reading a bit more than I did, but a sick baby plus working two days this week put a wrench in that plan. I did read two middle grade novels, a graphic novel, and a nonfiction picture book–all which I enjoyed very much. First, I read A Handful of Stars by Cynthia Lord which is my unofficial Twitter book club read for August (chat on Wednesday at 9PM ET if you would like to join us), and I am so glad that it was chosen. Salma would definitely have been on my girls list if I made it today. The other novel was Pickle: The (Formerly) Anonymous Prank Club of Fountain Point Elementary School by Kim Baker which was super funny. I love the diversity and humor within it. Kim is one of the fabulous female authors on the humor panel I’m chairing at NCTE. The graphic novel I read was The Rise of Aurora West by Paul Pope. Aurora is so kick butt–I loved it! Though the world she lives in is so scary (monsters kidnap children at night), she is a light in that very dark world. Finally I read Children Growing Up With War by Jenny Matthews which I’ll be reviewing on Wednesday.

Ricki: Ricki is currently without internet service, so she will catch up with everyone next week! Hopefully, she has double the number of good books to share!

This Week’s Expeditions

Kellee: I have already started the sequel to Aurora West, and I plan on finishing that. I also want to read The Tiara on the Terrace by Kristen Kittscher and Hook’s Revenge by Heidi Schultz (both funny females on the NCTE panel!). I hope to get through at least two of them.

Upcoming Week’s Posts

top ten tuesday children growing wanderers

25 boys Ricki 25 Boys Collage

Tuesday: Top Ten Favorite Fairy Tale Retellings

Thursday and Friday: 25 Boys Who Stand Out (in Middle Grade and Young Adult Literature)

Sunday: Author Guest Post!: “In This Place: An Imagery Writing Activity” by Kate Ormand, Author of The Wanderers

 So, what are you reading?

Link up below and go check out what everyone else is reading. Please support other bloggers by viewing and commenting on at least 3 other blogs. If you tweet about your Monday post, tag the tweet with #IMWAYR!

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Author Guest Post!: “How Settings Help Shape Characters’ Character” by Anne Boles Levy, Author of The Temple of Doubt

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How Settings Help Shape Characters’ Character

by Anne Boles Levy

I love long walks on sunlit beaches, or watching it rain outside my window, or listening to the happy screams of kids on a playground. I love settings, in other words. I’m in different moods in each of those places, and I’m always curious to see how that’s true of characters in novels and movies.

People react to their surroundings – think of yourself, stuck in traffic, with someone cutting in front of you. Honnnkkk! Then think of yourself in your favorite reading spot, curled up with a book and a cup of cocoa. I know where I’d rather be.

And why shouldn’t characters be the same? How would one of your students describe Katniss Everdeen hunting in the woods near her home versus her state of mind in the Hunger Games arena? Or Harry Potter living in the cupboard under the stairs versus his first view of Hogwarts?

I love teaching about setting to my middle schoolers, and I think I achieved a Zen-like bliss creating my own setting for The Temple of Doubt.

In it, my protagonist, Hadara, squirms with discomfort in a hot, sticky classroom on a tropical island. She can’t wait for the open spaces of her town and its surrounding wilds. She too reacts differently in each place, until it was hard for me to separate setting from situation, and situation from characterization. Her ability to wade through a swamp, shimmy up a tree, and find her way among treetop huts says something about the choices she makes and where she feels she can be herself.

Characters don’t merely interact in their settings – it’s not just a place where stuff happens. Take these two characters: one wakes up each morning between silk sheets, the sun streaming through high windows into an airy room. The other wakes up on a hard pallet in the hayloft of a barn, with only a scratchy horse blanket for warmth.

Without knowing anything else about the characters – gender or age, ethnicity or national origin – you’re likely already inferring a few facts about their life circumstances. Maybe you’re imagining that one is likely well off and the other, not so much. Were they born into these circumstances, or is this a recent quirk of fate for each? What might happen if they met?

When I taught 6th grade, I had my students keep a little chart for all the settings in A Wrinkle in Time, since Meg and her companions land on several planets, including a two-dimensional one! But we start at Meg’s comfy home, with its brightly lit kitchen, and we compare not only all the different places she winds up, but how her attitude and reactions also change.

Characters, like real people, are at least partly a product of their environments, and their sense of belonging – or not – can in turn spark the central conflict. Sometimes they fit perfectly in a setting, and it comes under attack, forcing them to act. Other times, home is no longer where the heart lies, and it’s time to journey on.

When seen through the character’s eyes, setting becomes so much more than a place and a time. It’s often a map to the parts of themselves that matter most.

 

Temple of Doubt

About the Book: 

It’s been two six-days since a falling star crashed into the marshes beyond Port Sapphire, putting the wilds of Kuldor off-limits to fifteen-year-old Hadara. She feels this loss deeply and is eager to join her mother beyond the city limits to gather illegal herbs and throw off the yoke of her tedious religious schooling. Medicines of any sort are heresy to the people of Port Sapphire, who must rely on magic provided by the god Nihil for aid. And if people die from that magic, their own lack of faith is surely to blame. At least, that’s what Hadara has been taught—and has so far refused to believe.

Hadara and her mother have ignored the priests’ many warnings about their herb gathering, secure in knowing their tropical island is far from Nihil’s critical gaze. Then two powerful high priests arrive from Nihil’s home city to investigate the fallen star, insisting it harbors an unseen demon. This sets off speculation that an evil force is already at work in Port Sapphire and brings one of the holy men to Hadara’s doorstep. When he chooses Hadara as a guide into the wilds, she sets off a chain of events that will upend everything she’s been taught about the sacred and the profane.

The Temple of Doubt is the first installment in a series that follows a teenager who is given a greater destiny and purpose than she could’ve ever imagined.

Excerpt from the Book:

My sandals thunked across age-worn planks on a bridge that linked the two halves of the city, east and west, commerce and families. The bridge’s arch gave me a flaw­less view of the flat rows of warehouses, the ships in their berths, the gleaming white of the Customs House at the mouth of the harbor. I could hear the singsong street ven­dors that gave Callers Wharf its name. It was already filling with crowds anticipating a spectacle. We hurried across the bridge and plunged into its teeming market. A brass trinket lured here, a whiff of savory spices pulled there. Amaniel tapped her foot impatiently while I took a peek into a few stalls before they closed.

“What if Nihil himself is coming? Honestly, Hadara, you’d make him wait while you tried on scarves.”

“The kiosks are always closed by the time school lets out.” I was sure I could face anything, even Nihil, in a pair of cloth slippers dyed a vivid pink, but they were about to vanish behind a reed shutter. “If Nihil’s coming, the port might be closed for a long time. If he isn’t, then maybe he won’t be offended if I shop some.”

Amaniel gripped my sleeve. “I’m dragging you if you don’t come. I mean it. I’m not missing this.”

“Alright, alright,” I said. “I don’t know what bitter root you’ve been eating today, but you’re all pucker.”

 

Anne Levy

About the Author: Anne Boles Levy has lived in eight states, forcing her to make up settings for her fantasy novels since she can’t remember what any real place looks like. She currently teaches English to middle schoolers after more than two decades writing and editing for print, web, and radio. Anne is a graduate of Smith College and studied abroad at University College London, and has her master’s in journalism from Columbia University. She’s also an amateur silversmith and the absent-minded wife to her long-suffering husband, Brett. They run around after two children and a cat in Scottsdale, Arizona.


Thank you to Cheryl at Skyhorse Publishing, Inc. for connecting us with Anne!

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In the World of Books: 25 Girls Who Stand Out For Kellee

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When Carrie Gelson shared her post about the 25 girls and 25 boys who stood out to her in young adult and middle grade literature and asked us to join in by writing our own, Ricki and I knew we had to. We read hundreds of books each year, but there are certain characters that stay in your heart year after year. Below are the 25 girls who remained with me. Originally, I had 71 girls on the list, so narrowing it down to 25 was so difficult; however, I am very proud of the 25 young women who I did choose. They are a special bunch who I hope have affected you as much as they’ve affected me, or you feel inclined to read their book because of this list.

25 Girls Collage
**Click on any book title below to see my review or the Goodreads summary of the book**

  1. Kate de Vries from Airborn (Series: Matt Cruse) by Kenneth Oppel
  2. Lina from Between Shades of Gray by Ruta Sepetys
  3. Willow Chance from Counting by 7s by Holly Goldberg Sloan
  4. Sophie Biyoya-Ciardulli from Endangered by Eliot Schrefer
  5. Hazel Grace Lancaster from The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
  6. Ally from Fish in a Tree by Lynda Mullaly Hunt
  7. Claudette from Giants Beware! (Series: Chronicles of Claudette) by Jorge Aguirre
  8. Katsa from Graceling by Kristen Cashore
  9. Hermoine from Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone (Series: Harry Potter) by J.K. Rowling
  10. Joey Willis from Hurt Go Happy by Ginny Rorby
  11. Kristy Thomas, Mary Anne Spier, Claudia Kishi, and Stacy McGill from Kristy’s Great Idea (Series: The Baby-Sitters Club) by Ann M. Martin
  12. Camila from Life in Outer Space by Melissa Keil
  13. Annabeth from The Lightning Thief (Series: Percy Jackson and the Olympians) by Rick Riordan
  14. Marlee and Liz from The Lions of Little Rock by Kristin Levine
  15. Matilda from Matilda by Roald Dahl
  16. Melody from Out of my Mind by Sharon Draper
  17. Phoebe from Phoebe and Her Unicorn (Series: Heavenly Nostrils) by Dana Simpson
  18. Sunny from Revolution (Series: The Sixties Trilogy) by Deborah Wiles
  19. Astrid from Roller Girl by Victoria Jamieson
  20. Lakshmi from Sold by Patricia McCormick
  21. Stargirl from Stargirl (Series: Stargirl) by Jerry Spinelli
  22. Tally Lo from Uglies (Series: Uglies) by Scott Westerfeld
  23. Lupita from Under the Mesquite by Guadalupe Garcia McCall
  24. Sal and Phoebe from Walk Two Moons by Sharon Creech
  25. Summer from Wonder (Series: Wonder) by R.J. Palacio

Who makes it on your list?

Come back next Friday to see my list of 25 boys who stand out.

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Check out Ricki’s list of 25 girls that stand out for her.

Check out Ricki’s list of 25 boys that stand out for her.