I’m twelve-ish at heart and still judge books by their covers sometimes, and the ones my friends and I trade the most are 'Dog Man' for goofs, 'Amulet' for epic quests, and 'Smile' when someone needs a comforting, true-story vibe. I like stuff with bright art and characters who aren’t perfect — that’s why 'New Kid' and 'Cardboard Kingdom' feel so real to us.
If you’re buying for a present, getting the first volume of a series is the safest bet. Also check the back pages or reviews if you want to avoid scary scenes; some adventure books have tense moments, but they’re usually more exciting than upsetting. Honestly, mix a funny one and a cool-adventure one and you’ll be set.
I still get excited walking into the kids' section and seeing what’s flying off the shelves, and lately there are some real standouts that 12-year-olds keep asking for. If a kid likes funny, easy-to-dip-into reads, 'Dog Man' and 'Big Nate' are still massive hits — they’re quick, silly, and perfect for reluctant readers who need a confidence boost. For more adventure, I’d point them toward 'Amulet' and 'The Last Kids on Earth' series; both have that page-turning energy and a nice balance of scares and humor.
For emotional, slice-of-life vibes, 'Smile', 'Guts', and 'Sisters' by Raina Telgemeier connect with a lot of middle-school feelings without being preachy, and 'New Kid' by Jerry Craft is a great choice for classroom conversations about fitting in. If a kid wants something with mythic stakes and gorgeous art, 'The Nameless City' and 'Hilda' are excellent. I also keep recommending 'Zita the Spacegirl' and 'Cardboard Kingdom' for creativity and friendship themes.
If you’re picking for a specific kid, think about what hooks them: jokes, fantasy quests, or relatable school drama. I usually let my nephew pick a mix — one funny book and one epic — and it keeps him reading way more than a single genre would, which is the whole point for me.
I've been lending books to neighborhood kids for years, and right now the ones that vanish fastest are 'New Kid' and its follow-up 'Class Act' for school-life realism, plus 'Amulet' for big-plot fantasy. For younger-taste readers who still want action, 'Dog Man' and 'The Last Kids on Earth' are perfect; they laugh and then actually finish the book, which feels like a win. Graphic novels that handle identity and emotions—like 'Smile', 'Guts', and 'Ghosts'—resonate with lots of 12-year-olds, because they show real feelings without lecturing.
I also notice a push for diverse creators: kids ask for titles with characters from different backgrounds, so 'New Kid' and 'Cardboard Kingdom' come up a lot. If you're shopping or grabbing from a library, look for first volumes or boxed sets — they make great gifts and keep momentum going when a kid falls in love with a world.
My classroom reading corner gets used nonstop, and the patterns are clear: kids want voice, visuals, and pacing. I recommend starting with single volumes that hook quickly: 'Smile' or 'Guts' will click with kids who like personal stories, while 'Amulet' and 'Hilda' pull in fans of long adventures. For humor, 'Big Nate' and 'Dog Man' are reliable laugh factories that build reading stamina. I also suggest 'The Nameless City' for kids who enjoy manga-influenced storytelling without the specific tropes of Japanese manga.
Beyond just titles, I tell parents to pay attention to themes. If a child is sensitive, pick up 'Ghosts' or 'El Deafo' for gentle handling of complex issues. If they like teamwork and creativity, 'Cardboard Kingdom' and 'Lumberjanes' (age-appropriate volumes) are fantastic. Mixing one slice-of-life book, one humor book, and one fantasy/adventure usually keeps reading fresh all month. Oh, and ask your librarian for displays of award winners—those shelves often have the best picks.
2025-09-04 09:04:43
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My Secret, My Bully, My Mates. Series
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This is a three part series all in one place.
Skylar just wants to be an asset to her pack. She's the daughter of the Beta and her brother is set to take the title after graduation. Her father wants nothing to do with her and is constantly belittling the things she does accomplish. She is the top of her class at school and the top warrior, but no one knows because she hides in the shadows as much as possible.Her bullies torture her, but never get caught. She takes them on time and time again though to protect other innocent members of her pack. Her brother and his friends ignore her existence and all she wants to do is get out of a pack that doesn't seem to want her and become an Elite Warrior for the Alpha King. She wants to feel wanted and accepted somewhere. Her whole world changes when a new girl shows up and decides to befriend Skylar after an intense training session. She brings Skylar out of the shadows and brings to light the darker side of pack members and pack culture. Can Skylar get past her past and live the life she wants?
"This isn't just a school. It's something more."
Zeda Iverson thought high school was done, but her parents insisted on Shadowbrook Academy – a mysterious school she'd never heard of – instead of college.
She soon discovers Shadowbrook hides secrets, and the four powerful princes who rule the academy are all obsessed with her.
But their attention becomes the least of her worries as a dangerous revolution looms, threatening to destroy the academy and the princes Zeda has fallen in love with.
Only Zeda holds the power to stop the coming chaos. Yet, her abilities are locked away.
Can she unlock her potential and save everyone she loves before it's too late?
Kayla is a smart, focused, top-mark student in her last two senior years of high school in a private facility for rich kids in Florida. All she wants is to get accepted to Harvard and graduate with top marks to follow the career she has set for herself. Her entire life is about becoming an independent and successful vet. She has micro-managed it and planned it to the tiniest detail. Leaving no room for a social life or living her teen years like her peers.
This year has had its ups and downs, with her stepbrother of almost ten years coming to live under the same roof after being raised apart after their parents married. The chaos and drama his appearance has brought since he despises not only his father but Kayla's mother too, has made home tense. He's a rude, defiant, and arrogant pain in her ass who is hellbent on causing trouble and listens to no one.
Dane is the polar opposite in every way - Vain, oversexed, a playboy who takes nothing seriously except booze, girls, and his motorbike while he rebels in every way against his father for ripping apart his family. Looking like a teen idol, acting like someone who doesn't need to take accountability for anything in his life, Kayla honestly cannot stand him. She sees a loser who will live on daddy's money and drink away his youth while sleeping with every girl in the county.
At 17, they have known one another most of their lives and never had any kind of friendly relationship. They have always been classmates but never friends and definitely not siblings. - but all that is about to change.
Cassandra Johnson is Pixie. Pixie is Cassandra Johnson. She's the same girl who's leading two extremely different lives.
Nobody would suspect the school's nerd as Pixie. 'Cause Pixie's a street fighter badass and the nerd does not have a single badass bone in her body.
The chances of people discovering this peculiar secret is close to none but of course this is where fate inserts the certified new boy into the equation and makes an exception for him.
Warning: heavy flow of profanities ahead. - and tears - or so I've heard.
Jace Storme is the most popular guy in school, while Maxxie Gray is the superhero-obsessed nerd....who just so happens to be obsessed with Jace. After Maxxie drops a pair of underwear, Jace says those fated words: "I like your Batman underwear." The two discover the ups and downs of young love, navigating identity, friends, and family while trying to keep their relationship alive.
The people have elected a new president. The first thing he did was conscript children into a school for future soldiers, and not a single human rights organization found out.
Selena was one of those children. She was twelve when soldiers at school picked her up from school, rode a chopper, and disappeared They brought her to a garrison along with hundreds of children like her. There, she met friends she'd do anything to protect.
I get genuinely excited when someone asks what to hand a 12-year-old who's just getting into comics — it feels like setting someone up for a lifelong hobby. If I were picking a starter stack, I'd mix light, funny slice-of-life with gentle adventure and a touch of magic so they can explore different art styles and storytelling beats.
Start with 'Yotsuba&!' for everyday wonder and laughs; it's perfect for readers who like goofy scenarios and charming characters. Pair that with 'Chi's Sweet Home' if they love animals — the short chapters are great for building reading confidence. For a gentle magical adventure, 'Cardcaptor Sakura' blends friendship, mystery, and bright, expressive art. If they like video games or strategy, 'Pokémon Adventures' offers a more narrative-driven take on familiar characters without being too complex.
If the kid is curious about school life or food, 'Silver Spoon' is a surprisingly engaging choice — it's thoughtful and teaches a lot without being preachy. For classics, 'Doraemon' and 'Astro Boy' are timeless and accessible. A word of caution: some long-running action series like 'Dragon Ball' or 'My Hero Academia' have more intense fight scenes and complex arcs; they're often fine, but I'd preview them first.
Practical tips: visit the library so they can flip through volumes, try free previews on official apps like Manga Plus or Shonen Jump, and encourage borrowing omnibus editions to avoid intimidating single-volume runs. Let them pick one purely for art and one for story — that mix kept me hooked as a kid. If they take to one title, you’ll see their reading habits bloom, and that’s the best part.