Here is Day 6 of my Top Ten Series with some picks for middle - TopicsExpress



          

Here is Day 6 of my Top Ten Series with some picks for middle school and high school readers. If you have a different Top 10 favorite, or if you agree with a pick on my list, I invite you to share, too! Top Ten Series: Middle School/High School 1. Conspiracy 365 series* (I’ve read the first two books in the series) (ages 10-15, though I personally would lean toward recommending for the older age range (not 10-11 year-olds)) 2. Black Ops Trilogy Conspiracy 365 (new, Book 1: Missing is available now) (ages 10-15) 3. Phoenix Files (ages 14 and up) 4. Other Kane Miller chapter book series – The Wickit Chronicles, Extreme Aventure, Jack, Who?, Shadow of the Dragon, Chloe & Levesque Mystery (ranging ages from 7 to 14) 5. Kane Miller chapter book individual titles, including award winners Butterflies, Dancing Through the Snow, Darius Bell and the Glitter Pool, Dying to Tell Me, The Garden of Empress Cassia, Hannah’s Winter, Noodle Pie, A Voice for Kanzas, and When Molly was a Harvey Girl (ranging ages from 9-14) 6. Usborne chapter book series, Animal Investigators box set (a new series, ages 12 and up) and Roman Pony Triology (ages 12 and up) 7. Usborne chapter book individual titles, such as The Curse of Magoria, Space Cowboys, Solitaire, Time Walker (ages 12 and up); Raven Queen and A World Away (ages 14 and up, catalog notes that these two books contain some mature topics) 8. Stories from Shakespeare (ages 12 and up) 9. Illustrated World History series (Internet Linked Greeks and Internet Linked Romans, ages 11 and up) 10. Math and Science Homework Helpers: Illustrated Dictionary of Math, as well as the Illustrated Science Dictionaries (Biology, Chemistry, and Physics, and a combined volume with all three), ages 12 and up Bonus: The Usborne Geography Encyclopedia with Complete World Atlas and World Wars series (The World Wars, Introduction to the First World War, and The Story of the Second World War), ages 10 and up *These books are ones I personally recommend; the others on the list are ones I picked based on what I’ve heard from other consultants and what’s available in the catalog since I haven’t personally read a lot of what’s available for about third grade through high school (my kids are only 2 and 4 :)).
Posted on: Wed, 24 Jul 2013 20:38:03 +0000

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