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Summer Reading List for Tweens and Teens, 11-up

Patch has teamed up with James Patterson’s READKIDDOREAD program to bring you reading lists for every age. Here, James Patterson’s summer reading picks for tweens and teens, ages 11-up.


Looking for another escape? This has – fantasy, adventure, and of course, love. What more is there? Read one, or read ‘em all – post your thoughts in the comments. Or, if we missed , tell us in the comments!

Great Advanced Reads for Tweens and Teens

  • "Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children" by Ransom Riggs: A thrilling reading experience which combines fantasy with haunting vintage photography. Find out what happens when 16-year old Jacob discovers the ruins of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children.
  • "The Lost Hero" (Heroes of Olympus series) by Rick Riordan: After rebuilding Camp Half-Blood, Kronos, Percy and their friends inherit a quest for which they need help from a few demigods.
  • "Matched" by Ally Condie: What happens when Cassia has to choose between her ideal mate, Xander and Ky, the boy she’s actually interested in? Will she live within the system or challenge its rules?
  • "Witch & Wizard" (Witch & Wizard series) by James Patterson: Siblings Wisty and Whit need to defend themselves against accusations of witchcraft, fight against a regime that wants to suppress life, liberty, books and music…..all while navigating the perils of being a normal teenager.
  • "Holes" by Louis Sachar: When Stanley Yelnats is given a choice between prison and Camp Green Lake, he readily chooses the easy option. But Camp Green Lake is not what it seems…
  • "Masterpiece" by Elise Broach, Illustrated by Kelly Murphy: New York City kid James and his beetle friend, Marvin get caught up in a staged art heist at the Metropolitan Museum of Art that could help recover a famous drawing by Albrecht Dürer.
  • "Anya’s Ghost" by Vera Brosgol: Anya believes that she needs a friend in her life. And she finds one in the bottom of a well. But what do you do when your new BFF is actually a ghost?
  • "One Crazy Summer" by Rita Williams-Garcia: 11-year old Delphine has it all together. But one crazy summer in 1968 with her mother threatens to change everything.
  • "When You Reach Me" By Rebecca Stead: Miranda receives four letters that will change her life forever.
  • "To Kill a Mockingbird" by Harper Lee: A beloved classic that tells the story of one of the most heroic protagonists in American fiction – Atticus Finch.
  • "Looking for Alaska" by John Green: Sixteen-year old Miles leaves his uneventful life behind in pursuit of the “Great Perhaps”.
  • "Team Moon: How 400,000 People Landed Apollo 11 on the Moon" by Catherine Thimmesh: Read the story of the team that contributed to the success of the first ever lunar mission.
  • "How They Croaked: The Awful Ends of the Awfully Famous" by Georgia Bragg: The deaths of 19 famous people, told in gory and sardonic detail.


Extra Credit

  • "THE BOOK THIEF" by Markus Zusack: The story of Liesel Meminger, who discovers books and her passion for reading against the backdrop of World War II.
  • "SEABISCUIT" by Laura Hillenbrand: The extraordinary novel based on the equally extraordinary true story of the horse that won against all the odds.
  • "UNBROKEN" by Laura Hillenbrand: A World War II airman uses ingenuity, determination, humor and resilience to survive in the open ocean after a doomed flight.


The ReadKiddoRead program features bestselling author James Patterson’s picks for the summer. Find reviews of these books and more in the Advanced Reads section of ReadKiddoRead.com.

Tell us what you think! What are you reading this summer? What did you think of this list? Are there other books that should make it to the list? Share your reading experiences with us and post a comment below!

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cheryl May 23, 2013 at 04:29 pm
He (BHO) is certainly not inept. He is an agitator, creating chaos, for the smartest in the room heRead More surely doesn't know much, but does he? That is their tactic. Make him unaccountable for the future. We know about Behghazi- we know about the dinner Chris Steven had 1 hr before the attack with the Turkish diplomat we know about ship transporting weapons from Libya to Turkey into Syria to arm the rebels who are. (the enemy)..... AlQaeda, lets not forget FAST AND FURIOUS arming (the enemy) drug cartels, We know about operation castaways- arming Honduras. True. look them up. Boehner knows too, that's why he won't investigate Benghazi and this is our NATIONAL SECURITY. Its almost like they cant wait or want another 9/11. He certainly isn't incompetent- during the campaign in 2008, he said,"we're just 5 days away from fundamental transformation of the United States of America, and that is exactly what he's doing. He is making congress irrelevant, he is trashing the rule of law and our constitution, he is eliminating one by one the bill of rights, he is forming a national police force under DHS. He certainly not incompetent. He has rearranged the middle east, he has alienated our long allies England & Israel, and now is in bed with the Muslim brotherhood. His first phone call as P was to the P of Turkey. He knows exactly what he's doing. He certainly isn't incompetent - he has brought back racism, division, trashes our military, changed the engagement rules in combat, wasted more tax dollar, printed more money than anyone can imagine, giving power to the regulators w/ more regulations, relaxed immigration laws, welfare laws, letting criminals out of jail, all for what you ask? They need a crisis. As Emanule stated- never let a good crisis go to waste. Occupy Wall ST didn't do it, it must be big. This is the Cloward and Piven strategy to collapse the system, our American System- to implement something unknown, never tried, and no one will tell us.
cheryl May 23, 2013 at 04:36 pm
Get out of the Common Core mandated curriculum that's how you save our children. He's a report fromRead More Dept of Ed- DOE released a report as part of its common core standards that included technology to monitor students in the name of developing best teaching practices that could promote "GRIT,TENACITY, AND PERSERVERANCE." Behavior task performance measures are the broad set of methods used to capture behavior consistent with perseverance or lack thereof, and in many cases associated emotional experiences, physical movements or facial expressions, physiological responses, and thoughts-- that students do in response to a particular challenge, the report said. Wanting to understand a student's response in a time of stress, the dept. report went on to state its desire to analyze various metrics, including facial expression, brain waves patterns, heart rate, posture and eye tracking using facial recognition cameras, posture analysis seats, pressure mouse, and wireless skin conductance sensor ( worn around the wrist). Sensors provide constant, parallel streams of data and are used with data mining techniques and self report measures to examine frustration, motivation/flow, confidence, boredom and fatigue, the report said.
Ann Criscuolo Pari May 22, 2013 at 10:37 am
while receiving Staples Rewards does help defray the cost of supplies for the teachers, they areRead More STILL putting cash out of their own pockets! This should not be. But Kudos to the teachers who put their students above their own financial situation. The Town and parents should be footing the costs, not the teachers.