Reading & Listening

Grades 6-12

E-Books & Audiobooks

Overdrive @ the Boston Public Library: Free e-books and audiobooks with your library card.
Hoopla @ the Boston Public Library: Free e-books, audiobooks, and other media with your library card.
Poets.org: AASL says, “Sign up for Poem-a-Day or browse the curated collection of poems and biographies of poets to fill your daily appetite. Featured texts, books, audio, and video offer many opportunities to sink into the literature.”

Podcasts

Spreaker: Listen to the world's trendiest podcasts or create your own on Spreaker.

"What Should I Read Next?": Resources for Choosing Your Next Book

Bibliographies

(Lists of Great Books)

Dogo Books

Be sure that you are logged into your BPS Google account before clicking here.

Guys Read
Teen Book Finder Database
NoveList K-8: A database of reading recommendations.

*This is a Boston Public Library database, so have your BPL card number ready!

NoveList: A database of reading recommendations for young adults and adults.

*This is a Boston Public Library database, so have your BPL card number ready!

YALSA’s Teen Top Ten The Teens' Top Ten is a "teen choice" list, where teens nominate and choose their favorite books of the previous year!

Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult ReadersPopular Paperbacks for Young Adults Each year, the Popular Paperbacks committee creates lists of books to encourage young adults to read for pleasure. The lists of popular or topical titles are widely available in paperback and represent a broad variety of accessible themes and genres.

Best Fiction for Young Adults YALSA’s Best Fiction for Young Adults Committee presents fiction titles published for young adults in the past 16 months that are recommended reading for ages 12 to 18.

Great Graphic Novels for Teens An annual list from the Young Adult Library Services Association.

Amazing Audiobooks for Young Adults Each year, YALSA's Amazing Audiobooks Blogging Team selects and annotates an annual list of notable audio recordings significant to young adults from those released in the past two years.

Read Kiddo Read James Patterson’s site dedicated to making kids readers for life.

Book Awards

Click on each link for lists of current and past winners.

Alex Award: Given to ten books written for adults that have special appeal to young adults, ages 12 through 18.
YALSA Nonfiction Award: Honors the best nonfiction book published for young adults (ages 12-18) during a Nov. 1 – Oct. 31 publishing year.
Printz Award: For books exemplifying literary excellence in young adult literature.
Morris Award: Honors a book published by a first-time author writing for teens and celebrating impressive new voices in young adult literature.
Sibert Award: For the best informational books.
Newbery Award: For chapter books.
Coretta Scott King Award: For books exploring the African-American experience.
Pura Belpre Award: For books exploring the Latino cultural experience.
Batchelder Award: For books originally published in languages other than English.

Fiction Genre Guide

Fiction Genre Definitions

Many school libraries have spine stickers telling you that the book is of a certain genre. A genre is a category of books that are similar in their subject, style, or format. Here’s a quick guide to genres from former Boston Arts Academy librarian Allegra D’Ambruoso.

  • Realistic Fiction: stories that seem like they could reasonably happen;
  • Historical Fiction and Classics: stories published or written about the past (we’ve picked 1970 as the “past.” Any fiction written before 1970 or about the world before 1970 is in this section);
  • Mystery & Adventure: survival stories, lost in the woods stories, mysteries, murder, etc. Not all mysteries are detective stories, so take a look here for realistic stories that have an air of mystery or adventure.
  • Non-realistic Fiction: stories that could not (or should not be able to) happen in our world as is. This is where vampires, werewolves, ghosts, other planets, aliens, futuristic dystopias, steampunk, etc. exist.
  • Graphic Novels: “sequential art,” stories with a visual component that plays an important role in the book (i.e., comic books).
  • Picture books have also been moved into the fiction collection. Check one out! You can read to a young friend or just enjoy it yourself.