2025 Summer Reading Guide: The Graphic Novels (ages 8-12 & 12+)
June 27, 2025 § Leave a comment

I’m back with another installment of this year’s Summer Reading Guide and this one is dedicated to graphic novels! It always bears repeating that graphic novels aren’t just what many of today’s kids prefer to read, they’re also helping to build the stamina for reading that is in increasingly short supply in this age of digital media and instant gratification. Lean in, I implore you!
I’m particularly proud of this list, because I’ve been generally less-than-enthused with graphic novels in the past year or so. The storylines, especially in contemporary realistic fiction, have started to feel painfully similar (and less and less well written). The YA graphic novels are just downright weird. I could go on, but I’m merely making the point that I am really, really excited about the titles I’ve picked below. These needles in the haystack feel fresh in the best sense, with unique storylines, stunning art, or twists on old favorites. Or, if they aren’t introducing anything new, they’re at least doing it as well as the Greats who made graphic novels so attractive to these kids in the first place.
Nine of the books below are for the middle-grade audience (ages 8-12), while two are for teens (Dan in Green Gables and Alanna). (If you’re looking for graphic novels for the 6-9 set, check out this earlier post.) I hope your kids love them all.
« Read the rest of this entry »2019 Gift Guide: Middle-Grade Fiction for Ages 8-14
December 15, 2019 § 2 Comments
The category of middle-grade fiction is rapidly broadening. On the one side are novels accessible to 8-12 year olds, while on the other are heavier, more mature stories aimed at the 10-14 crowd. As always, I’ve indicated age ranges after each title. Those with kids on the older end: don’t be in a hurry to move your kids to young-adult fiction. There’s still plenty of richness for the taking here.
The first five novels are new to this bog; the others are ones I’ve reviewed earlier in the year but couldn’t resist repeating, because they have mad gift potential. Or maybe it’s just that I’m madly in love with all of them. 2019: what a year. (And I can’t wait to see you in 2020. This wraps my Gift Guide, and I wish all of you a very Happy Holidays.)