Until then, if I add 300-400 new books a year (my budget is $8 per student per year, and we have about 650 students. I also donate about $3,000 a year in books that I get to review to my school district. ) I need to get rid of that many. And that, my friends, is REALLY HARD, especially since I have read all of the books. Making it even harder is that the books that are in the worst shape are always the BEST books, and the books in the best shape might be that way because no one ever picks them up. Duplicate copies of once popular titles are easy pickings, and so are fantasy series. As much as I miss Byng's 2002 Molly Moon or Gliori's Pure Dead Magic series, it was six books long. No one was reading them. This year, things like Aguirre's Enclave, Healey's The Hero's Guide series, and Morris' Squire's Tales all were sent away.
This makes it even harder to buy fantasy books. MY students aren't reading them. If your students ARE, definitely take a look at these titles. Keep in mind also that my students seem especially allergic to books about pirates, carnivals, and dinosaurs in fictional books, with the rare exception of Martin's The Ark Plan.
I just report what I see.
Calonita, Jen. The Curse Breaker (Isle of Ever #2)
Kavvadias, Philip. Mission Microraptor
March 17, 2026 by Aladdin
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
This was particularly British and reminded me vaguely of Flinn's 2008 A Kiss in Time, which I just weeded. Bringing home a fairy tale princess from Europe, bringing home a microraptor from a field trip in the Alps... I can see this being popular with dinosaur fans, but not at my school.
March 10, 2026 by Sourcebooks Young Readers
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
The first book was fun, but there is at least one more title on the way. My students do love 12 to 22, and this author's The Retake.
From the Publisher:
"Book Two of the Isle of Ever series raises the stakes in the game to find a treasure! Now that Benny’s found her ancestor’s friends on the secret island, she must break the curse that keeps them from being mortal kids, while also trying to outwit those who want the treasure for their own purposes.
Having finally reached the Isle of Ever and the immortal kids who live there, Benny thinks she’s won the game of clues her ancestor Evelyn set out for her in her will—only she can’t prove it yet! Because it turns out Evelyn has more secrets in her diary and a new game for Benny: to find the lost piece of pirate treasure needed to break the curse once and for all. It won't be easy: one of her best friends has betrayed her; her new friends from the island are just discovering twenty-first century life, and a mysterious stranger mentioned in Evelyn’s diary has somehow turned up in present-day Greenport! And Benny has to figure it all out in just a few days, before Isle of Ever disappears again for another two hundred years.
"Book Two of the Isle of Ever series raises the stakes in the game to find a treasure! Now that Benny’s found her ancestor’s friends on the secret island, she must break the curse that keeps them from being mortal kids, while also trying to outwit those who want the treasure for their own purposes.
Having finally reached the Isle of Ever and the immortal kids who live there, Benny thinks she’s won the game of clues her ancestor Evelyn set out for her in her will—only she can’t prove it yet! Because it turns out Evelyn has more secrets in her diary and a new game for Benny: to find the lost piece of pirate treasure needed to break the curse once and for all. It won't be easy: one of her best friends has betrayed her; her new friends from the island are just discovering twenty-first century life, and a mysterious stranger mentioned in Evelyn’s diary has somehow turned up in present-day Greenport! And Benny has to figure it all out in just a few days, before Isle of Ever disappears again for another two hundred years.
March 17, 2026 by Aladdin
E ARC provided by Edelweiss Plus
This was particularly British and reminded me vaguely of Flinn's 2008 A Kiss in Time, which I just weeded. Bringing home a fairy tale princess from Europe, bringing home a microraptor from a field trip in the Alps... I can see this being popular with dinosaur fans, but not at my school.
From the Publisher:
"A boy tries to protect his new dinosaur companion by hiding out in the wilderness in this hilarious and action-packed first book in the R.A.P.T.O.R. middle grade series perfect for fans of Alex Rider and Jurassic Park.
Finn is more of a video games and pizza guy than a hiking guy. So when his class takes a field trip to the Alps, he and his assigned partner Milo take a shortcut back to the hotel. On the way, they stumble upon an egg buried in ice and decide to take it with them.
Later that night, the egg hatches and a baby Microraptor is brought back from extinction. Finn quickly bonds with the hatchling—who he names Arty—but he’s not the only one interested in the paleontological anomaly. From agents of the British Museum of Natural History to corporate goons for hire, everyone wants to get their hands on the discovery of the century.
Before they know it, Finn and Milo are on the run to protect both their lives and Arty’s, seeking refuge in the woods. It seems like hiking is in their future after all…

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