Book of the Day: Ask Me No Questions by Marina Budhos


As part of a U.S. government crackdown on illegal immigration after 9/11, Muslim men were required to register with the government and many were arrested because their visas had long-since expired. Families who had lived and worked in this country were suddenly and forcibly reminded of their illegal status without any likelihood of changing it. For 18-year-old Aisha Hossain, this means the end of her dream of going to college to become a doctor. For 14-year-old Nadira, her younger sister and the story's narrator, it means coming out from behind the shadow of her perfect older sister to reveal her own strength and find a way to reunite her nearly shattered family.

Book of the Day: Framed by Frank Cottrell


Dylan and his sisters have some ideas about how to make Snowdonia Oasis Auto Marvel into a more profitable business, but it is not until some strange men arrive in their small town of Manod, Wales with valuable paintings, and their father disappears, that they consider turning to crime.

Book of the Day: The Year of My Miraculous Reappearance by Catherine Ryan Hyde


After finally getting noticed by someone other than school bullies and his ever-angry father, seventeen-year-old Tyler enjoys his tough new reputation and the attentions of a popular girl, but when life starts to go bad again, he must choose between transforming himself or giving in to his destructive thoughts.

After finally getting noticed by someone other than school bullies and his ever-angry father, seventeen-year-old Tyler enjoys his tough new reputation and the attentions of a popular girl, but when life starts to go bad again, he must choose between transforming himself or giving in to his destructive thoughts.

Book of the Day: Lemonade Mouth by Mark Peter Hughes


A disparate group of high school students thrown together in detention form a band to play at a school talent show and end up competing with a wildly popular local rock band.

Book of the Day: Trigger by Susan Vaught


Teenager Jersey Hatch must work through his extensive brain damage to figure out why he decided to shoot himself.

Book of the Day: Code Orange by Caroline B. Cooney


While conducting research for a school paper on smallpox, Mitty finds an envelope containing 100-year-old smallpox scabs and fears that he has infected himself and all of New York City.

Book of the Day: Dragon Spell by Donita K. Paul

This is the first in a series of three Christian fantasy books about a young girl who is saved by a magical dragon egg. Lots of action and drama, great adventure!

Book of the Day: The New Policeman by Kate Thompson

Irish teenager JJ Liddy discovers that time is leaking from his world into Tir na nOg, the land of the fairies, and when he attempts to stop the leak he finds out a lot about his family history, the music that he loves, and a crime his great-grandfather may or may not have committed.

Book of the Day: Baboon King by Anton Quintana


Son of a Kikuyu mother and a Masai herdsman father, Morengáru the hunter lives on the edges of tribal society until an actual banishment forces him to make a life for himself among a troop of baboons.

Book of the Day: Island Boyz by Graham Salisbury


A collection of short stories including Island Boyz, Angel-Baby and Cloud of Hats. (BPHS AR BOOK)

Book of the Day: Sons from Afar by Cynthia Voight


Six years after coming to live with their grandmother, James and Sammy Tillerman go in search of their long-lost father.

Book of the Day: Memories of Summer by Ruth White


In 1955, thirteen-year-old Lyric finds her whole life changing when her family moves from the hills of Virginia to a town in Michigan and her older sister Summer begins descending into mental illness.

Book of the Day: Rag and Bone Shop by Robert Cormier


Trent, an ace interrogator from Vermont, works to procure a confession from an introverted twelve-year-old accused of murdering his seven-year-old friend in Monument, Massachusetts.

Book of the Day: Both Sides Now by Ruth Pennebaker


Fifteen-year-old Liza tries to deal with the normal everyday crises of life in an Austin, Texas, high school, a process complicated by her mother's fight with breast cancer.

Book of the Day: Heaven Eyes by David Almond


Having escaped from their orphanage on a raft, Erin, January, and Mouse float down into another world of abandoned warehouses and factories, meeting a strange old man and an even stranger girl with webbed fingers and little memory of her past.

Book of the Day: Ace Hits the Big Tim by Barbara Murphy


On the day he enters Kennedy High in Manhattan wearing a patch over one eye, sixteen-year-old Horace Hobart is urged to join the toughest gang at school. (BPHS AR BOOK)

Book of the Day: You, Maybe by Rachel Vail


Josie, a fifteen-year-old high school sophomore, is smart, funny, and very much her own person, but when popular senior Carson Gold starts wooing her, she cannot resist his attention.

Book of the Day: Jumping the Nail by Eve Bunting


When teenagers in a California coastal community challenge each other to "jump the Nail"--leap from dangerous cliffs into the ocean--group pressure and manipulative relationships quickly drive the game out of control. (BPHS AR BOOK)

Book of the Day: In Lane Three, Alex Archer by Tessa Duder


Fifteen-year-old Alex struggles to overcome personal trauma and hardship as she competes with her arch rival for a place on the New Zealand swimming team participating in the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome. (BPHS AR BOOK)

Book of the Day: If You Come Softly by Jacqueline Woodson

After meeting at their private school in New York, fifteen-year-old Jeremiah, who is black and whose parents are separated, and Ellie, who is white and whose mother has twice abandoned her, fall in love and then try to cope with people's reactions.

Laura, Jace, and Chloe were best friends growing up, but once high school hit, they grew apart and found new friends. Now they are juniors, and Laura has decided that nothing would be better than to go to the prom with her two oldest friends.

Book of the Day: Now You See by Jacquelyn Mitchard

Fifteen-year-old Hope describes events leading her to agree to her boyfriend's plan to stage her abduction, and the consequences for their relationship, her family life, and her budding career as an actress.

Book of the Day: Broken Song by Kathryn Lasky

In 1897, fifteen-year-old Reuven Bloom, a Russian Jew, must set aside his dreams of playing the violin in order to save himself and his baby sister after the rest of their family is murdered.

Book of the Day: Road of the Dead by Kevin Brooks


Two brothers, sons of an incarcerated gypsy, leave London traveling to an isolated and desolate village, in search of the brutal killer of their sister.

Book of the Day: The Miner's Daughter by Gretchen Morgan Laskas


Sixteen-year-old Willa, living in a Depression-era West Virginia mining town, works hard to help her family, experiences love and friendship, and finds an outlet for her writing when her family becomes part of the Arthurdale, West Virginia, community supported by Eleanor Roosevelt.

Book of the Day: Stiff by Mary Roach

In this fascinating account, Mary Roach visits the good deeds of cadavers over the centuries and tells the engrossing story of our bosies when we are no longer with them.

Book of the Day: Down the Rabbit Hole by Peter Abrahams


Like her idol Sherlock Holmes, eighth grader Ingrid Levin-Hill uses her intellect to solve a murder case in her home town of Echo Falls.

Book of the Day: Listening for Lions by Gloria Whalen


Left an orphan after the influenza epidemic in British East Africa in 1918, thirteen-year-old Rachel is tricked into assuming a deceased neighbor's identity to travel to England, where her only dream is to return to Africa and rebuild her parents' mission hospital.

Book of the Day: The Color of Water by James McBride


A young African American man describes growing up as one of twelve children of a white mother and Black father, and discusses his mother's contributions to his life and his confusion over his own identity.

Book of the Day: Johnny Jihad by Ryan Inzana


Inspired by the experiences of John Walker Lindh and the Columbine shootings, this exploration of our culture's casual acceptance of violence and the emptiness of lower middle-class life concerns young martyr-in-training John Sendel.