Skip to main content

Content Finder

Audience
Content Type
Grade Level
Topic
Hard Driving: The Wendell Scott Story
Brian Donovan

Hard Driving: The Wendell Scott Story: The American Odyssey of NASCAR's First Black Driver

Genre:
Biography
Age Level:
YA

Wendell Scott figured he was signing up for trouble when he became NASCAR’s version of Jackie Robinson in the segregated 1950s. For the next two decades, Scott chased a dream through crashes, health problems, money troubles, and repeated encounters with discrimination. Hard Driving is the dramatic story of one man’s dogged determination to live the life he loved, and to compete, despite daunting obstacles, at the highest level of his sport.

 

So Hard to Say by Alex Sanchez
Alex Sanchez

So Hard to Say

Genre:
Fiction, Romance
Age Level:
Middle Grade

A middle-school boy begins to question his sexual orientation, while dealing with the crush his female friend, 13-year old Hispanic Xio, has on him. Sanchez is sensitive and insightful when talking about both gay and Hispanic culture, and he’s created a delightful heroine in Xio.

Hardwear: Jewelry from a Toolbox
Hannah Rogge

Hardwear: Jewelry from a Toolbox

Genre:
Nonfiction
Age Level:
YA

Like the style challenges on Project Runway, this book takes unusual objects (items found in a hardware store, like washers, bolts, etc.) and turns them into attractive jewelry. Even beginners will find projects at their level.

Harriet the Spy
Louise Fitzhugh

Harriet the Spy

Genre:
Classics, Fiction, Mystery / Crime
Age Level:
Middle Grade

Eleven-year-old Harriet follows her spy route every day, recording her findings (findings for her eyes only) in her notebook. When her classmates find the notebook, Harriet has to deal with the consequences. A few years ago, the movie gave this classic book new life, but it is still a timeless and charming read for older elementary readers.

Harriet Tubman
Whit Taylor

Harriet Tubman: Toward Freedom

Genre:
Biography
Age Level:
Middle Grade

Harriet Tubman did something exceptionally courageous: She escaped slavery. Then she did something impossible: She went back. She underwent some thirteen missions to rescue around seventy enslaved people, using and expanding a network of abolitionists that became known as the Underground Railroad. She spent her life as an activist, speaking out for Black people and women’s suffrage. This graphic novel of story is detailed and authentic. Illustrated with care for the historical record, it offers insight into the life and mind of Tubman, displaying her as a woman with an unshakable desire to break the chains of an unjust society. Introduction by Carole Boston Weatherford.