Each year, Missouri schoolchildren in grades 4-8 vote for their
favorite book from a list of nominated titles. The Mark Twain Award is awarded to the author of this
book by the Missouri Association of
School Librarians. |
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| 2008 - 2009 Mark Twain Award Nominees |
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The Wright 3 by Blue Balliett |
| In the midst of a series of unexplained accidents and mysterious coincidences, sixth-graders Calder, Petra, and Tommy lead their classmates in an attempt to keep Frank Lloyd Wright's famous Robie House from being demolished. |
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Cornelia and the Audacious Escapades of the Somerset Sisters by Lesley M. Blume |
| A lonely city girl, Cornelia is told stories by an elderly adventuress that take her from Paris to Morocco to England and beyond. |
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Uncharted Waters by Leslie Bulion |
| Jonah's lies and his secret fear of the sea threaten to ruin his month at the shore with his favorite uncle, but a grumpy marina storekeeper and an attractive young college student help turn the summer into an adventure he will never forget. |
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Million Dollar Putt by Dan Gutman |
| Assisted by his neighbor, Birdie, blind thirteen-year-old Ed "Bogie" Bogard will win one million dollars if he can sink a ten-foot putt in Hawaii's fifth annual Angus Killick Memorial Tournament. |
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Rules by Cynthia Lord |
| Frustrated at life with an autistic brother, twelve-year-old Catherine longs for a normal existence but her world is further complicated by a friendship with an young paraplegic. |
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A Small White Scar by K.A. Nuzum |
| Fifteen-year-old Will Bennon leaves his family and begins life as a cowboy, but his mentally retarded twin brother follows him and joins the journey. |
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Archer's Quest by Linda Sue Park |
| Twelve-year-old Kevin Kim helps Chu-mong, a legendary king of ancient Korea, return to his own time. |
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Moon Shadow by Chris Platt |
| Thirteen-year-old Callie is determined to save and raise a beautiful but sickly mustang foal after the filly is orphaned in a Nevada desert round-up. |
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Sea of Monsters by Rick Riordin |
| Demi-god Percy Jackson and his friends must journey into the Sea of Monsters to save their camp. But first Percy will discover a secret that makes him wonder whether being claimed as Poseidon's son is an honor or a cruel joke. |
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Fairies of Nutfolk Wood by Barbara Bentler Ullman |
| After her parents divorce and she moves to the country with her mother, fourth-grader Willa Jane, anxious and unhappy with the changes in her life, discovers a world of little people called Nutfolk living in the woods around her new home. |
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Finest Kind by Lea Wait |
| Jake's father has lost his job and savings in the economic panic of 1837. The family leaves its comfortable Boston surroundings and takes up residence in a dingy farmhouse in Wiscasset, ME, where the 12-year-old finds himself responsible for the household. With his father working as a lumberman and his mother caring for his younger brother, who has cerebral palsy, Jake carries the additional burden of keeping his sibling's existence a secret. |
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Counting on Grace by Elizabeth Winthrop |
| It's 1910 in Pownal, Vermont. At 12 Grace and her best friend Arthur must go to work in the mill, helping their mothers work the looms. Together Grace and Arthur write a secret letter to the Child Labor Board about underage children working in the mill. A few weeks later, Lewis Hine, a famous reformer arrives undercover to gather evidence. Grace meets him and appears in some of his photographs, changing her life forever. |
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| 2007-2008 Mark Twain Award Nominees |
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The
Naked Mole Rat Letters by Mary Amato |
When her father begins a long-distance romance with a Washington, D.C.
zookeeper, twelve-year-old Frankie sends fabricated email letters to the
zookeeper in an attempt to end the relationship. |
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Wing
Nut by M. J. Auch |
| When twelve-year-old Grady and his mother
relocate yet again, they find work taking care of an elderly man, who
teaches Grady about cars, birds, and what it means to have a home. |
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On
Etruscan Time by Tracy Barrett |
| While spending the summer on an
archaeological dig near Florence, Italy, with his mother, eleven-year-old
Hector meets an Etruscan boy who needs help to foil his treacherous uncle's
plan to make him a human sacrifice--1,000 years in the past. |
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Shakespeare's
Secret by Elise Broach |
| Named after a character in a Shakespeare
play, misfit sixth-grader Hero becomes interested in exploring this unusual
connection because of a valuable diamond supposedly hidden in her new
house, an intriguing neighbor, and the unexpected attention of the most
popular boy in school. |
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Do You Know the Monkey Man by Dori
Hillestad Butler |
| For thirteen-year-old Samantha, life
consists of too many unanswered questions. Why has her father not tried to
contact her all these years? How could he have allowed her twin sister to
drown in Clearwater Quarry when they were only toddlers? And how can
Samantha's mother expect her to accept some man she hardly knows as her new
father? |
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Lunch
Money by Andrew Clements |
| Twelve-year-old Greg, who has always been
good at moneymaking projects, is surprised to find himself teaming up with
his lifelong rival, Maura, to create a series of comic books to sell at
school. |
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Double
Identity by Margaret Peterson Haddix |
| Thirteen-year-old Bethany's parents have
always been overprotective, but when they suddenly drop out of sight with
no explanation, leaving her with an aunt she never knew existed, Bethany
uncovers shocking secrets that make her question everything she thought she
knew about herself and her family. |
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Defiance by Valerie Hobbs |
| While vacationing in the country,
eleven-year-old Toby, a cancer patient, learns some important lessons about
living and dying from an elderly poet and her cow. |
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Gentle's Holler by Kerry Madden |
| 12-year-old Livy longs to see the world
outside the small mountain house she shares with her parents and eight
siblings. Being a part of such a large family is an issue. Her father's
pipe dream of writing a hit song is another. He spends his time trying to
sell his music rather than working at a paying job. Gentle, Livy's younger
sister, is blind. The family has many issues but few resources to deal with
them. How Livy makes her way in these circumstances is the heart of this
story. |
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Deadly Drive by David Patneaude |
| Casey is driven to suceed on her new
basketball team, partly because her mother was a star player when she was a
student at University of Iowa. Nine years ago a hit-and-run driver killed
Casey's mother and Casey suffered an injured right arm. Casey swears
revenge if she ever finds the killer. Complicating matters, every year on
the anniversary of her mother's death, Casey receives an anonymous envelope
full of money. Is it from her mother's killer? Is the killer someone Casey
actually knows? |
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Project
Mulberry by Linda Sue Park |
While working on a project for an after-school club, Julia, a Korean
American girl, and her friend Patrick learn not just about silkworms, but
also about tolerance, prejudice, friendship, patience, and more. Between
the chapters are short dialogues between the author and main character
about the writing of the book. |
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The
Kingdom Keepers by Ridley Pearson |
| Finn Whitman, an Orlando teen, is hired to
be hologramed as a Disney World park "guide" but soon finds himself being
transported into the Magic Kingdom in the dead of night to help fight a
group of Disney villains, led by Maleficent, who want to take over Disney
World--and maybe more. |
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The
Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan |
| Twelve-year-old Percy Jackson learns he is a
demigod, the son of a mortal woman and Poseidon, god of the sea. His mother
sends him to a summer camp for demigods where he and his new friends set
out on a quest to prevent a war between the gods. |
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First
Boy by Gary Schmidt |
| Dragged into the political turmoil of a
presidential election year, fourteen-year-old Cooper Jewett, who runs a New
Hampshire dairy farm since his grandfather's death, stands up for himself
and makes it clear whose first boy he really is. |
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Cryptid
Hunters by Roland Smith |
| Twins, Grace and Marty, along with a
mysterious uncle, are dropped into the middle of the Congolese jungle in
search of their missing photojournalist parents. |
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Jack's
Run by Roland Smith |
| Kidnapped by drug czar Alonzo Asnar and held
hostage in Argentina, Jack and his sister Joanne attempt a daring escape
while their parents, aided by some old friends, set out to rescue
them. |
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The
Search for Belle Prater by Ruth White |
| In 1955, Woodrow and his cousin Gypsy
befriend a new girl in their seventh grade class in rural Virginia, and the
three of them set off to find Woodrow's missing mother, encountering
unlikely and intriguing coincidences along the way. |
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Each
Little Bird that Sings by Deborah Wiles |
| Comfort Snowberger is well acquainted with
death since her family runs the funeral parlor in their small southern
town, but even so the ten-year-old is unprepared for the series of
heart-wrenching events that begins on the first day of Easter vacation with
the sudden death of her beloved great-uncle Edisto. |
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Black
Storm Comin' by Diane Lee Wilson |
| Twelve-year-old Colton, son of a black
mother and a white father, takes a job with the Pony Express in 1860 after
his father abandons the family on their California-bound wagon train, and
risks his life to deliver an important letter that may affect the growing
conflict between the North and South. |
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When Ratboy Lived Next Door by Chris
Woodworth |
| When his strange family moves into her quiet
southern Indiana town, sixth-grader Lydia Carson initially despises her new
neighbor and classmate, who seems as wild as the raccoon that is his
closest companion. |
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| Past Mark Twain Award Winners |
| 2007 - Abduction! by Peg Kehret |
| Thirteen-year-old Bonnie has a feeling of
foreboding on the very day that her six-year-old brother Matt and their dog
Pookie are abducted, and she becomes involved in a major search effort as
well as a frightening adventure. |
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| 2006 - The
City of Ember by Jeanne Duprau |
| In the year 241, twelve-year-old
Lina trades jobs on Assignment Day to be a Messenger to run to new places
in her decaying but beloved city, perhaps even to glimpse Unknown
Regions. |
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| 2005 - Wenny Has Wings by Janet Lee Carey |
| Having had a near-death
experience in the accident that killed his younger sister, eleven-year-old
Will tries to cope with the situation by writing her letters. |
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| 2004 - Zach's Lie by
Roland Smith |
| When Jack Osborne is befriended
by his school's custodian and a Basque girl, he begins to adjust to his
family's sudden move to Elko, Nevada, after entering the Witness Security
Program, but the drug cartel against which his father will testify is
determined to track them down. |
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| 2003 - Because
of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCamillo |
| Ten-year-old India Opal Buloni
describes her first summer in the town of Naomi, Florida, and all the good
things that happen to her because of her big ugly dog Winn-Dixie. |
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| 2002 - Dork in
Disguise by Carol Gorman |
| Starting middle school in a new
town, brainy Jerry Flack changes his image from “dork” to
“cool kid,” only to discover that he’d rather be
himself. |
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| 2001 - Holes by Louis
Sachar |
| As further evidence of his
family’s bad fortune which they attribute to a curse on a distant
relative, Stanley Yelnats is sent to a hellish correctional camp in the
Texas desert where he finds his first real friend, a treasure, and a new
sense of himself. |
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| 2000 - Saving
Shiloh by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor |
| Sixth-grader Marty and his
family try to help their rough neighbor, Judd Travers, change his mean
ways, even though their West Virginia community continues to expect the
worst of him. |
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| 1999 - Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio by Peg Kehret |
| The author describes her battle
against polio when she was thirteen and her efforts to overcome its
debilitating effects. |
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| 1998 - Titanic
Crossing by Barbara Williams |
| In 1912, thirteen-year-old
Albert considers his younger sister a pest, but things change when they
travel with their mother and uncle aboard the Titanic and are caught up in
its tragic sinking. |
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| 1997 - A Time For
Andrew by Mary Downing Hahn |
| When he goes to spend the summer
with his great-aunt in the family’s old house, eleven-year-old Drew
is drawn eighty years into the past to trade places with his
great-great-uncle who is dying of diptheria. |
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1996 - The
Ghosts of Mercy Manor by Betty Ren Wright |
| Twelve-year-old Gwen, an orphan
who comes to live with the Mercy family, discovers that the house is
haunted by the ghost of a sad-looking young girl and is determined to solve
the mystery behind her appearances. |
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1995 - The
Man Who Loved Clowns by June Rae Wood |
| Thirteen-year-old Delrita, whose
unhappy life has caused her to hide from the world, loves her uncle Punky
but sometimes feels ashamed of his behavior because he has Down’s
syndrome. |
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| 1994 - Shiloh by Phyllis
Reynolds Naylor |
| When he finds a lost beagle in
the hills behind his West Virginia home, Marty tries to hide it from his
family and the dog’s real owner, a mean-spirited man known to shoot
deer out of season and to mistreat his dogs. |
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| 1993 - Maniac Magee by Jerry Spinelli |
| After his parents die, Jeffrey
Lionel Magee’s life becomes legendary, as he accomplishes athletic
and other feats which awe his contemporaries. |
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| 1992 - The
Doll in the Garden by Mary Downing Hahn |
| Ater Ashley and Kristi find an
antique doll buried in old Miss Cooper’s garden, they discover that
they can enter a ghostly turn-of-the-century world by going through a hole
in the hedge. |
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| 1991 - All About
Sam by Lois Lowry |
| The adventures of Sam, Anastasia
Krupnik’s younger brother, from his first day as a newborn through
his mischievous times as a toddler. |
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1990 - There's a Boy in the Girls’ Bathroom by Lewis Sachar |
| An unmanageable, but lovable,
eleven-year-old misfit learns to believe in himself when he gets to know
the new school counselor, who is a sort of misfit too. |
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1989 - Sixth-Grade
Sleepover by Eve Bunting |
| Janey worries that the sixth
grade Rabbit Reading Club’s all-night sleepover will expose her fear
of the dark, but it turns out that she is not the only member with a
secret. |
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| 1988 - Baby-sitting is a Dangerous Job by Willo Davis Roberts |
| A baby sitter and her three
willful charges make a formidable team to outwit their surprised
kidnappers. |
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| 1987 - The War
With Grandpa by Robert K. Smith |
| Upset that he has to give up the
room he loves to his grandfather, Pete decides to declare war in an attempt
to get it back. |
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| 1986 - The
Dollhouse Murders by Betty Ren Wright |
| A dollhouse filled with a
ghostly light in the middle of the night and dolls that have moved from
where she last left them lead Amy and her retarded sister to unravel the
mystery surrounding grisly murders that took place years ago. |
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1985 - A
Bundle of Sticks by Pat Rhoads Mauser |
| At the mercy of the class bully,
a fifth grader is sent to a martial arts school where he learns techniques
to defend himself as well as a philosophy that allows him not to
fight. |
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| 1984 - Secret Life of the Underwear Champ by Betty Miles |
| Ten-year-old Larry is
“discovered” on the street and asked to appear in a television
commercial. Only later does he find out what he is advertising. |
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| 1983 - The
Girl With the Silver Eyes by Willo Davis Roberts |
| A 10-year-old girl, who has
always looked different from other children, discovers that she not only
has unusual powers but that there are others like her. |
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| 1982 - The Boy Who Saw
Bigfoot by Marian T. Place |
| A ten-year-old boy, placed once
again with new foster parents, becomes involved in a search for
Bigfoot. |
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| 1981 - Soup for
President by Robert Newton Peck |
| Rob manages Soup’s
campaign for class president in their small Vermont town. |
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| 1980 - The Pinballs by Betsy Byars |
| Three lonely foster children
learn to care about themselves and each other. |
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| 1979 - The Champion of Merrimack County by Roger Drury |
| The discovery of a bike-riding
mouse in the bathtub is just the beginning of a series of humorous
communications for the Berryfield family. |
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| 1978 - Ramona the
Brave by Beverly Cleary |
| Six-year-old Ramona tries to
cope with an unsympathetic first-grade teacher. |
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| 1977 - The
Ghost on Saturday Night by Sid Fleischman |
| A thick tule fog and a
ghost-raising lead to more excitement and reward than Opie had counted
on. |
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| 1976 - The Home
Run Trick by Scott Corbett |
| The Panthers try desperately to
convincingly lose a baseball game when they find out the winners must play
a girls’ team. |
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| 1975 - How to
Eat Fried Worms by Thomas Rockwell |
| Two boys set out to prove that
worms can make a delicious meal. |
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| 1974 - It’s a Mile From
Here to Glory by Robert C. Lee |
| A shy undersized
sixteen-year-old finds himself suddenly popular when he becomes star of the
track team. |
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| 1973 - Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C. O'Brien |
| Having no one to help her with
her problems, a widowed mouse visits the rats whose former imprisonment in
a laboratory made them wise and long lived. |
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1972 - Sounder by
William H. Armstrong |
| Angry and humiliated when his
sharecropper father is jailed for stealing food for his family, a young
black boy grows in courage and understanding by learning to read and with
the help of the devoted dog Sounder. |
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