Mary Anne Mohanraj

 

Recommended Children's SF and Fantasy

This list started as my own personal favorites, but others have kindly contributed and so it has grown. In the last few years, there's been an explosion in wonderful YA SF/F, and I don't think there's any way I could possibly keep up. But here's a starting point for some older, much beloved works. I'd appreciate help in approximating age ranges on these titles. Please don't send me titles unless you think they are excellent books that you would eagerly recommend to your little brother or sister. :-) This is not meant to be an exhaustive list -- merely a sampling of some of the best available. Thank you!

You may also want to check out Jed Hartman's list -- while it's not sf/f focused, it's an excellent annotated list of children's books, with a fair number of sf/f pieces in there.

This work is copyright M.A. Mohanraj 2000, all rights reserved. Please don't repost this or make it publically accessible via FTP, mail server, or archive site without my explicit permission. Permissions are generally cheerfully granted upon request. Permission is granted for one hard copy for personal use. This work was last updated on May 14, 2002.




Adams, Richard (F) (teen)
	Watership Down (although the protagonists are intelligent animals,
	this is really a book for older readers, dealing with fairly serious
	themes; recommended and much beloved)

Aiken, Joan (F) (4th grade and up?)
(mostly realistic novels set in an alternate late 19th century England;
strong female characters; generally rather revolutionary/political)
	The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (made into a film) (plucky children
		reduced to unfair poverty)
	Black Hearts in Battersea (made into a TV series) (same kids
		undoing a plot against nobility)
	Night Birds on Nantucket (Dido out on the ocean, more plots)
	The Cuckoo Tree
	The Stolen Lake
	Dido and Pa
	Is Underground (Is, Dido's sister, about a secret midnight train
		to Playland, a place of fun and frolic and dancing every
		night...or so they say)
	Cold Shoulder Road (Is and her cousin Arun are looking for Arun's
		mother, who has disappeared, and the members of the 
		Silent Sect she belonged to aren't talking...)
	Midnight is a Place (probably the most revolutionary/political)
	The Faithless Lollybird (short stories)
	Up the Chimney Down (ditto)
	The Harp of Fishbones (ditto)
	Mice and Mendelsson (two mice and a pony)
	Arabel and Mortimer (girl and talking raven)

Alcock, Vivien (F)
	The Dancing Bush (2nd - 4th grade)
	The Mysterious Mr. Ross (5th up)
	The Stonewalkers (5th up)

Alexander, Lloyd (F) (3rd grade and up?)
	The Foundling and Other Tales (prequel to Taran's birth,
		includes "Coll and His White Pig" and "The Truthful Harp")
	* The Chronicles of Prydain (I adore this series.  Taran is 
	Assistant Pig-Keeper, a very likeable boy who learns quite a 
	lot and grows up to be an impressive man -- all the while 
	battling the forces of evil (who are more complex than at 
	first suspected.  His love, Eilonwy, is spunky and charming.)
		The Book of Three
		The Black Cauldron
		The Castle of Llyr
		Taran Wanderer
		The High King (Newbery Medal winner)
	The Westmark Series (Older children involved in political 
	turmoil; must cope with killing people, people trying to kill 
	them, people trying to crown them, trying to run an 
	underground newspaper, etc. and so on, recommended)
		Westmark
		The Kestrel
		The Beggar Queen
	The Wizard in the Tree (a "good" orphan and wizard battle
		against evil)
	The Remarkable Journey of Prince Jen (Prince Jen takes six gifts
		to court -- a saddle, a sword, a paint box, a bowl,
		a kite and a flute, and stumbles into a series of
		misfortunes, aided only by Mafoo and Voyaging Moon...)
	The First Two Lives of Lukas-Kasha (a village boy is plunged
		into a tub of water by a visiting magician and is washed
		ashore in a new land where he is hailed as king)
	The Marvelous Misadventures of Sebastian (a young fiddler loses
		his job, rescues a cat, is rescued, meets a princess and 
		comes into possession of a magical violin...)
	The Cat Who Wished to Be a Man
	The Town Cats and Other Tales
	The Vesper Holly Adventures (adventures of a Philadelphia girl,
	set some decades ago)
		The Illyrian Adventure
		The El Dorado Adventure (Vesper defends a tribe of Indians
			in Central America against earthquakes, volcanoes,
			and a profit-minded businessman...)
		The Drackenberg Adventure
		The Jedera Adventure
		The Philadelphia Adventure (in Lloyd Alexander's home town)

Anthony, Piers (SF/F) (7th - 8th grade)
	The Apprentice Adept (great puzzles in this series)
		Split Infinity (a split world and the young serf,
			Stile, who travels back and forth between them.  One 
			is a world of wealth and games; the other a world of 
			magic -- both worlds are trying to kill him.)
		Blue Adept (Stile continues his journey to win the
			great games and master his magical skills as
			the Blue Adept.)
		Juxtaposition (Stile masters the games and the magic
			-- and now his problems really start.)

Appleton, Victor; Howard Garis; James D. Lawrence; et.al. (SF)
	The Tom Swift books (delightfully improbable adventures of a 
		brave boy with an inventor for a friend)

Avi (SF)
        Something Upstairs (Kenny Huldorf moved into a house that was
                a historical landmark.  Something upstairs took him on
                an amazing time travel adventure.  He told his story
                to Avi.  Avi wrote it and believes it is true.)

Banks, Lynne Reid (F)
        The Fairy Rebel (a fairy who wants to wear jeans and make some
                of her own rules about how to live her life)
        An Indian in the Cupboard (Omri gets a used plastic Indian and
                a discarded cupboard for his birthday.  With the magic
                of an old key, his cupboard can make plastic things
                real.  Omri deals with the responsibility for a 
		living being from another culture.  The Indian in the
		book is a stereotyped 50's Indian.  If you can get
		past that, the story and character development is 
		wonderful).

Barron, T.A. (F)
	Heartlight (girl travels around the universe and saves all of
		mankind and the sun)
	The Ancient One (sequel to Heartlight; girl travels back in time)
	The Merlin Effect (girl gets sucked into a whirlpool, discovers a
		magical world and meets and saves the legendary Merlin)
	The Lost Years of Merlin Trilogy (tells the story of the legendary
	Merlin when he was young and has no memory, which he eventually
	gains back)
		The Lost Years of Merlin
		The Seven Songs of Merlin
		The Fires of Merlin (upcoming Fall 1998)

Baum, L. Frank (F)
	The Oz books
	The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus

Beagle, Peter S. (F)
	The Last Unicorn (also a lovely animated movie - hard to
		describe -- a unicorn is the protagonist, but the 
		story is about many things -- passing away of beauty, 
		despair, regret...)
	A Fine and Private Place (more of an adult book)

Bellairs, John (F)
	The House with a Clock in Its Walls (followed by 2 sequels)
	The Face in the Frost (his adult book, more serious)

Boston, L.M.
(child lives with his grandmother in her old house, Green Knowe.
The books are a mixture of stories she tells, everyday life,
and direct and indirect contacts with the people in her stories,
mostly children who lived there a hundred or so years ago.  In later
books a witch moves into the neighborhood.)
	The Children of Green Knowe (one in a set of five)
	Treasure of Green Knowe
	The River at Green Knowe
	An Enemy at Green Knowe
	A Stranger at Green Knowe (the strange adventure of a boy and
		gorilla - very touching)
	The Castle of Yew
	The Sea Egg
	Nothing Said

Brooks, Terry (F) (7th - 8th grade)	
	First King of Shannara (prequel to Sword; the need for a
		magical sword has arisen; this is the story of 
		the perilous journey undertaken to create the Sword 
		of Shannara and to battle the evil Warlock Lord.)
	The Sword of Shannara (A seemingly hopeless quest of a simple
		man against the greatest power of evil the world had 
		ever known.)

Cameron, Eleanor (SF) (3rd grade)
	The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet
	...other Mushroom Planet books
	The Green and Burning Tree (nonfiction re: kids lit)
	The Seed and the Vision (ditto)
	The Court of the Stone Children (a very tightly constructed time 
		fantasy, written after the Mushroom Planet books)

Carmody, Isobelle
        Chronicles of Obernewtyn
                Obernewtyn
                The Farseekers
                Ashling
        The Gathering (Australian Children's Book of the Year winner)
        Scatterling

Chant, Joy (F)
	Red Moon, Black Mountain (3rd and up)
	Grey Mane of Morning (around 5th to 6th grade and up, "romance"
	     figures in plot to some degree)

Christopher, John (SF)
	The Prince in Waiting (Tale of thirteen-year-old Luke, destined to
		become "The Prince of Princes", a boy who has no reason
		to suspect that his role is about to change...)
	Tripods series (This series always disturbed me.  Rather bleak,
	boy against the aliens if I remember correctly, yet powerful)
		When the Tripods Came (prequel telling of original invasion)
		The White Mountains (Will, a young hero escapes a
			mechanical tyranny of the future)
		The City of Gold and Lead (boys who escaped are now
			training to compete in an athletic event that will 
			screen candidates to serve the tyrants in the City
			of the Tripods)
		The Pool of Fire (Will and the small group of free people
			attempt to destroy the Masters' three great cities
			before a space ship destined to doom the planet
			arrives)

Clement, Hal (SF)
	Needle
	Mission of Gravity
	Ice World
	Still River

Cooper, Susan (F)
	* The Dark is Rising series (Brilliant brilliant brilliant.  
	Set mostly in Cornwall and Wales, Arthurian-based adventures of a
	family of children and their friends in the epic battle between
	Light and Dark which spans time and worlds.  My only quarrel is
	with the ending.)
		Over Sea, Under Stone
		The Dark Is Rising (Newbery Honor Book)
		Greenwitch
		The Grey King (Newbery Award winner)
		Silver on the Tree
	* Seaward (His name is West.  Her name is Cally.  They have
		each lost their parents, and were then wrenched into a
		strange and perilous world where they know only that they
		are searching for the sea.  A book about survival, love,
		and the virtues of both life and death...beautiful.)
	Jethro and the Jumbie (these three are for younger children)
	The Silver Cow
	The Selkie Girl
	The Boggart (Emily and Jess Volnik's family inherits a
		Scottish castle where lives the Boggart, a mischievous
		spirit who's been playing practical jokes for 
		centuries.  The Boggart gets trapped in a roll-top
		desk and gets shipped to the Volnik's home in Canada 
		and turns their world upside down.)

Dahl, Roald
	Fantastic Mr. Fox (more of a novella) (3rd - 4th)
	The Magic Finger
	Matilda (girl develops telekinesis) (slightly older)
        James and the Giant Peach (classic)
        Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
        Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator  (slightly older again)
        Danny, Champion of the World
        The Witches (kid and bizarre grandmother-modifying potions)

Davies, L.P. (SF)
	Dimension A (very engaging alternate dimension story)

Dawson, Carley (F)
	Mr. Wicker's Window

Dawson, Mitchell (F)
	The Magic Firecrackers

del Rey, Lester (SF)
(I loved these as a kid and recently found them again!  Junior
spacemen stories, but with a good dose of humanity)
	The Mysterious Planet
	Outpost of Jupiter
	Attack from Atlantis
	Moon of Mutiny (will Fred obey orders or attempt to save two
		lives, on the moon, where the one unforgivable crime is
		mutiny?)
	Rocket Jockey

Dillon, Barbara (F)
	The Teddy Bear Tree (A magical teddy bear bought at a rummage
		sale is stolen by a dog.  An eye is found and buried; 
		a tree grows from the eye bearing an amazing treasure.)

Doherty, Berlie
	The Children of Winter (4th - 5th)

Doyle, Debra, and MacDonald, James D.
	The Circle of Magic series (6 books)

Duane, Diane (F) (4th grade and up?)
	* Wizard series: (This book starts with a young girl barely 
	escaping being beat up -- she takes refuge in a library, and 
	finds a book titled 'So You Want to Be a Wizard', which turns 
	out to have actual practical instructions.  It only gets
	better from there -- some seriously sad things happen in later
	books, and the children have to make difficult choices).
		So You Want to Be a Wizard
		Deep Wizardry (adventures deep undersea)
		High Wizardry (adventures in far space)
		A Wizard Abroad (adventures in the British Isles)

Duncan, Lois (F)
	Gallows Hills (Sarah Zoltane is hired to be a fortune teller at
		the senior carnival.  She starts to see visions and
		discovers that almost all of the seniors were witnesses at
		the Salem Witch Trials in past lives)

Eager, Edward (F) (3rd grade and up)
	Half Magic (three children find a charm which gives them half of
		what they wish for)
	The Knight's Castle
	Magic or Not?
	Magic By the Lake
	Seven Day Magic
	The Time Garden (the thyme in a garden takes the children
		travelling through time...)
	The Well Wishers

Ende, Michael (F) (6th and up)
	The Neverending Story (a wonderful story (the movie only
		covers the first half of the book and doesn't do 
		a very good job of even that) translated from German)

Engdahl, Silvia Louise (SF)
(Girl from advanced civilization is part of contact team observing
natives undercover on less advanced worlds.  Deals with growing up, 
responsibility vs love, the pain of watching tragedy that you can't 
do anything to fix -- the second book is extremely moving -- all out of
print, but well worth searching for - check her web page, 
http://www.teleport.com/~sengdahl, for details on how to find them)
	Enchantress from the Stars
	* The Far Side of Evil (sequel to Enchantress)
	Trilogy: (same universe, different characters, same sorts of 
	stresses on protagonists)
		This Star Shall Abide (winner of the Christopher Award)
			(published as Heritage of the Star in U.K.)
		Beyond the Tomorrow Mountains
		The Doors of the Universe

Farjeon, Eleanor (4th grade-ish)
	The Glass Slipper (a novelisation of Cinderella)
	The Silver Curlew (a novelisation of Rumplestiltskin)	

Farmer, Nancy (SF)
	The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm (striking; very original SF story 
		set in a future Africa)

Farmer, Penelope (F)
	A Castle of Bone

Fisk, Nicholas (SF)
	Space Hostages (these three are for 9-12 year olds)
	Grinny
	Trillions
	A Rag, a Bone, and a Hank of Hair (for older children)

Fletcher, Susan (F) (a series about some girls who save a race of
quickly diminishing dragons)
	Flight of the Dragon Kyn
	Dragon's Milk
	Sign of the Dove

Fortschen, William R. (SF)
	Star Voyager Academy (revolves around a group of teenagers
		entering a military academy located in outer space.  It
		tells of the usual problems facing teenagers like: getting
		to know one another, dealing with finals and learning in
		class, how to deal with bullies, and, in the adult issue,
		a seccessionist movement involving several colonies that
		are trying to leave the authority of Earth)
	Article 23 (picks up where the first book left off.  This time the
		cadets are going on their first official space trip in a
		military ship.  They continue to try to solve how to
		deal with the seccessionist movement since a couple of
		cadets are from the colonies seeking independence, how
		to handle a couple of bigoted cadets from Earth who do
		not like these so-called rebels, and a ship's captain who
		is slowly going mad.)

Furlong, Monica (F)
	Juniper (how protagonist became a witch)
	Wise Child (neglected child fostered by village herbal healer
		woman in (12th?) century.  Healer woman (Juniper) follows 
		the old religion and, along with teaching the child herbs, 
		healing, and kindly living, also initiates her into the old
		ways.  A struggle between Wise Child's birth mother, who is a 
		woman of bad magick (and abusive to her daughter), and Juniper
		ensues.  To call it "good witch vs bad witch" would come 
		nowhere near giving this book sufficient credit.

Garner, Alan (F)
(Weirdstone is wonderfully scary, especially if you don't like confined spaces)
	The Weirdstone of Brisingamen (3rd and up) (this and
		following set in Cheshire, Alderley Edge)
	The Moon of Gomrath (3rd and up)
	The Owl Service (slightly older, perhaps--5th and up?) (set in
		Wales and based on the Mabinogion)
	Elidor
	Red Shift (older children) (set in different times, all
		connected by an ancient flint arrowhead; economical, 
		poetic language)

Goldman, William (F)
	The Princess Bride (even better than the movie.  Really.  Hard as
		that is to believe...)

Gripe, Maria (F)
	The Glassblower's Children (translated from Swedish, half 
		realistic and half fairy tale)

Heinlein, Robert A. (SF) (5th and up?)
(Somewhat militaristic, but a classic delight.  Highly individualistic
smart kids carving a path through the universe)
	Citizen of the Galaxy (Thorby encounters space battles, alien
		cultures, powerful and mysterious enemies -- an in the
		process encounters the values of a free society, weighing
		the worth of the individual)
	* Have Space Suit -- Will Travel
	Podkayne of Mars (female protagonist!)
	Rocket Ship Galileo
	* The Rolling Stones
	Space Cadet
	Starship Troopers
	Tunnel in the Sky (Rod Walker and his classmates, completing a
		survival course, are transported to an uninhabited planet
		for their final exam...only their pick-up fails to come...)
	...and many more 

Hoover, H.M. (SF) (6th grade and up)
	The Lost Star
	Return to Earth
	The Children of Morrow
	This Time of Darkness
	The Bell Tree
	Orvis

Hughes, Monica (SF) (5th grade and up)
	The Isis trilogy
		Keep of the Isis Light
		The Guardian of Isis
		The Isis Pedlar
	The Tomorrow City

Hunter, Mollie (6th grade and up)
	A Stranger Came Ashore
	The Third Eye
	The Wicked One

Ibbotson, Eva (F)
	The Secret of Platform 13
	Which Witch?

Ipcar, Dahlov (F) (4th grade and up)
	The Warlock of Night

Jacques, Brian (F)
-- in the tradition of Watership Down, epic adventure among animals
	Redwall
	Mossflower
	Matimmeo
	...etc.

Jansson, Tove (1st grade and up)
	A Comet in Moominland
	Finn Family Moomintroll
	Moominsummer Madness
	Tales of Moominvalley
	Moominpappa at Sea
	Moominvalley in November
	Moominland Midwinter

Jones, Diana Wynne (F)
        Archer's Goon
        Aunt Maria
        Cart & Cwidder (Dalemark)
        Castle in the Air (sequel to Howl's Moving Castle)
        Changeover (adult)
        Charmed Life (Chrestomanci)
        Crown of Dalemark (Dalemark)
        Dogsbody
        Drowned Ammet (Dalemark)
        Eight Days of Luke
        Everard's Ride (collection, limited edition)
        Fantasy Stories (editor, with 1 contributed story)
        Fire and Hemlock
	The Four Grannies
        Hexwood
        Hidden Turnings (editor, with 1 contirubted story)
        Homeward Bounders
        Howl's Moving Castle
	The Lives of Christopher Chant (Chrestomanci)
        Thung adult/adult)
        A Tale of Time City
        The Time of the Ghost
        Warlock at the Wheel (collection)
	Who Got Rid of Angus Flint (3rd - 5th)
	Wild Robert (3rd - 5th)
	Wilkin's Tooth (aka Witch's Business in America)
        Witch Week (Chrestomanci) (sequel to Charmed Life in which the
	theme consists of attempts to gain supernatural powers)
(note: Dalemark is a country, Chrestomanci a recurring character)

Jones, Terry (of Monty Python fame) (F) (3rd-4th gr)
	Nicobobinus (...the boy who could do anything, and Rosie, and
		how they set off together to discover the Land of the Dragons.
		They meet the Golden Man, some kidnapping pirates, murderous
		monks, mountains that move, and a ship that can cook...)
	The Saga of Erik the Viking (apparently much better than the movie)
	Fairy Tales (supposedly dull)

Juster, Norton (F) (5th grade and up)
	The Phantom Tollbooth (Bored Milo comes home one day and finds a
		package containing a pedal powered car, a map, some
		unrecognizable change and a tollbooth...the gateway to
		another land)
	
Kay, Guy Gavriel (F) (for adolescents and adults)
	* The Fionavar Tapestry (My favorite fantasy series of all 
	time.  College students from our world go to another to fight 
	in the battle against the Dark.  They go through  hell.  
	(Seriously disturbing non-explicit rape scene.)  They are 
	changed as a result.  I think this series is amazingly beautiful)
		The Summer Tree
		The Wandering Fire
		The Darkest Road
	Tigana
	A Song for Arbonne
	The Lions of Al'Rassan

Kelleher, Victor
        Master of the Grove (Australian Children's Book of the Year winner)
        The Hunting of Shadroth
        Forbidden Paths of Thual
        Del-Del
        The Makers
        Brother Night
        Taronga

Key, Alexander (SF) (4th-5th)
(esper powers, primarily, and  utopian societies contrasted against ours)
	Escape to Witch Mountain
	Return from Witch Mountain
	The Forgotten Door

King-Smith, Dick (F)
	The Invisible Dog (Janie's imaginary Great Dane becomes real)
	Magnus Powermouse 
	Pigs Might Fly (Runt of the litter learns how to swim; saves
		the farm and all the animals from a flood and becomes a hero)
	Sophie is Seven

Kipling, Rudyard
	The Jungle Book
	Just-So Stories
	
Langston, Jane (F)
	The Fledgling (a girl takes flying lessons from a Canada goose)

Lee, Tanith
	The Winter Players
	Shon the Taken
	East of the Sun, West of the Moon
	Prince on a White Horse
	Companions on the Road

LeGuin, Ursula K. (F) (5th grade and up?)
	* The Earthsea trilogy: (Young Ged discovers wizardly powers 
	in himself -- confronts the darkness within him.  Very much 
	novels of growing up and taking responsibility, in a lovely 
	magical setting.  LeGuin is one of the foremost sf/f writers 
	-- her 'Left Hand of Darkness' is highly recommended for adults)
		A Wizard of Earthsea
		The Tombs of Atuan
		The Farthest Shore
	Tehanu (I hesitate to class this with the trilogy, since it
		seems to be for an older audience)

L'Engle, Madeleine (F and mainstream)
	* Time tetralogy: (Do these need a description? :-)  Bright 
	children battle against the Dark (do we sense a theme?) in 
	varying ways.  Must risk everything and come to great self-
	knowledge to survive.  I love Mrs. Whatsit.)
		A Wrinkle in Time
		A Wind in the Door
		A Swiftly Tilting Planet
		Many Waters (the story of the twins)
(The following books are set mostly in the Real World, similar themes)
	Meet the Austins
	Dragons in the Waters
	The Young Unicorns
	The Arm of the Starfish
	Camilla
	...and many more

Levine, Gail Carson (F) (6th grade and up)
	Ella Enchanted (Cinderella retelling)

Lewis, C.S. (F) (2nd grade and up?)
	The Chronicles of Narnia (Four young British children step 
	through a wardrobe into Narnia, land of Talking Beasts, in 
	the grip of a terrible winter and under the rule of an evil 
	Ice Queen.  Thinly veiled Christian allegory, but a rollicking
	good story nonetheless.)
		The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
		Prince Caspian
		The Silver Chair
		The Voyage of the Dawn Treader
		The Magician's Nephew
		The Horse and His Boy
		The Last Battle

Lindgren, Astrid (F)
	(The following three are wonderfully written and deal with the demands
	of becoming an adult)
	Mio my Son (7 or 8 years and up)
	The Brothers Lionheart (10 years and up) (dark book; death and suicide)
	Ronja the Robber's Daughter (8 years and up)
	The books of Emil
	Pippi Longstocking

MacDonald, George (F)
	The Princess and the Goblin (classic fairy tales)
	The Princess and Curdie

Mahy, Margaret (F)
        The Changeover
        The Haunting
        Memory
	The Tricksters
	Catalogue of the Universe (not sf/f)

McCaffrey, Anne (F/SF) (4th grade and up?)
	Harper Hall trilogy: (Young Menolly is an outsider, a girl
	with an amazing talent for music in a subculture where girls 
	don't do that...McCaffrey is one of the grande dames of 
	fantasy, and this trilogy can still move me to tears.)
		Dragonsong
		Dragonsinger
		Dragondrums
	The Rowan (child protagonist)
	Damia
	Damia's Children
	...and many more

McKillip, Patricia (F) (6th grade and up (somewhat complex, but readable))
	* Riddle Trilogy: (Can be read on multiple levels, the story 
	of a young Prince who must ultimately learn to confront
	himself rather than run from his fears.  His fiance, Raederle,
	is the protagonist of the second book and is one of the most 
	wonderful female characters in fantasy.  Strong, loving, sure 
	of herself and what she wants...)
		The Riddlemaster of Hed
		Heir of Sea and Fire
		Harpist in the Wind
	The Forgotten Beasts of Eld (exquisite and haunting)

McKinley, Robin (F) (7th grade and up)
	The Hero and the Crown (Misfit princess learns to slay dragons
		in order to impress people -- things quickly spiral upward in 
		seriousness and soon fate of her kingdom lies in her none-too-
		steady hands.  The wizard's love for her is astonishingly
		touching - off-stage sex)
	The Blue Sword (sequel to above)
	Beauty (fairy tale retelling)
	A Door in the Hedge (short stories)
	A Knot in the Grain (ditto)
	Deerskin (explicit incest, fairy tale retelling)

Nesbit, E. (3rd grade and up)
	The Book of Dragons
		Five Children and It (they find a Psammead (sand-fairy) 
			who grants wishes -- as usual, not nearly as
			 nice as you might think)
                The Phoenix and the Carpet
		The Story of the Amulet
	The Last of the Dragons, and Some Others (has all the stories in 
		The Book of Dragons, plus one that's not in the later volume)
	The Enchanted Castle
	The Magic City
	The Railway Children (Not fantasy, but very good)

Nix, Garth (F)
	The Ragwitch (protagonists are children)
	Sabriel (protagonist is 18)

Norton, Andre (F)
	The Crystal Gryphon
	Gryphon's Eyrie
	Forerunner
	Moon Called
	Wheel of Stars
	Fur Magic
	Steel Magic
	Octagon Magic
	Star Ka'at's and the Plant People

Norton, Mary (F)
	The Borrowers series (far better than film)
	Bedknob and Broomstick (ditto)
	Are All the Giants Dead

O'Brian, Robert C. (SF)
	Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (Mrs. Frisby, a widowed field
		mouse, is trying to move her family to their summer house.
		The only problem is that her youngest son, Timothy, has
		pneumonia and is too weak to move. She contemplates
		asking the brilliant rats of NIMH what to do.  (I haven't
		read the book, but the animated movie (more F-oriented) was
		beautiful) (someone writes in that "the book is superb and 
		incredibly thought-provoking; almost philosophical) -- his 
		son apparently wrote a good sequel, Rasco and the Rats of NIMH
	The Silver Crown (age 10 or so) (young girl's family is killed,
		she goes to hunt out Aunt and ends up battling the forces
		of darkness)
	Z for Zachariah (older readers) (post-nuclear war, teenaged girl
		thinks she's the only survivor until a strange man turns
		up; a bit disturbing)

Pangborn, Edgar (SF)
	A Mirror for Observers (one of the best SF books about growing up, 
		by a now neglected but very distinctive writer.  Some 
		interesting gender issues, rather subtly coded, from a 
		probably gay author)

Panshin, Alexei (SF) (young adult)
(This book moved me deeply as a child, and made me think about what it
means to be adult, what happens when an adolescent finds herself
disagreeing with a wise father, a whole bunch of political/ethical stuff...)
	* Rite of Passage (adult scene)

Pierce, Meredith Ann (SF)
	The Dark Angel
	A Gathering of Gargoyles
	The Pearl of the Soul of the World

Pierce, Tamora (F) (7th-8th grade)
(the first two series have tough and able female protagonists, though not
without self-doubts and problems, emotional and otherwise)
	Song of the Lioness Series (this is a series about a girl named
	Alanna who is disguised as a boy for eight years in her quest to
	become a knight.  It is also about her enemies, her lovers, and
	all of her adventures in the land of Tortall)
		Alanna, the First Adventure
		In the Hand of the Goddess
		The Woman Who Rides Like a Man
		Lioness Rampant
	The Immortals Series (this is about a girl named Daine who
	discovers her special bond with animals is actually the very rare
	"wild magic".  She restores the very balance of the land of
	Tortall, along with the help of a very good friend mage named
	Numair.  Alanna makes brief appearances in these books.)
		Wild-Magic
		Wolf-Speaker
		The Emperor Mage
		The Realm of the Gods
	Circle of Magic series
		Sandry's Book
		Tris's Book
		Daya's Book
		Briar's Book
	Protector of the Small
		First Test
		Page
		Squire

Pike, Christopher (SF)
	The Eternal Enemy
	The Starlight Crystal

Pinkwater, Daniel
	Lizard Music (Victor, home alone for two weeks, sees a lizard
		band on T.V. after the late show is over.  Soon he is 
		seeing lizards all around town.  He meets the Chicken 
		Man and his real adventures begin, including a trip to
		an invisible island.  A captivating story that weaves
		fantasy and reality.  ALA Notable Children's Book.
	Borgel
	Wingman
	Alan Mendelssohn, The Boy from Mars

Pratchett, Terry (SF)
	Only You Can Save Mankind
	Johnny and the Dead
	John and the Bomb
	The Carpet People
		Truckers
		Diggers
		Wings

Pullman, Philip (F)
	Clockwork
	His Dark Materials
		The Subtle Knife
		The Golden Compass
		The Amber Spyglass

Robinson, Joan G.
	When Marnie Was There (4th up)

Rockwell, Carey (SF)
        The Tom Corbet Books (plucky young lad and his companions
        blazing a path through interplanetary space as members of some
	solar patrol squad)

Rowling, J.K. (F)
	Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
	Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
	Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
	Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire

Rubinstein, Gillian (SF)
        Space Demons
        Skymaze
	Galax-Arena

Rushdie, Salman (F) (age 6+)
	Haroun and the Sea of Stories

Selden, George (sometiems classified as George Selden Thompson) (F)
        A Cricket in Times Square (I remember enjoying this one immensely)
	numerous sequels to the Cricket	
	Genie of Sutton Place
	Oscar Lobster's Fair Exchange

Sendak, Maurice (F) (kindergarten - 2nd)
	Where the Wild Things Are (Max becomes rebellious and disobedient
		and his mother calls him a 'wild thing' and sends him to 
		his room without dinner.  His room gradually turns into a
		forest and he sails across an ocean to the land of the
		wild things where he becomes king of the wild things -- I
		don't want to give the rest away.)

Service, Pamela F. (SF/F)
	Stinker From Space (An alien crashlands on Earth and its body 
		is dying.  The only creature around with enough brain 
		capacity is a skunk.  He must return to his planet 
		with secret information...)
	Stinker's Return (Upon returning to his planet Stinker finds 
		he is in trouble.  He had landed in another planet's 
		area of authority, and war is looming...)

Sharp, Margery (the whole Miss Bianca/Bernard series) (F)
	Miss Bianca
	Miss Bianca in the Salt Mines
	The Rescuers
	The Turret

Shura, Mary Francis (F)
	Simple Spigott
	A Shoeful of Shamrocks
	The Nearsighted Knight

Sleator, William (SF/F)
	Interstellar Pig (boy discovers people next door are aliens)
	The Boy Who Reversed Himself (multi-dimension)
	The Duplicator (boy can duplicate himself)
	House of Stairs (locked house full of teenagers; psychological exper.)
	The Spirit House (Thai boy visits US; brings sinister spirit with him)

Sleigh, Barbara (F)
	Carbonel, the King of the Cats
	The Kingdom of Carbonel
	Carbonel and Calidor

Smith, Sherwood (F) (5th-8th gr)
(the story of Wren, who was raised in an orphanage and discovers in the
first book that her friend Tess is really Princess Teressa, who's being
kept hidden from a rotten sorceror king.  She then has to rescue Tess.  In
the second book, she goes to discover her true heritage while there's
trouble back in Cantirmoor.  And in the third book, Tess's parents (the
good King and Queen) are slain, making Tess reigning queen, but only if
shee can keep hold of the throne.  See
http://members.tripod.com/~arula/wren1 for more details)
	Wren to the Rescue
	Wren's Quest
	Wren's War

Snyder, Zilpha Keatley (F)
	Green-Sky trilogy (about the descendants of children taken 
	from Earth to another planet to start a society free of violence)
		Below the Root (in a society that has survived
			near-total destruction, a teenage boy explores an 
			underground civilization)
		And All Between
		Until the Celebration
	The Egypt Game
	Black-and-Blue Magic

Stewart, Mary (F)
	The Little Broomstick (girl discovers a broomstick that takes 
		her to a college for witches)

Storr, Catherine
	Marianne Dreams (4th up)

Tepper, Sheri S. (F) (all set in the world of the True Game)
(The first book starts with young shapechanger Mavin in a very
difficult situation -- about to reach puberty and basically be turned
into a captive breeder.  She escapes, and the adventures start there.
The following series deal with her son Peter and his love Jinian and 
their quest to save their dying world (and not get killed in the process))
	Mavin series
		The Song of Mavin Manyshaped
		The Flight of Mavin Manyshaped
		The Search of Mavin Manyshaped	
	Peter series (Mavin's son)
		King's Blood Four
		Necromancer Nine
		Wizard's Eleven
	Jinian series
		Jinian Footseer
		Dervish Daughter
		Jinian Star-eye

Tolkein, J.R.R. (F) (3rd grade and up?)
	The Hobbit (A classic, the tale of Bilbo Baggins, a quiet
		hobbit who goes on some exciting adventures)
	The Lord of the Rings: (Bilbo's nephew, Frodo, gets caught up
	in much more serious adventures.  Epic fantasy, with heroes 
	and princesses (Tolkien is not known for his strong women), 
	dark battles and magical creatures...)
		The Fellowship of the Ring
		The Two Towers
		The Return of the King
	Farmer Giles of Ham (3rd up)
	Smith of Wootton Major (3rd up)
	Roverandom

Turner, Gerry (F)
	Stranger from the Depths (couple of young kids who discover a
		statuette of a creature that predates mankind and appears 
		to have thrived under the ocean cover)

Wersba, Barbara (F)
	The Crystal Child (A young girl's mother died in a fire.  The 
		girl didn't cry for a long time, and when she did the 
		tears were crystal  The girl turned into a crystal 
		statue and was placed in the garden.  The love of a 
		little boy brings her back...)

Westal, Robert (SF) (older teens)
	Futuretrack Five (bit disturbing)
	The Cats Of Seroster

White, E.B. (F)
	Charlotte's Web (a classic animal tale; one reader says of it,
		"It is one of those books that can be read to chidren,
		by children and by adults, and will be enjoyed by all.")

White, T.H. (F) (6th grade and up? - language is slightly difficult)
	The Sword in the Stone (also a Disney movie - (Arthurian
		retelling -- delightful -- taken from his brilliant adult
		novel, "The Once and Future King")
	The Book of Merlyn
	Mistress Masham's Repose (A ten-year-old orphan named Maria
		discovers some descendants of the Lilliputians from
		Gulliver's Travels.  She must protect them from her evil
		guardians, who hope to capture them and sell them.   Some
		adult themes and vocabulary, long descriptive passages.
		Better for adults or children who are excellent readers.)
	The Master (features two children stranded on Rockall, where a
		mysterious sage is building a machine to take over the world.)

Wrede, Patricia (F) (5th grade and up?)
(Cimorene, an unconventional princess, is being pushed into a
conventional marriage.  She escapes by hiring herself out to be a
dragon's princess...)
	* Dealing with Dragons - female protag.
	Searching for Dragons
	Calling on Dragons
	Talking to Dragons

Wright, Betty Ren (F)
	The Dollhouse Murders (Amy needs a break from constantly 
		looking after her developmentally disabled sister.
		Amy stays with her aunt in the house that her father
		grew up in and in which her grandparents were 
		murdered.  The dollhouse people come to life to help
		her solve the mystery of their death.  Deals well 
		with the feelings of siblings of disabled people.)

Yep, Lawrence (F)
	The Rainbow People (collection of Chinese-American fables with
		life lessons for all ages)

Yolen, Jane (F)
	Dragon's Blood (A young boy who works with dragons trained to
		fight in the arena learns about love and freedom)
	Heart's Blood (seqeul) 
	A Sending of Dragons (sequel)
	The Books of Great Alta
		Sister Light, Sister Dark
		White Jenna
	Briar Rose (lovely retelling of the Sleeping Beauty story, set
		in Nazi Germany)
	The Devil's Arithmetic (SF) (5-6th grade)

Zambreno, Mary (F)
	A Plague of Sorcerers
	Journeyman Wizard (involves the adventures of a young sorcerer
		in training who goes to a remote village to receive training
		from one of the last of the spellmakers.  While there his
		teacher dies in a mysterious "accident" involving magic.
		Suspicion falls on the apprentice.  One of the great 
		characters in this book is Dahlia, a opinionated, rat killing
		skunk who serves the journeyman as a familiar, allowing him to
		make the link to the world of magic.  Good mystery, 
		good fantasy.)

Zelazny, Roger (F)
	A Dark Travelling