Year Seven (and lots of other years) area addicted to diary books at the moment, especially Diary of a Wimpy Kid. This post lists lots of other diaries you can find in the school library. Each row lists similar books according to their genre (school stories, fantasy adventures etc.)
1. These books all fall into the pink girly book genre, because they are aimed at girls in their early teens who like reading books about friendships and families, with a bit of romance to spice up the plot.
1. These books all fall into the pink girly book genre, because they are aimed at girls in their early teens who like reading books about friendships and families, with a bit of romance to spice up the plot.
2. These books are all diaries in the romance genre. They are aimed at slightly older teenage girls.
3. These books are all historical diary stories. Although they are set in the past, the emphasis is on the characters' lives. Some of these diaries are cross-over genres with mystery, romance or adventure.
4. These books are mystery stories developped as diary entries. They include historical mysteries (Lady Grace Mysteries) and fantasy elements (Beka Cooper series, Riddles of Epsilon)
5. All these diaries are written from the perspective of sportsgirls and women.
6. These diaries deal with supernatural themes. They include horror comedies (The Floods series, Diary of a Wimpy Vampire) and gothic novels (Emily Strange, Hatched) as well as standard horror stories (Diary of a Monstser Catcher Diary Z) and supernatural romances (Vampire diaries).
7. These stories are Issues-based diaries, dealing with everything from depression (Losing it, So much to tell you) to homelessness (Back on Track) to war (Diary Z, Diary of Anne Frank) and creative writing (Secret Scribbled Notebooks)