Skip to main content

Content Finder

Audience
Content Type
Grade Level
Topic
Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey through His Son's Addiction
David Sheff

Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey through His Son's Addiction

Genre:
Autobiography and Memoir, Nonfiction
Age Level:
YA

A father’s anguished account of his promising son’s meth addiction and its painful impact on the entire family is honest, raw, and full of information about the realities of drug addiction.

Beauty Queens
Libba Bray

Beauty Queens

Genre:
Fiction
Age Level:
YA

Teen beauty queens. A desert island. Mysteries and dangers. No access to e-mail. And the spirit of fierce, feral competition that lives underground in girls, a savage brutality that can only be revealed by a journey into the heart of non-exfoliated darkness. Oh, the horror, the horror! Only funnier. With evening gowns. And a body count.

Because of Winn-Dixie
Kate DiCamillo

Because of Winn-Dixie

Genre:
Fiction
Age Level:
Middle Grade

Soon after India Opal and her father, a preacher, move to a small Florida town, Opal meets an ugly stray mutt in the local grocery store, and names him after it. Opal and Winn Dixie build a unique family from an assortment of town residents for a poignant and very funny novel told from Opal’s point of view.

Becoming: Adapted for Young Readers

Becoming: Adapted for Young Readers

Genre:
Autobiography and Memoir
Age Level:
Middle Grade

Michelle Robinson was born on the South Side of Chicago. From her modest beginnings, she would become Michelle Obama, the inspiring and powerful First Lady of the United States, when her husband, Barack Obama, was elected the forty-fourth president. They would be the first Black First Family in the White House and serve the country for two terms. In this volume for young people, Michelle Obama shares her views on how all young people can help themselves as well as help others, no matter their status in life. She asks readers to realize that no one is perfect, and that the process of becoming is what matters, as finding yourself is ever evolving. In telling her story with boldness, she asks young readers: Who are you, and what do you want to become? This book is also available in Spanish.

Becoming Billie Holiday
Carole Boston Weatherford

Becoming Billie Holiday

Genre:
Biography, Poetry
Age Level:
YA

Through slightly fictionalized poetry, readers learn about a girl born in Baltimore who grows up to become jazz singer Billie Holiday. Her life is in not white-washed, there’s sex and drugs along with the music, but ultimately the music shines through. Floyd Cooper’s illustrations are gorgeous and perfectly suited.

Becoming Muhammad Ali
Kwame Alexander, James Patterson

Becoming Muhammad Ali

Genre:
Biography
Age Level:
Middle Grade

Before he was a household name, Cassius Clay was a kid with struggles like any other. Kwame Alexander and James Patterson join forces to vividly depict his life up to age seventeen in both prose and verse, including his childhood friends, struggles in school, the racism he faced, and his discovery of boxing. Fully authorized by and written in cooperation with the Muhammad Ali estate, and vividly brought to life by Dawud Anyabwile’s dynamic artwork, Becoming Muhammad Ali captures the budding charisma and youthful personality of one of the greatest sports heroes of all time. 

 

Becoming Naomi León
Pam Muñoz Ryan

Becoming Naomi León

Genre:
Fiction
Age Level:
Middle Grade

Naomi and her younger brother Owen have lived with their grandmother in a small trailer for many years, ever since they were abandoned by their mother. When Mom Terri Lynn suddenly returns, does she really have the kids’ best interests at heart?

Up Before Daybreak
Deborah Hopkinson

Up Before Daybreak

Genre:
Nonfiction
Age Level:
Middle Grade

This book captures the voices of the forgotten men, women, and children who worked in the cotton industry in America over the centuries. The voices of the slaves who toiled in the fields in the South, the poor sharecroppers who barely got by, and the girls who gave their lives to the New England mills spring to life through oral histories, archival photos, and an engaging narrative prose style.