Kids Books - Science Fiction
Bruiser
By Neal Shusterman
I didn't really like this book, but anyways its about a boy named Brewster who takes injuries away from certain people he likes. When he starts dating Bronte, her twin: Tennyson isn't happy because he doesn't like "Bruiser" which is Brewster. But one day after school, Tennyson follows Brewster home and realizes he was wrong and instantly becomes friends with Brewster. His injuries from other people starts getting pretty serious and then something terrible happens. I'll have to say...it was a sorta confusing book for me.
Tick, Tock, You're Dead! (Give Yourself Goosebumps)
By R.L. STINE
lucas
cool i sort of like this story.(iv'e never read this story before so thats why i sort of like it
Robyn Silver: The Midnight Chimes
By Paula Harrison
Robyn is just a normal, clumsy girl...until the night she starts seeing weird creatures everywhere. Unknown forces (!) have caused trees to fall down right on top of her school (that would be cool!) and the class is forced to study in the dark and gloomy Grimdean Mansion. The owners of the the house tell Robyn and two friends that they are Chimes, born at midnight, able to see strange animals and destined to save the world...
Kingdom Keepers IV: Power Play
By Ridley Pearson
I just ran out of books to read and recently I just had a Disney obsession so I read this book series and it was the right choice
At First Bite (Poison Apple #8)
By Ruth Ames
I've read, and boy do I wish these were around when I was younger. This story introducers readers to tween vampire, Ashlee Lambert, who moves from her posh NYC apartment out to to L.A. were her famous mother gets her own reality tv as a judge. Ashlee not only has to make new friends and deal with a whole new school, but she's still learning about being a vampire. The cool thing about the vampires in this book is that they shift into bats, don't drink animal blood and can go outside. Though she's the lone vampire in her family (who have no idea she is one), Ashlee has a mentor there to help her. Things get a little out of hand once she's in L.A.
Tokyo Mew Mew Omnibus 1
By Mia Ikumi
cuteyaij9
i like a boy to his name is joshua hes my brother and i love him with all my heart
Firefight (The Reckoners)
By Brandon Sanderson
For me, this series was a potato in a minefield. If you'd read Firefight, the second book in Brandon Sanderson's The Reckoners Trilogy, you'd know what I was talking about. When I first read Steelheart, the first book in the series, it was because I had lost a bet with my brother. Now, they're some of my favorite books ever. Firefight is the sequel to Steelheart. Both books take place in a dystopian America that is dominated by Epics, people who have amazing, superhero-like powers that corrupt them and turn them evil. In Steelheart, David, the bad-metaphored, Epic-hating protagonist, joined a group of Epic assassins known as the Reckoners in order to slay Steelheart, the Epic who ruled David's town of Newcago (Chicago) and killed David's father. In the second book, Firefight, David and the Reckoners are also out to kill an Epic--this time Regalia, ruler of Babalon Restored (New York). In New York, a new cast of characters meets David, the Reckoner Tia, and Prof, the leader and founder of the Reckoners who is secretly and Epic, and is struggling not to use his corrupting powers and keep his evil at bay. They help a squad of New York Reckoners: the tough, serious Val, the strange Exel, and happy, perky, goofy Mizzy. David also reunites with Megan, the sly, very attractive Epic who was a spy for Steelheart in the first book. David must do several things at once: plot to kill the Epic Regalia with the Reckoners, help Prof keep his Epic powers from overcoming him, keep an eye on Oblivion, an Epic who has the power to wipe out Babalon Restored in a single blast, and meet with Megan without the Reckoners knowing, all of whom think of her as an evil murderer. To make matters more complicated, a larger mystery is at hand. Humans first started becoming Epics when a large, red star called Calamity appeared over the world. David wants to solve the mystery as to how Epics get their powers and weaknesses and what Calamity has to do with it, not to mention what Calamity is. By the end of the book, David and the reader will be closer to solving the mystery, but still not completely there. The reader will have to wait until the spring of 2016, when the third book, Calamity, comes out. This book has high-action and a complicated, enthralling plotline. It has lived up to its predecessor, Steelheart, and will leave the reader just as interested and thrilled. I like this book because it has almost everything you could ask for in an interesting story: action, plot, humor, unique characters, romance, and an incredible stare-at-the-book-with-your-mouth-hanging-open twist ending. I would recommend Firefight to anyone who likes action-filled or humorous books, and has read Steelheart.. Most kids would definitely enjoy reading Steelheart, Firefight, and (in spring of 2016), Calamity.
Rebels of the Lamp, Book 1 Rebels of the Lamp
By Peter Speakman, Michael M. B. Galvin
I guess having a genie isn't that great. Parker Quarry is having a blast with a genie he released from an ancient canister. But what he doesn't know is that might have accidentally started a war that was never supposed to happen. Now Parker, Theo (his cousin) and Reese (a really smart girl at school) have to stop a millennia-old battle of a battle ready genie from restarting a war that has all of the humanity in its crosshairs.
I Am Morgan le Fay: A Tale from Camelot
By Nancy Springer
In most stories, Morgan le Fay is depicted as a cruel, heartless woman who wants to take the throne.But this book tells Morgan's story from her birth, as a young witch-in-training who falls in and out of love, curious about the world of magic and wanting to learn.She is actually full of emotion and totally NOT evil! She is a spirited girl full of love and adventure. A must-read!
This Savage Song (Monsters of Verity)
By Victoria Schwab
Resonant, heartwarming, and fast-paced. A strong 4/5 stars, Victoria Schwab's This Savage Song will leave readers breathless, waiting for an encore. Thoroughly recommended to ages 12 and up, fans of J.K. rowling, Holly Black, and Cassandra Clare will eat this up.









