Book Riot's Read Harder Challenge discussion
2021 Read Harder Challenge
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Task 9: Read a middle grade mystery
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Book Riot
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Dec 07, 2020 10:32AM

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Might read the sequel The Guggenheim Mystery by Robin Stevens. Might read something else.
What grade level are the Enola Holmes books?


There are also some main-series mysteries: Claudia and the Phantom Phone Calls comes to mind.
Nancy Drew or The Hardy Boys would also work for this prompt - so would any of the Sweet Valley mysteries.




Author is LGBTQ+ if you are trying for the bonus challenge!

Here are some books my daughter read in middle school that I feel fit, even if some lean toward adventure/mystery
Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library
The Mysterious Benedict Society
Wildwood
The Whiz Mob and the Grenadine Kid
Small Spaces
Eventown
The Strangers
Watch Hollow

I loved the series and read the first book Peril in Paris in the follow up series (same characters), so I might read the follow up Spies in St. Petersburg


The Flavia de Luce books are actually adult with a child protagonist. They are not middle grade.

I have read that one. While there is a mystery in the book, it is not the main focus of the book. I picked it for my middle school son because it was listed on a bunch of "best mystery for middle schoolers" lists (he is a mystery lover), so I would count it. I really liked it and so did my son.

I have read that one. While there is a mystery in t..."
I was thinking of using this one for #21 "Read a children’s book that centers a disabled character but not their disability". Glad to hear it was good. I no longer have littles, so I don't know what is new in children's and middle grade.

I’m planning to use a bsc book here too




I have read that one. While there is a mystery in t..."
Oh that's great, thank you so much. I think I'll go with it as I'm trying to put together the list from books I already own / can get for free and this is available from the library.
Might see if it could also fit the children's disabled book prompt as Bonnie suggested.

Or From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, after watching Dash&Lily on Netflix I have gotten curious about it.



I do not want to discourage you from reading Brittany's AMAZING series. But, Study in Charlotte is high school age

I understand the confusion. I'm a teen services librarian. I and the youth librarian have deep discussions about where to put middle grade books: teen section or children's. Brittany's series landed squarely in teen without hesitation.
We rely a lot on library review journals for age help. So, I double-checked before I posted here: School Library Journal says grade 9-up; Kirkus says age 14-18.
Do read the books ... they truly are wonderful!


Loved this book. I'm reading the second in the series for my challenge pick!




Same!


I understand the confusion. I'm a teen services librarian. I and the youth librarian ..."
If you have a Half Price Books where you live, you will go nuts in there with their interpretation of young adult vs teen. They have basically killed "juvenile books" and named them young adult. It makes me nuts to see Magic Tree House in Young Adult!

Me too.

Books mentioned in this topic
The Westing Game (other topics)The Whispering Skull (other topics)
The Screaming Staircase (other topics)
The Great Trouble: A Mystery of London, the Blue Death, and a Boy Called Eel (other topics)
Goldie Vance Vol. 2 (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Lemony Snicket (other topics)Bill Wallace (other topics)
Enid Blyton (other topics)
Katherine Woodfine (other topics)
Siobhan Dowd (other topics)
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