I have the library to thank for the books rounding out
this chapter book compilation. We’ve got an axolotl, fashionable young friends
and a fractured fairy tale, all for the 6-9 age range. If you have children/grandchildren/nieces/nephews
in this age group, what do they like to read? What are you reading together?
Letizia Rizzo, illustrator.
<This book is
part of an unnumbered series.>
In Ms. Garcia’s sixth grade class in Brownsville, Texas,
there is Amigo the Axolotl. He is from Mexico, and when he hears Alejandro
telling Ms. Garcia that he’s going to the Charro Days Fiesta, he plots quickly
to tag along with the Student Helper. The festival should be great. Maybe Amigo
will meet a lady lizard! Or he’ll get to eat shrimp burritos! Instead, things
don’t go as planned, and he ends up separated from Alejandro and in the sights
of a dog. What’s an axolotl to do?
This
book geared for ages 7-8 is part of the Homeroom is a Zoo series. It is
constantly-moving and fun to read the axolotl’s chaotic misadventure. It is a
story for emergent readers ready for chapter books who may still need help with
some of the vocabulary. I would read more of these.
JoJo and the Fashion Show (Aug. 1, 2025) by
Annette M. Clayton.
Carolina
Vázquez, illustrator.
<This is part
of an unnumbered series.>
JoJo Jupiter has a new hearing aid. At first worried
about the bold purple color standing out, she chooses to own it and blings it
up with a Dazzle Kit, also making herself other accessories to complement her
ear-ware. JoJo sets a classroom trend and soon her best friends Rae and Mia are
sporting Dazzle Kit jewelry along with many of their other classmates. Her
third best friend, Cassie, is not sporting Dazzle Kit accessories. With a
recess fashion show coming up, JoJo isn’t seeing that Cassie’s having a hard
time. How can JoJo make sure the fashion show goes on while being the friend
Cassie needs her to be?
An
unnumbered book in the JoJo series that is youthfully stylish gets
readers thinking about what they might do if one of their friends was
struggling. It is a thoughtful story that involves teamwork and troubleshooting
in order to help a best friend feel included and seen. Advanced readers will
fly through this book in no time, making it a good one for those budding
readers ready for more challenging chapter books.
This Journal Belongs to Rapunzel: A Rapunzel Fractured
Fairy Tale (Aug. 1, 2025) by Stephanie True Peters.
Danesh
Mohiuddin, illustrator.
<This is part
of an unnumbered series.>
There is a girl who lives in a lighthouse in the middle
of an island teeming with the most delicious clams. The girl’s name is
Rapunzel. She’s never been allowed to eat a clam. She only ever remembers
living in the lighthouse and being its keeper, tasked even with switching out a
broken lightbulb in a massive storm. The only one who ever comes to visit her
is a large talking crab called Gurgle. She is unpleasant, Rapunzel has to
regularly remove barnacles from her when she visits, and she’s, well, crabby,
but Gurgle is also the only way Rapunzel gets any food. Her favorite treats are
marshmallows. When she hears, “Rapunzel! Rapunzel! Let down your hair!” and up
climbs a boy named Henry, she is in shock. Henry may be her ticket off the
little island, but first she’ll have to face off with Gurgle and her super
sharp claws.
Geared
for youth ages 6-8, this chapter book written in journal form is a fractured
fairy tale just right for this age group. It’s fast-paced and
attention-keeping. There are harrowing moments that aren’t scary and a
revelation expected to anyone familiar with the story of Rapunzel that is a
good moment to read all the same. It’s a worthy tale for confident chapter book
readers.
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