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The Meaning of Maggie By Megan Jean Sovern cover

The Meaning of Maggie By Megan Jean Sovern

“Eleven year old Maggie Mayfield can’t stop thinking about Oreos and this is just one of her many conundrums.

She also has two older sisters with bods that don’t stop and she has to wait to campaign for President for almost an entire quarter century.

Then in one summer, her conundrums triple when her father takes a fall at work. What happened? The truth? It’s not what happened to him, it’s what’s happening to him.

The Meaning of Maggie is a novel set in a house too small for all the big problems plaguing a smart girl just trying to survive adolescence armed with after school snacks and deep thoughts.

When her father’s legs permanently fall asleep, Maggie begins a search for meaning that she never expected.

And just like that, getting a B doesn’t seem like such a HUGE DEAL*.

*Okay getting a B is still a huge deal. But you get the idea.
(from the author’s site).

Visit the publisher’s site).”

Get the ebook
or request the hard copy from a federation library
& be sure to leave your review in the comments below!

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Hope is a Ferris Wheel by Robin Herrera cover

Hope is a Ferris Wheel by Robin Herrera

“Ten-year-old Star Mackie lives in a trailer park with her flaky mom and her melancholy older sister, Winter, whom Star idolizes. Moving to a new town has made it difficult for Star to make friends, when her classmates tease her because of where she lives and because of her layered blue hair. But when Star starts a poetry club, she develops a love of Emily Dickinson and, through Dickinson’s poetry, learns some important lessons about herself and comes to terms with her hopes for the future (from the publisher’s site).”

Visit Robin Hererra’s site.

Get the ebook
or request the hard copy from a federation library
& be sure to leave your review in the comments below!

 

Here’s a great book trailer (Thanks, Mya!)

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Seven stories up by Laurel Snyder cover

Seven Stories Up by Laurel Snyder

“When Annie wakes up on her first morning at the Hotel Calvert, she’s in for a big surprise. There’s a girl named Molly in her bed who insists the year is 1937 and that this is her room! Annie’s not sure what happened, but when she learns that Molly’s never been outside the hotel, she knows it’s time for an adventure. Magic, fortune-telling, some roller skates, a rescued kitten, and the best kind of friendship make up the unforgettable story of two girls destined to change each other’s lives (from the publisher’s site).”

Visit Laurel Snyder’s site.

Get the ebook
or request the hard copy from a federation library
& be sure to leave your review in the comments below!

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The Fourteenth Goldfish by Jennifer Holm cover

The Fourteenth Goldfish by Jennifer L. Holm

“Galileo. Newton. Salk. Oppenheimer.
Science can change the world . . . but can it go too far?

Eleven-year-old Ellie has never liked change. She misses fifth grade. She misses her old best friend. She even misses her dearly departed goldfish. Then one day a strange boy shows up. He’s bossy. He’s cranky. And weirdly enough . . . he looks a lot like Ellie’s grandfather, a scientist who’s always been slightly obsessed with immortality. Could this pimply boy really be Grandpa Melvin? Has he finally found the secret to eternal youth?
(from the publisher’s site).”

Visit Jennifer L. Holm’s site.

Get the ebook
or request the hard copy from a federation library
& be sure to leave your review in the comments below!

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The Actual & Truthful Adventures of Becky Thatcher cover image

The Actual & Truthful Adventures of Becky Thatcher by Jessica Lawson

“In 1860, eleven-year-old Becky Thatcher is the new girl in town, determined to have adventures like she promised her brother Jon before he died. With her Mama frozen in grief and her Daddy busy as town judge, Becky spends much of her time on her own, getting into mischief. Before long, she joins the boys at school in a bet to steal from the Widow Douglas, and Becky convinces her new best friend, Amy Lawrence, to join her.

Becky decides that she and Amy need a bag of dirt from a bad man’s grave as protection for entering the Widow’s house, so they sneak out to the cemetery at midnight, where they witness the thieving Pritchard brothers digging up a coffin. Determined to keep her family safe (and to avoid getting in trouble), Becky makes Amy promise not to tell anyone what they saw.

When their silence inadvertently results in the Widow Douglas being accused of the grave robbery, Becky concocts a plan to clear the Widow’s name. If she pulls it off, she might just get her Mama to notice her again and fulfill her promise to Jon in a most unexpected way . . . if that tattle-tale Tom Sawyer will quit following her around.”

Find it on the DCF Shelf & be sure to leave your review in the comments below!

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