At the Teach Jake to Read conference I recently
attended, teachers were talking enthusiastically about reading to their students.
"At first they grumble but then they get right into it," one person
said. "We gather on beanbags and it's a calming, bringing-together
time," another said. Some teachers used Kindles. Some used iPads.
Others preferred paper and, if a student missed a class, copied the missed
pages, so s/he could catch up.
Hatchet is a tried and true favorite. It's an exciting, believable story of one boy's survival against the elements and it's fairly easy reading. The author lives in the wilds and, in the perfect small details, it shows.
Here's a new one I'm interested in. It's getting rave reviews and is the first of a trilogy.
This one might be for a younger teen audience but I've seen this series inspire readers who were really switched off. Skulduggery Pleasant is a skeleton detective.