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Any Good Book Recomendations?!!?

I have read the hunger games, I like dystopian books, I have also read Harry potter and totally loved it.
I also like to read realistic fiction books. Specifically about girls in middle school.( That is also the genre I write)
I like Historical Fiction books. Specifically about WW2(not the holocaust though), Segragation in the south, and the revolutionary war.
Some of my favorite authors are: Wendy Mass, and Julia DeVillers
I also like to read Young Adult bookshttp://www.wattpad.com/14001848-5-must-r…
( that is 5 must read books that I posted on Wattpad)
Thank you!

No Responses to “Any Good Book Recomendations?!!?”

  1. Pepere Eldridge says:

    Ruined – Paula Morris
    Rebecca Brown is staying with her Aunt Claudia in nineteenth century New Orleans, a city of voodoo, ghosts, and hurricanes. While walking in Lafayette Cemetery she is befriended by Lisette, a ghost who helps Rebecca to uncover shocking truths about her life and influences her to right the wrongs of the past.
    Shift – Jennifer Bradbury
    Two friends set out on a cross-country bike trip. Only one arrives in Seattle. What happened?
    Project 17 – Laurie Faria-Stolarz
    When six high school students sneak into an abandoned mental institution to make a film about their night there, they do not expect the inexplicable and terrifying events that keep occuring within the crumbling, maze-like building, causing them to question themselves and, ultimately, to make different choices about the course of their lives.
    Story of a girl – Sara Zarr
    After she is caught with her brother’s friend in the back seat of his car, Deanna has to deal with a ruined reputation.
    Wait for me – An Na
    When Mina falls in love with a young coworker at her parents’ dry cleaners, she struggles between her mother’s dreams for her and true love.
    Someone like Summer – M.E. Kerr
    When Annabel, daughter of a contractor, and Esteban, a Latino immigrant, begin a relationship, they are at odds with many of the supercilious residents in the resort town of Seaview.
    More than friends – Katherine Spencer
    After her brother dies, Grace finds herself falling for his best friend Jackson, who has some serious problems of his own.
    Enthusiasm – Polly Shulman
    Fans of Jane Austen’s novels, Julie and Ashleigh decide to imitate their heroine and try to discover True Love in high school.
    Undercover – Beth Kephart
    A quiet girl writes love notes for the people in her school, but her feelings for one student may change her.
    The Market – J.M. Steele
    When Kate finds out that someone is rating all the girls in her class, she is determined to make sure her score rises, no matter what it takes.
    The It Chicks – Tia Williams
    Tangie and her friends juggle romance, classes, and the arts with their friendship as the “It Chicks”.
    Good enough – Paula Yoo
    Patti is trying to get into an Ivy League school to please her parents, but this Korean-American teen also wants to have fun.
    Divine Confidential – Jacquelin Thomas
    After she moves from Hollywood to Georgia, Divine still wants to live her life as a diva and find romance.
    A higher geometry – Sharelle Byars Moranville
    In the late 1950s, Anna feels she must choose between the traditional role her parents expect of her and her dream of going to college to study mathematics.
    Every crooked pot – Renee Rosen
    Nina uses makeup and different hairstyles to hide her birthmark over one eye, in hopes of fitting in.
    Maggie Bean stays afloat – Tricia Rayburn
    Maggie has changed, through Pound Patrollers diet and exercise, but can she attract Peter Applewood and still keep her old friends?
    Cures for heartbreak – Margo Rabb
    After her mother dies and her father becomes sick, Mia deals with growing up and finding love.
    Mistik Lake – Martha Brooks
    Odella yearns to know the answers to family secrets that have affected three generations of women in her family.
    Off-Color – Janet McDonald
    A white girl and her mother are suddenly forced into public housing, where she struggles for acceptance while also discovering she’s biracial.
    So not the drama – Paula Chase
    Mina is determined that she will be as popular in high school as she was in middle school.

  2. Dane Coriell says:

    Below are my favorites with similarities to the Hunger Games – dystopian with a solid romantic element:
    The Shore of Monsters by David J. Nix – 2011. Five generations earlier, a horde of monsters nearly obliterated humanity. All males are dead or ruined by a monster plague; words like ‘father’ and ‘romance’ have lost meaning. When teenager Sky joins an expedition to the shore that falls apart, she must survive amongst the monsters that roam the ruins. She gets unexpected help from a very surprising source. Mystery, action, and romance follow!
    Across the Universe by Beth Revis – 2011. When 17-year-old Amy joins her parents as frozen cargo on a spaceship, she expects to be thawed 300 years later upon arrival at a new planet. However, her world turns upside down when she is awakened fifty years too early and finds herself embroiled in the mystery surrounding the attempted murders of frozen passengers. Her life endangered by Eldest, the tyrannical leader of the ship’s maintenance population, she turns to her only ally: Elder, the young man destined to take Eldest’s place as leader. As they solve the mystery together, romance blossoms between Amy and Elder, complicating an already complex situation.
    Blood Red Road (Dustlands Series) by Moira Young – 2012. In a post-apocalyptic future, 18-year-old Saba’s twin brother is stolen by black-clad riders. When tough-as-nails Saba launches a relentless search to recover him, she must fight for her life in gladiator cages, overcome enemies both creature and human, and learn to trust others for the first time. And try as she might, she can’t help but fall for the charming scoundrel Jack, who just may understand her more than she knows. The author tells Saba’s story in a raw first person format that blows you away. Must read for dystopian lovers!
    Delirium by Lauren Oliver – 2011. In the tightly controlled society of a future America, love is forbidden, classified as ‘deliria’ by authorities. Three months before her 18th birthday and a mandatory procedure to ‘cure’ her deliria, Lena meets Alex, who sends her heart aflutter. As love blossoms between the two, Lena questions what she has always been told about love, and begins to consider the unthinkable: not submitting to the cure, and choosing deliria instead. Beautifully written, but a little slow.
    Divergent by Veronica Roth – 2011. In a future dystopian Chicago, each 16-year old must choose to belong one of five factions, each of which represents a dominant personality trait. For most the choice is easy – simply follow the results an aptitude test. For Beatrice, however, the choice is not simple. Her test indicates three aptitudes. In addition to complicating her life, this fact makes her dangerous to the community for reasons she does not know. What she decides promises to put her in danger, and possibly tilt the entire balance of society.
    The Forest of Hands and Teeth by Carrie Ryan – 2010. Seven generations have passed since the Return, a plague that reanimates dead humans into creatures that feed on the living. Teenager Mary lives inside one of the last enclaves of uninfected, protected by a chain link fence that surrounds her village. When the fence is breached, Mary flees the village with a small band of survivors. Their flight toward an uncertain salvation is both harrowing and revealing, as they try to determine if they are humanity’s last hope.
    How I Live Now by Meg Rosoff – 2006. Fascinating novel about the outbreak of a 21st century world war as seen through the eyes of Daisy, a 15 year old American staying with her cousins on a remote England farm. At first utopian, the kid’s existence degenerates into horror as the war encroaches on the farm. Through the several month period covered by the story, Daisy grows from a self-centered girl into a determined survivor. This book will leave a mark on the reader for years to come.
    Unwind by Neal Shusterman – 2009. In post-war future, the abortion debate has been solved through compromise. Parents may elect to have their teenage children “unwound”, a process where the teens organs and body parts are harvested for others. The story follows three runaway Unwinds, each discarded for behavior, religious, or economic reasons. As the trio embarks on a harrowing journey of escape, the reader will ponder very heavy moral questions, and wrestle with how much a bad decision can affect future generations. This is a masterpiece on every level!

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