The 2016 Teens’
Top Ten voting begins Monday. To vote, go to the Top Ten website. Here is the list of nominees:
Baker,
Chandler. Alive. Disney/Hyperion.
Stella Cross
has received a heart transplant, but it has not stopped her emotional
suffering.
Then a
mysterious boy named Levi Zin comes into her life. Stella’s pain goes away
whenever she’s
around Levi.
However, Stella finds out a terrible secret about Levi. Can it be true?
Bardugo,
Leigh. Six of Crows. Macmillan/Henry Holt & Co.
Young
criminal genius Kaz Brekker is offered the chance to pull off a dangerous theft
that can make him rich. He
recruits a gang of six dangerous misfits to help him with the heist. The book
follows the crew’s crazy
adventure and features plot twists, betrayals, and schemes aplenty.
Black,
Holly. The Darkest Part of the Forest. Little, Brown & Co.
In Fairfold,
a place where both humans and Faeries live, siblings Hazel and Ben have grown
up telling each other
stories about the boy in the glass coffin in the woods. The boy has horns and
ears pointy as knives,
perhaps he’s a prince or a knight. Of course, they’ll never know because the
boy will never wake. Then,
unexpectedly, he does . . .
Boecker,
Virginia. The Witch Hunter. Little, Brown & Co.
Elizabeth
Grey is a witch hunter who is suddenly accused of being a witch. She is
arrested and sentenced to burn. The
only way for Elizabeth to avoid this fate is to help out her former enemy
Nicholas Perevil, the most
dangerous wizard around. The book is filled with magic and adventure, action
and mystery and features a
world full of witches, pirates and ghosts.
Brockenbrough,
Martha. The Game of Love and Death. Scholastic/Arthur A. Levine Books.
Set in
Seattle in the 1920s, a romance develops between Flora, who is African
American, and Henry, who is white.
Despite some differences, the pair has much in common, including a shared love
of jazz music. However, it
turns out that Flora and Henry actually are pawns in a game played by two other
characters – Love and
Death. This book is full of intrigue and is, at times, heartbreaking, and will
have the reader racing to
the final pages.
Childs, Tera
Lynn, and Tracy Deebs. Powerless. Sourcebooks Fire.
In a world
full of powerful heroes and villains, Kenna is just a regular, powerless
teenager who works in a lab. Then,
three villains break into the lab, and Kenna decides to fight back. In the
midst of this battle, Kenna is
saved by a villain. Suddenly, she is forced to rethink her beliefs.
Cornwell,
Betsy. Mechanica. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt /Clarion Books.
A new take
on the classic story of Cinderella. Mechanica uses her wit and her mother’s old
engineering textbooks to
try to escape her stepmother and stepsisters. Mechanica is a strong, smart, and
capable character in
a book that has an inspirational message for teenage girls.
Dinnison,
Kris. You and Me and Him. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt/Clarion Books.
Maggie is
overweight. Nash is out of the closet. They are the best of friends. But that
friendship is tested when they
both develop feelings for the same boy, a new kid named Tom.
Doktorski,
Jennifer Salvato. The Summer After You & Me. Sourcebooks Fire.
Lucy
Giordano lives on the Jersey Shore and has a crush on a boy named Connor
Malloy, whose family spends many summer
weekends at the home next door. The pair eventually shares an unexpected tromance.
Then, Super Storm Sandy hits and alters Lucy’s life dramatically. Lucy and
Connor go their separate
ways. But several months later, Connor is scheduled to return to The Shore,
which should definitely
make for an interesting summer.
Doller,
Trish. The Devil You Know. Bloomsbury.
Arcadia, or
Cadie for short, is 18 years old and has been longing for something more in
life ever since her mother died.
Then she meets two handsome boys, cousins to one another, and they invite her
and a friend on a
camping trip. What seems like innocent fun takes a negative turn when Arcadia
discovers one of the
boys is hiding a terrible secret.
Heltzel,
Anne. Charlie, Presumed Dead. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
Charlie
Price is presumed dead after his plane crashes. However, his body is never
found. At his funeral, Lena and
Aubrey meet and discover both were his girlfriend. Lena believes Charlie is
still alive, and she and Aubrey
set out on a journey across Europe and Asia to expose Charlie’s deceit. The
girls try to work together,
but the secrets they hide could prevent them from finding Charlie.
Kaufman
Amie, and Jay Kristoff. Illuminae. Random House/Alfred A. Knopf.
Kady and
Ezra have just broken up, and then their planet is bombed by a megacorporation.
The pair
escapes to a
government ship, but must put their differences aside in order to survive and
stop a plague that has
resulted from the use of a bioweapon.
Laurie,
Victoria. When. Disney/Hyperion.
High school
junior Maddie Fynn has special powers that allow her to see numbers above a
person’s
forehead,
which she soon discovers are death dates. She identifies the death date of a
young boy, but is unable to
prevent his disappearance. Then, Maddie becomes a suspect in a homicide
investigation.
Matharu,
Taran. The Novice: Summoner: Book One. Macmillan/Feiwel & Friends.
A
blacksmith’s apprentice named Fletcher discovers he can summon demons from
another world. He
soon gets
chased out of his village for a crime he did not commit, ending up at an
academy for adepts, where he is
trained to serve as a Battlemage in the Empire’s war against the savage Orcs.
Eventually, Fletcher
discovers the fate of the Empire is in his hands.
Nielsen,
Jennifer. A. Mark of the Thief. Scholastic/Scholastic Press.
Set in
Ancient Rome, a young slave named Nic finds an amulet that gives him magic
powers usually
reserved for
the Gods. After discovering a conspiracy to overthrow the emperor and start a
war, Nic is
forced to
use the magic within to defeat the empire’s most ruthless leaders and save
Rome.
Niven,
Jennifer. All the Bright Places. Random House/Alfred A. Knopf.
Death plays
a big role in the lives of high schoolers Theodore Finch and Violet Markey. He
is constantly on the verge
of suicide, and she is battling grief after her sister’s death. The Indiana
teens come together to
work on a project and soon develop a bond, showing each other what it’s like to
live.
Priest,
Cherie. Illustrated by Kali Ciesemier. I Am Princess X. Scholastic/Arthur A.
Levine.
When they
were young, best friends Libby and May created a comic character named Princess
X. Then Libby was
killed in a car accident. Lonely and grieving, May soon discovers an
underground culture centered
around a web comic at IAmPrincessX.com. The similarities between those stories
and Libby’s own stories
are striking. Could her friend still be alive?
Schmidt,
Tiffany. Hold Me Like a Breath. Bloomsbury.
Penelope
Landlow has an autoimmune disease that forces her to remain indoors. She is
also the
daughter of
a notorious crime family that is involved in the black market for organ
transplants. Penelope soon gains
her independence and is forced to survive on her own in the big city. She
learns about love, loss and how
to survive in an often dangerous world.
Schreiber,
Joe. Con Academy. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
Will Shea
(aka Billy Humbert) is a con man who has scammed his way into Connaughton Academy,
an exclusive
school for the American elite. He soon meets Andrea Dufresne, who also has
conned her way into the
school. The pair soon makes a bet to see who can con the school bully, Brandt
Rush, out of thousands of
dollars.
Sedgwick,
Marcus. The Ghosts of Heaven. Macmillan/Roaring Brook Press.
An epic
story about the journey of discovery told in four episodes. The first, takes
place during
prehistoric
times, as a girl picks up a stick and creates some of the first cave drawings.
Next, we visit the 17th century
and a girl named Anna, whom many believe is a witch. Episode three is set in a
Long Island mental
institution and features a mad poet who watches the ocean. Finally, a trip to
the future, as a spaceship
travels to settle another world.
Simmons,
Kristen. The Glass Arrow. Tor Teen.
Set in the
future, Aya is a 15-year-old girl who has spent her life hiding in the
mountains in order to
avoid the
fate of most women, who are treated like property and auctioned off for
breeding. Then, she
is caught.
Desperate to escape, she relies on the assistance of a wolf and a mute boy in
her search for
freedom.
Stohl,
Margaret. Black Widow Forever Red. Disney/Marvel Press.
Natasha
Romanoff, aka Black Widow, is one of the
world’s most lethal assassins, and she once rescued young Ava Orlova from being
subjected to a series of military experiments. Now, Black Widow and Orlova, who
is 15 years old and living in Brooklyn, team up again to stop Widow’s former
teacher, the evil Ivan Somodorov, from wreaking havoc on the children of
Eastern Europe.
Stone,
Tamara Ireland. Every Last Word. Disney/Hyperion.
Samantha
McAllister seems to have it all: she is beautiful, bright and part of the
popular crowd in high school. But
looks can be deceiving, and she is hiding the fact she has Obsessive Compulsive
Disorder (OCD).
Samantha’s life changes after she visits a place at school called Poet’s Corner
and she begins hanging out
with new friends like Caroline and AJ.
Westerfeld,
Scott, Margo Lanagan, and Deborah Biancotti. Zeroes. Simon & Schuster/Simon
Pulse.
Six
California teens have special powers that aren’t always welcome. Like Ethan,
known as Scam, who has a voice
inside of him that will sometimes speak out when it’s not the right time to do
so. When that “power” gets
Ethan in trouble, the other Zeroes are the only ones who can rescue him.
However, the members of
this group are not exactly the best of friends.
Weingarten,
Lynn. Suicide Notes from Beautiful Girls. Simon & Schuster/Simon Pulse.
June and
Delia were best friends who grew apart. Then, Delia commits suicide. Or, at
least that’s what others have
been told. June believes her former best friend has been murdered, and she goes
on a quest to find the
truth . . . which, it turns out, is very complicated.
Yoon,
Nicola. Everything, Everything. Random House/Delacorte Press.
Maddy is a
teenager with a serious autoimmune disease that prevents her from leaving the
house. Yet,
she seems
content to stay home and read books. That is until a boy named Olly moves in
next door. The two meet,
and their quirky relationship is chronicled through emails, journal entries,
IMs and old notes.
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