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Ellen Bachert
Library Media Specialist
ebachert@rpsd.org
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Linda Califano
Library Assistant
Literary Reference Center* |
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Mission Statement
The
mission of the Roselle Park High School library media program is
to ensure that all students and staff have the skills and
opportunity to
access, evaluate, and use information. The library, as the
information
center of the school, is committed to supporting the curriculum
and
to develop each student into an independent seeker of information
by
providing the guidance and the necessary resources. This mission
encourages all students and staff to become lifelong and
responsible
users of ideas and information.
What is literary
criticism?
Literary
criticism is the evaluation, analysis, description, or
interpretation of literary works. It is usually in the form of
a critical essay, but in-depth book reviews can sometimes be
considered literary criticism. Criticism may examine a
particular literary work, or may look at an author's writings as
a whole.
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The following reference books may be helpful:
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LOOKING FOR A GOOD BOOK?
Best
YA Novels
(According
to
New Jersey Librarians on the NJYAC listserv were polled for their top ten young adult novels. Titles listed below are available in the RPHS Library. A complete list is available on the shelf in the fiction section.
Adams, Douglas. Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy. Pan Books, 1979. (Adult)
The book begins as the Earth explodes, and Arthur Dent is
taken off the planet by his friend, Fordrefect, who unbeknownst
to
Arthur works as a researcher for the revised edition of TheHitchhiker's
Guide to the Galaxy. Together they begin a journey through
the galaxy aided byquotes from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the
Galaxy.
Anonymous. Go Ask Alice. (ed. by
Beatrice Sparks) Prentice-Hall, 1971. (Gr. 8+)
A novel based on the diary of a fictional fifteen-year-old
drug user chronicling her struggle toescape the pull of the drug
world.
Bauer, Joan. Hope Was Here.
Putnam, 2000. (Gr. 8+)
When sixteen-year-old Hope and the aunt who has raised her move
from Brooklyn to Mulhoney,
Wisconsin to work as waitress and cook in the Welcome Stairways
diner, they become involved with the diner owner's political
campaign to oust the town's corrupt mayor.
Bauer, Joan. Rules of the Road.
Putman's, 1998. (Gr. 7+)
Sixteen-year-old Jenna gets a job driving the elderly owner
of a chain of successful shoe stores from Chicago to Texas to
confront the son who is trying to force her to retire, and along
the way Jenna hones her talents as a saleswoman and finds the
strength to face her alcoholic father.
Bauer, Joan. Squashed. Delacorte
Press, 1992. (Gr. 7-10)
As a sixteen-year-old pursues her two goals--growing the biggest
pumpkin in Iowaand losing twenty pounds herself--she strengthens
her relationship with her father and meets a young man with
interests similar to her own.
Bradbury, Ray. Fahrenheit 451.
Ballantine Books, 1953. (Adult)
In this dystopia, firemen don't put out the flames; they set
them to piles of books. That is, until Fireman Guy Montag meets a
girl who tells him of a past when people were not afraid, and a
professor who tells him of a future where people can think.
Brashares, Ann. The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants .
Delacorte Books for Young Readers, 2001. (Gr. 9+)
Four best girlfriends spend the biggest summer of their lives
enchanted by a magical pair of pants.
Burgess, Melvin. Smack . Holt, 1998. (Gr.
10+)
After running away from their troubled homes, two English
teenagers move in with a group of squatters in the port city of
Bristol and try to find ways to support their growing addiction
to heroin.
Card, Orson Scott.Ender's Game. T. Doherty
Associates, 1985. (A/YA)
This award winning novel follows the story of Ender, after he is
sent to Battle School , who becomes Earth's best hope to defeat
the alien invaders who nearly destroyed the planet. Ender must
withstand the pressures of training in order to become the
world's hero.
Cisneros, Sandra.The House on Mango Street.
Vintage Books, 1989. (Adult)
A young girl living in a Hispanic neighborhood in Chicago ponders
the advantages and disadvantages of her environment and evaluates
her relationships with family and friends.
Cormier, Robert.The Chocolate War. Pantheon,
1974. (Gr. 8+)
A young man arouses the wrath of school bullies and discovers
othe devastating consequences of defying a long, mindless
tradition centered around the school's annual fund raising drive.
Crutcher, Chris. Whale Talk. (and others by
him) Greenwillow Books, 2001. (Gr. 8+)
Intellectually and athletically gifted, TJ, a multiracial,
adopted teenager, shuns organized sports and the gung-ho athletes
at his high school until he agrees to form a swimming team and
recruits some of the school's less popular students.
Dessen, Sarah. Someone Like You, Viking,
1998. (Gr. 8+)
Halley's junior year of high school includes the death of her
best friend Scarlett's boyfriend, the discovery that Scarlett is
pregnant, and Halley's own first serious relationship.
Farmer, Nancy. The House of the Scorpion.
Atheneum Books for Young Readers, 2002. (Gr. 7-10)
In a future where humans despise clones, Matt enjoys special
status as the young clone of El Patrón, the 142-year-old leader
of a corrupt drug empire nestled between Mexico and the United
States.
Gibbons, Kaye. Ellen Foster. Algonquin
Books, 1987. (Adult)
An abused child finally gets a chance at a better life when she
lives in the home of a loving woman who has several foster
children.
Going, K. L. Fat Kid Rules the World. G.P.
Putnam's Sons, 2003. (Gr. 8+)
Seventeen-year-old Troy, depressed, suicidal, and weighing nearly
300 pounds, gets a new perspective on life when a homeless
teenager who is a genius on guitar wants Troy to be the drummer
in his rock band.
Golding, William. Lord of the Flies. Faber
and Faber, 1954. (Gr. 9+)
A group of young boys try to survive after they are abandoned on
a desert island.
Greene, Bette. Summer of My German Soldier.
Dial Press, 1973. (Gr. 6+)
When German prisoners of war are brought to her Arkansas town
during World War II, twelve year-old Patty, a Jewish girl,
befriends one of them and must deal with the consequences of that
friendship.
Grimes, Nikki. Bronx Masquerade. Dial Books,
2002. (Gr. 8+)
While studying the Harlem Renaissance, students at a Bronx high
school read aloud poems they've written, revealing their
innermost thoughts and fears to their formerly clueless
classmates.
Hamilton, Virginia. Sweet Whispers, Brother Rush.
Philomel Books, 1982. (Gr. 7+)
Fourteen-year-old Tree, resentful of her working mother who
leaves her in charge of a retarded brother, encounters the ghost
of her dead uncle and comes to a deeper understanding of her
family's problems.
Hautzig, Esther. The Endless Steppe.
HarperCollins Children's Book Group, 1968. (Gr. 6+)
Arressted in Poland and exiled to Siberia, Ester and her family
must struggle to find enough food and clothing to stay alive. It
is only the family's strength that will allow them to survive.
Howe, James. The Watcher. Atheneum Books for
Young Readers, 1997. (Gr. 7-9)
As she sits watching a seemingly perfect family and a handsome
lifeguard on the beach, a lonely, troubled girl projects herself
into the fantasy lives she has created for them.
Jackson, Shirley. We Have Always Lived in the Castle.
Viking Penguin, 1962. (Gr. 8+)
After a murder takes place on their family's land, Merricat
Blackwood tries to protect her sister, Constance from the nearby
villagers.
Jimenez, Francisco. Breaking Through.
(Sequel to The Circuit) Houghton Mifflin, 2001. (Gr.5-8)
Having come from Mexico to California ten years ago,
fourteen-year-old Francisco is still working in the fields but
fighting to improve his life and complete his education.
Johnson, Angela. The First Part Last. Simon
& Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2003.(Gr. 8+)
Bobby's carefree teenage life changes forever when he becomes a
father and must care for his adored baby daughter.
Kerr, M. E. Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack.
Harper & Row, 1972. (Gr. 7+)
Fifteen-year-old Tucker's life changes in many ways when he meets
the unusual overweight girl who gives his cat a home.
Kidd, Sue Monk. The Secret Life of Bees.
Viking, 2001. (A/YA)
When Rosaleen, the African-American woman who has taken care of
Lily for the past ten years, is victimized by racist police
officers, they must leave their home.
Kingsolver, Barbara. The Poisonwood Bible.
Perrenial, 1999. (Adult)
The story of Nathan Price and his family after they move to
the Belgian Congo in 1959.
Lee, Harper. To Kill a Mockingbird.
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins , 1961. (Gr. 8+)
In this classic work, Scout Finch tells the story of her father's
defense of an African-American man charged with the rape of a
white girl.
Lipsyte, Robert. The Contender. Bantam
Books, 1967. (Gr. 8+)
A Harlem high school dropout at the beginning of a successful
boxing career changes his goals.
Mackler, Carolyn. The Earth, My Butt and Other Big
Round Things. Candlewick Press, 2003. (Gr. 7-10)
Feeling like she does not fit in with the other members of her
family, who are all thin, brilliant, and good-looking,
fifteen-year-old Virginia tries to deal with her self-image, her
first physical relationship, and her disillusionment with some of
the people closest to her.
Mahy, Margaret. Memory. M.K. McElderry
Books, 1988. (Gr. 7+)
On the fifth anniversary of his older sister's death, nineteen-
year-old Jonny Dart, troubled by feelings of guilt and an
imperfect memory of the event, goes in search of the only other
witness to the fatal accident and, through a chance meeting with
a senile old woman, finds a way to free himself of the past.
McKinley, Robin. Beauty. Harper & Row,
1978. (Gr. 6+)
Kind Beauty grows to love the Beast at whose castle she is
compelled to stay and through her love releases him from the
spell which had turned him from a handsome prince into an ugly
beast.
McKinley, Robin. The Blue Sword. Greenwillow
Books, 1982. (Gr. 6+)
Harry, bored with her sheltered life in the remote orange-growing
colony of Daria, discovers magic in herself when she is kidnapped
by a native king with mysterious powers.
Myers, Walter Dean. Fallen Angels.
Scholastic Inc., 1988. (Gr. 10+)
Seventeen-year-old Richie Perry, just out of his Harlem high
school, enlists in the Army in the summer of 1967 and spends a
devastating year on active duty in
Myers, Walter Dean. Monster. HarperCollins ,
1999. (Gr. 7+)
While on trial as an accomplice to a murder, sixteen-year-old
Steve Harmon records his experiences in prison and in the
courtroom in the form of a film script as he tries to come to
terms with the course his life has taken.
Na, An. A Step from Heaven. Front Street,
c2001. (Gr. 8+)
A young Korean girl and her family find it difficult to learn
English and adjust to life in America.
Napoli, Donna Jo. The Magic Circle. Dutton
Children's Books, 1993. (Gr. 7-10)
After learning sorcery to become a healer, a good-hearted woman
is turned into a witch by evil spirits and she fights their power
until her encounter with Hansel and Gretel years later.
Nix, Garth. Sabriel. (and sequels)
HarperCollins, 1995. (Gr. 7+)
Sabriel, daughter of the necromancer Abhorsen, must journey into
the mysterious and magical Old Kingdom to rescue her father from
the Land of the Dead.
Rowling, J. K. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.
(and sequels) Arthur A. Levine, 1998.(Gr. 5+)
11 year old Harry Potter is surprised to learn that he is a
wizard and has his first year of adventures at Hogwarts School of
Witchcraft and Wizardry.
Sachar, Louis. Holes. Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, 1998. (Gr. 6-9)
As further evidence of his family's bad fortune which they
attribute to a curse on a distant relative, Stanley Yelnats is
sent to a hellish correctional camp in the Texas desert where he
finds his first real friend, a treasure, and a new sense of
himself.
Salinger, J. D. Catcher in the Rye. Little,
Brown and Company, 1951. (Gr. 7+)
Cynical seventeen year old Holden Caulfield has an eventful 24
journey around New York City.
Sleator, William. House of Stairs. Dutton,
1974. (Gr. 7+)
Five fifteen-year-old orphans of widely varying personality
characteristics are involuntarily placed in a house of endless
stairs as subjects for a psychological experiment on conditioned
human response.
Smith, Betty. A Tree Grows in Brooklyn.
Perennial, 1968. (Adult)
Francie Nolan grows up in a Brooklyn, New York slum.
Speare, Elizabeth George. The Witch of Blackbird Pond.
Houghton Mifflin, 1958. (Gr. 6+)
In 1687 in Connecticut, Kit Tyler becomes friends with old woman
considered a witch by the community and suddenly is on trial for
witchcraft.
Spinelli, Jerry. Stargirl. Knopf Books for
Young Readers, 2000. (Gr. 6-10)
In this story about the perils of popularity, the courage of
nonconformity, and the thrill of first love,an eccentric student
named Stargirl changes Mica High School forever.
Tolkien, J. R. R. The Lord of the Rings. Houghton
Mifflin, 1955. (A/YA)
This trilogy tells the story of Frodo Baggins and the fellowship
who journeys to Mordor to destroy the ring and save Middle Earth.
Wolff, Virginia Euwer. Make Lemonade. (and
sequel) Henry Holt, 1993. (Gr. 7-10)
A young single mother and her fourteen year old babysitting
help each other in this powerful story
Zindel, Paul. The Pigman. Harper & Row,
1968. (Gr. 7+)
A teenage boy and girl, high school sophomores from unhappy
homes, tell of their bizarre relationship with an old man.