We are happy to announce our Seventh Annual Battle of the Books competition. The Battle of the Books is a voluntary reading incentive program for 4th, 5th, and 6th grade students. The purpose is to encourage students to read good books and have fun while competing against their peers
2023-2024 Battle of the Books Parent information and Permission Slip
Battle of the Books Presentation
Battle of the Books Past Teams Slideshow (Coming Soon)
The Battle competition will be held Thursday, April 18, 2024 at 6:00 pm in the Middle School Gymnasium
Students participate by forming their own teams of 4-5 students and reading books from the current Mark Twain Award List.
Students have been reading the books since the beginning of school. They may form their own teams as soon as they turn in their signed permission slip. (permission slips will be available soon)
Nothing! This is absolutely free to students.
The students gain knowledge and enjoyment from reading good books, sharing them with friends, and participating in teamwork.
Once students return their signed permission slips, they may form their own teams. Students may form teams of four to five players. However, the team may only consist of students in grades 4-6. The team may be a group of one grade level or mixed between the three. The students will also have to choose their own team name. Team names must be approved by the school librarian.
A typical “Battle” is a tournament or game in which student teams earn points by answering questions about the books they have read. The students play several rounds and the team with the most points wins.
The books for this year’s Battle of the Books are from the Mark Twain Award nominees list. They are:
A Place to Hang the Moon In World War II England, orphaned siblings William, Edmund, and Anna are evacuated from London to live in the countryside, where they bounce from home to home in search of someone willing to adopt them permanently. |
Once Upon a Camel In 1910, Zada the camel treks across the West Texas desert to save two baby kestrels from an approaching haboob, a mountain-sized storm. She shares stories of adventures from her youth in Turkey to keep them calm. |
One Kid's Trash When his father moves them halfway across Colorado, eleven-year-old Hugo O'Donnell is surprised that his remarkable talent for garbology makes him popular for the first time in his life. |
Pony Twelve-year-old Silas is awoken in the dead of night by three menacing horsemen who take his father away. Silas is left shaken, scared, and alone, except for the presence of his companion, Mittenwool, who happens to be a ghost. When a pony shows up at his door, Silas decides to leave his home and embark on a perilous journey to find his father. Along the way, he will face his fears and explore the unfathomable mysteries of the world around him. R. J. Palacio spins a harrowing yet distinctly beautiful coming-of-age story about the power of love and the ties that bind us across distance and time. With the poignant depth of War Horse and the singular voice of True Grit, this is one of those rare books poised to become an instant classic for readers of all ages. |
Six Feet Below Zero Rosie and Baker need to keep up the illusion that their Great Grammy is alive before the Grim Hesper takes away the only home they have ever known. |
Tangled Up in Luck If you told Sloane Osburn and Amelia Miller-Poe that they'd be hiding in their town cemetery from an evil mastermind, they would have been hard-pressed to believe you. If you also told them that person was intent on beating them to a cache of long-lost jewels using nothing more than a slingshot and wicked aim, they'd have been sure you got your facts wrong. Finally, if you told them they'd be doing all of this as friends, they would have been convinced you needed medical attention. |
The Hidden Knife After a tragedy, Vicky bands together with new friends to seek justice in the dangerous Glass City, where the magical gargoyles are always watching. |
The Lion of Mars Bell has spent his whole life (all eleven years of it) on Mars. But he's still just a regular kid-he loves cats, cake and is curious about the secrets the adults in the US colony are keeping, like why don't we have contact with anyone on the other Mars colonies? Why are they so isolated? When a virus breaks out and the grown-ups all fall ill, Bell and the other children are the only ones who can help. It's up to Bell, a regular kid in a very different world, to uncover the truth, save his family and possibly unite an entire planet. |
The Night Ride Sonnia wants to protect the horses she's grown to care for, but she's only a kid from the poor side of town--considered expendable, just like the horses. If she keeps her head down, soon she can buy her dream horse from the royal stables, Ricochet, and get him out of there--and keep supporting her family. But would she be able to live with herself? |
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Worst-Case Collin In the two years since his mother was killed in an automobile crash, Colin has been anticipating further disasters, writing down what to do in the event of an avalanche or mentally practicing the Heimlich maneuver just in case. The real trouble is that his mathematician father is obsessed with a classic math problem and has a hoarding problem spiraling out of control, leaving Colin desperate to hide this chaos from his friends and everyone else, even as he struggles with his grief. |