Georgia Children's Book Award
Georgia Children's Book Award references 19 books assigned across applicable K-12 grade levels in US schools. The Georgia Children's Book Award, established in 1968 at the University of Georgia's College of Education, is a children's-choice reading program. Each year students across Georgia read from an annual list of nominated middle-grade titles (grades 4-8) and vote for their favorite. The list is refreshed each year, so the titles are Georgia-specific and current.
Narrow by grade
19 books referenced
A Rover's StoryJasmine Warga
A Work in ProgressJarrett Lerner
Farther Than the MoonLindsay Lackey
FrizzyClaribel Ortega
Good DifferentMeg Eden Kuyatt
HandsTorrey Maldonado
HoopsMatt Tavares
Little MonarchsJonathan Case
MexikidPedro Martín
Nic Blake and the RemarkablesAngie Thomas
Not an Easy WinChrystal Giles
Parachute KidsBetty C. Tang
The Door of No ReturnKwame Alexander
The Mona Lisa VanishesNicholas Day
The Mystery of the Radcliffe RiddleTaryn Souders
The Way I Say ItNancy Tandon
To Catch a ThiefMartha Brockenbrough
Two TribesEmily Bowen Cohen
What Happened to Rachel Riley?Claire Swinarski
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About this curriculum framework
This curriculum is one of dozens of named English Language Arts frameworks tracked across US public-school districts. Frameworks differ in scope (district-level vs state-level vs national), in mandate (required vs recommended vs elective), and in how prescriptive their reading lists are (single fixed text list vs broad reading-pool selection).
The book list below represents titles cited as required, recommended, or commonly assigned within this framework, sourced from the framework's primary documentation (or, where the framework is administered at district level, from public district curriculum pages). Each book's detail page links the specific source document for that citation.
How to use this Georgia Children's Book Award reading list
The book list above represents titles ReadingList has confirmed as referenced by Georgia Children's Book Award— either through the framework’s own published documentation, through audited classroom syllabi citing the framework, or through US state and district curriculum guides that map their reading expectations to it. Each book’s detail page links the specific primary source so parents, teachers, and students can verify the citation and locate the official document.
Reading lists evolve. Georgia Children's Book Award citations on ReadingList are reviewed on a rolling basis as primary sources publish updates. If you teach or learn under this framework and a title on this page is no longer used (or you know of one that should appear), the ReadingList methodology page explains how to submit a correction with a citation.
Related on ReadingList
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Copy + paste this snippet into any school newsletter, classroom blog, library site, or homeschool resource page. The embed shows the top 12 titles and links back to the full list. Updates automatically when ReadingList’s data changes.
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Frequently asked questions
What books does Georgia Children's Book Award include?
19 books are referenced by Georgia Children's Book Award across applicable K-12 grade levels. Each book page cites the primary source assignment (the official curriculum standard, exemplar list, or syllabus where the title appears).
What grades does Georgia Children's Book Award cover?
Georgia Children's Book Award is a reading-program curriculum spanning applicable K-12 grade levels via the standards framework. Browse by grade using the grade-filter links on this page or visit /grade for the full grade index across all curricula.
Where does Georgia Children's Book Award data come from?
Sourced from published curriculum documents + standards organizations. Cross-referenced with Common Core exemplars at achievethecore.org. Every book page on ReadingList.school cites the standards origin for that assignment.
Is Georgia Children's Book Award required reading?
Georgia Children's Book Award provides recommended exemplars + assignments — adoption varies by district and teacher. Always check with your school's English department for the specific required vs recommended list at your grade level.