Sponsored by James Patterson’s MAX EINSTEIN series.
The planet is running out of time—and there is no Planet B. Max Einstein and her friends are World Champions in this newest adventure, where they:
GET OUTDOORS
From racing across glaciers in Greenland to visiting the Great Barrier Reef off the coast of Australia, twelve-year-old genius Max and her friends live for adventure.
TAKE ACTION
Whenever there’s a problem to solve, the kids work better together!
NEVER GIVE UP
Max has one more surprise in her playbook, and if she’s going to pull it off, she needs her team. Whoever said that kids can’t save the world?
Hey readers!
I’m back with another week of new children’s books.
Poultrygeist by Eric Geron and Pete Oswald
In this funny, spooky picture book, a chicken crosses the road and wakes up as a ghost on the other side. Surrounded by new ghost animal friends, the poultrygeist learns how to be scary.
Big Apple Diaries by Alyssa Bermudez
This graphic memoir follows author Alyssa Bermudez through her own seventh grade diary entries. As Alyssa copes with the usual middle school concerns, from friends to her divorced parents to being mistreated by kids at school, the novel accelerates toward 9/11, where Alyssa’s dad works in the World Trade Center.
The Smashed Man of Dread End by J.W Ocker
In this creepy novel, Noelle learns her family’s new home houses the terrifying Smashed Man. Alongside her new friends, Noelle must figure out a way to defeat the Smashed Man for good.
Tia Lugo Speaks No Evil by Danette Vigilante
In this middle grade thriller, Tia witnesses a murder outside her window, and the killer sees her. Though she’s determined to stay quiet and her friends and grandmother comfort her, the killer’s threats mean Tia can’t ignore it.
Call and Response: The Story of Black Lives Matter by Veronica Chambers
This book serves as an educational introduction to the Black Lives Matter movement. It retells how the organization’s founders came together as well as the stories of victims of police brutality such as Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown, and George Floyd, discussing systemic racism and the civil rights movement.
Until next week!
Chelsea