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The Shadowing #1: Hunted by Adam Slater

I don't know if you can ever get used to seeing dead people, but after so many years, Callum at least knows to expect them and not be too surprised by their appearances.  You know what is scarier than seeing ghosts though?  It's not seeing them all of a sudden. Callum was walking home through the forest and there were always ghosts gathering there, but today, nothing. It's dead silent. Then as he tried to hurry home, he heard a piercing howl. He had no interest in finding out what could be so terrifying that even the ghosts had to hide.
Callum started running.
When he got inside and had calmed himself down, he thought perhaps he'd imagined it all.  Afterall, it could just be all that murder talk he'd been hearing about all day.  The kids were discussing the gruesome details today...something about the victims' eyes being torn out and stuff. He's sure a good night sleep would make everything better, but of course, you already know that is not going to happen.
The cover, as you can see, is a bit over the top, but it is a decent page-turning horror story, which is hard to come by in books for that late elementary / early high school group. The "hunt" begins almost right away, and it's hard to stop reading as you watch this nightmare unfolds for Callum, his grandma and his new friend Melissa. The murders are pretty gory, but the scariest scene is definitely when Callum literally comes face to face with the hunter with just the window of his house between the two. It's bone-chilling scary.  The characters are okay, but I'm sure character development is not the key here,which is just fine for this type of story.
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Let's talk sports

People always say that boys love non-fiction, and that sports non-fiction is particularly good. This is true, for certain boys. Like any other subject area, it has its fans, but there are just as many guys who don't care, or at least don't care about the same sports.

The best way to make this clear is to think of sports as you would music. There are many genres of music, and not all appeal to everyone. There's classical music, rap, rock, country, folk, world... on and on it goes. Likewise, there is hockey, basketball, baseball, football (Canadian, American and soccer), and so on. Pick the one or two that makes sense for your area.

Vancouver is hockeytown at the moment, especially with the Canucks within striking distance to the Stanley Cup. It makes sense, then to have something relevant to our team available. A good, current book for us is Canucks at Forty, given that it's the Canucks 40th anniversary. It has profiles of past and present players, and defining moments from the team's history. Of course, this book wouldn't make sense in Toronto or Houston. And even in Vancouver, this book will lose meaning soon as the years wear on and new stars arrive.

Timeliness is important. Michael Jordan is a famous retired basketball player. This means he doesn't play anymore, and is no longer in the public eye. He certainly isn't the face of the NBA anymore. And yet, I see a lot of libraries still have these old books, books about stars that either don't play anymore or have added so much to their careers that the book is really irrelevant or even embarrassing. While having bios of important players is good, historical perspective is very important. For example, this book, The Definitive Word on Michael Jordan could well be very good. But it was written before Jordan finished his career, so it doesn't even cover his whole story in the game.

The point is, you need to know your local teams, the most popular sports, and how current the material you have is. If you have a 20 year old cricket book in Calgary, you probably don't have many interested readers. Boys aren't likely to read it. Get the latest stuff, toss anything older than a couple of years, or, better yet, get a subscription to a couple of sporting magazines.
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Boys Don't Read, Except When They Do

What do you and others consider as "real" reading? Check out Charles London's post in The Huffington Post.  Charles London is the author of We Are Not Eaten by Yaks.
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Classic of the Day: Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams

This is the grandpappy of books for teen boys. I read this one when I was 12 or 13, and I'm not sure how I got my hands on it. Maybe it found me. I don't know. I do know that I loved it, and it opened a whole new world for me, and that it really kickstarted my adult reading and helped form my tastes from then on, from movies to TV, and obviously reading. The absurd humor, the off-point ramblings, the made up facts from the Guide to the memorable tag line "Don't Panic", it was perfect.

I imagine everyone has this in their collection already, but I can't stress how important it is often enough. Yes, decades have passed since it was published, and Douglas Adams himself is long dead, but the series lives on, as recently as 2009, when Eoin Colfer (ooh, a kids' book tie-in) wrote a surprisingly good 6th installment. If a boy who is transitioning from kids to YA/adult material tells you he loves funny books, and likes British authors, this should be the first stop.

I don't need to describe the plot here. I suspect everyone has read it already, and if not, you need to drop everything and give it a try.

The point I'm trying to make is that while I disdain "classics" in general as being too stodgy, too irrelevant to modern life, some are timeless. Teen boys will always read this. After all, the Guide is Wikipedia, and how modern is that?

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Ship Breaker by Paolo Bacigalupi


In this future world, environmental destruction and climate change have caused major cities to be underwater and huge corporations are fighting for control of whatever resources can be salvaged. Nailer is a 14 year old boy who scavenges metal and oil from ships that have washed up on shore. Life is brutal and dangerous, and although they work in crews, each person only watches out for themselves.
One day, Nailer and his friend find a broken clipper ship with enough wealth to buy themselves freedom and a better life. However, they also find a young girl who promises them that her family will reward them if they save her. Nailer and his friend are confronted with the decision of whether to save her life or run off with their treasure.
Writing and pace are pretty good -- w/ believable characters and some tense scenes (e.g. in the second chapter, Nailer almost drowns when he falls into oil and one of his crew members refuses to rescue him).
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Firestorm by David Klass

Jack Danielson is a normal high school senior when his father reveals that him and his mother are not his true parents and that Jack must run away. After being attacked by bat-like creatures and shot at by lasers, Jack realizes that things are more dangerous than he first believed. He eventually discovers that he has been sent back 1000 years from the future to stop the environmental disasters that are destroying the future world. Lots of action, some good fight and chase scenes. This it the fire book of the Caretaker Trilogy. Firestorm is supposedly going to be made into a movie by Warner Bros. (and Klass was the screen writer for Desperate Measures and Walking Tall.)
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Living Hell by Catherine Jinks

The Earth has been destroyed and Cheney and the rest of what’s left of mankind is on a spaceship, hoping to eventually find another livable planet. The spaceship is a super hightech machine that provides for all their needs. All is going well until they hit a strange band of radiation. Suddenly the ship is transformed into a living organism that hunts down the human occupants, thinking that they are harmful bacterial/viruses.
Serious and action packed, with people being eaten alive and dissolved by acid-spitting immune cells.
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The Dragonback Series by Timothy Zahn


Jack Morgan, an orphan and thief, is on the run after being framed for 2 murders he did not commit. While investigating the remains of a crashed spaceship, he finds Draycos, an alien of the K’da, running away from his enemies the Valahgua (also aliens). Draycos bonds to Jack and is able to slip into his skin as the form of a tattoo. With Draycos on his kin, Jack is able to use some of the alien's powers. The two of them embark on a mission to save the rest of Draycos’ race and clear Jack’s name. Lots of spaceship battles, chases, aliens, and the plot has more of the feeling of epic fantasy...
Timothy Zahn is author of several Star Wars Expanded Universe novels and other adult sci-fi/fantasy novels.
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Lockdown by Alexander Gordon Smith

Alex never thought that a couple break-and-enters could land him in so much trouble. It’s on one of these break-ins that mysterious men in black suits suddenly appear, kill his friend and frame him for murder. He’s sent to the Furnace - a top security prison built miles underground for juvenile delinquents. The Furnace is no ordinary prison -- skinless dogs try to eat you alive, terrifying creatures with masks sewn on their faces come and take you away at night. No one has ever made it out of the prison alive, but Alex is determined to escape.
Lots of action, lots of scary bad guys and no teen angst or issues! This one had me on the edge of my seat the whole time and I had to read the sequel right away. The third on is coming out later this year and I can't wait...
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I am a Genius of Unspeakable Evil and I Want to be Your Class President by Josh Lieb

Twelve-year-old Oliver Watson pretends to be the dumb kid -- but he is in fact a genius who has made himself rich and is plotting his way to world domination. When Oliver’s father — and archnemesis — brags about winning his middle school election, Oliver decides to spite his dad by proving that anyone -- even himself-- can win a class election. Since he isn't exactly the most popular kid in his class, he resorts to intimidation, bribery, and blackmail... A funny read with lots of pranks, (darts that give gas, chemicals that give colds and rashes, letting the air out of tires), a kidnapping, bombs and violent dodgeball.
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