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2016 Holiday Gifts for Tween Readers Ages 9 – 12

by Melissa Taylor

Books make the best gifts, particularly books that hook kids from the first page. These 2016 favorites will grab your kids’ attention and keep them reading long after the last present is opened. Here you’ll find gift ideas for every type of tween reader on your holiday list whether she likes magical adventures or he loves humorous crime-solving dogs.

  • Life Lessons

  • Pax

    by Sara Pennypacker, illustrated by Jon Klassen

    When Peter’s soldier father abandons Pax, Peter’s fox, on the side of the road and drops Peter off at a distant grandfather’s, heartbroken Peter runs away to find his fox. Pax, who is in the wild for the first time, feels lost without his boy. Fortunately, both boy and fox experience the kindness of others even with the backdrop of imminent war.

  • The Seventh Wish

    by Kate Messner

    While ice-fishing, Charlie catches a magical wish-granting fish. She has a lot of wishes but starts out with just a few — getting a certain boy to like her, helping her mom get a job, helping her neighbor be good at basketball. When her wishes don’t turn out quite like she wanted, Charlie realizes that the fish can’t fix life’s struggles, including the biggest one breaking her heart, her college-aged sister’s heroin addiction.

  • Booked

    by Kwame Alexander

    Soccer is 12-year-old Nick’s favorite thing. Even when his parents separate, even when he’s too nervous to talk to his crush, and even when he’s harassed by thugs at school, Nick has soccer. Until he’s injured. Written in free verse, this is a fast-paced, realistic book filled with the angst and hope of growing up.

  • Ghosts

    by Raina Telgemeier

    Catrina’s family moves to a California ocean town filled with salty air and ghosts. She worries about her little sister Maya’s cystic fibrosis, feeling responsible for the incident that sent Maya to the hospital. With Maya’s prompting, Catrina attends a local Day of the Dead celebration and discovers that the ghosts are actually friendly spirits of loved ones, not something to fear.

  • Arts and Science

  • Maker Lab

    by Jack Challoner

    Created with the Smithsonian Institution, this National Parenting Publications Awards (NAPPA)-winning book is filled with 28 science experiments and crafts for our next generation of makers. With difficulty rankings and time estimates, kids (and parents) will know what they’re diving into with each project. Better still, young inventors can construct a solar system, build an exploding volcano, and race balloon rocket cars — and do it all (and much more) using only household items.

  • Doodle Games Activity Book

    by Joe Rhatigan, illustrated by Anthony Owsley

    Grab a pencil and paper, invite a friend or work by yourself, then use your doodle skills for fun. Create masterpieces from random shapes, combine two animals to make a mutant creature, or use only five dots to draw a person. Whatever activity you pick, you’ll be creating delightful, artistic experiences.