What if your favorite teacher was actually a robot? Gordon Korman blends humor, mystery, and science fiction in this entertaining middle grade novel about a suspiciously perfect new teacher. With multiple perspectives, relatable characters, and thought-provoking questions about artificial intelligence.
The invisible war raging on your screen. Tracing the secret global market for “zero-day” software exploits from the destruction of Stuxnet to current infrastructure threats like Volt Typhoon, Perlroth delivers a terrifyingly real narrative about how our digital interconnectedness has left our water, power, and security open to global sabotage.
Bored and stuck at home after an accident, Carter starts watching his town’s police camera feeds just to pass the time. But when harmless curiosity turns into a full-blown obsession, Carter finds himself caught in mysteries he may not be ready to solve—and learning that snooping always comes with a price.
Walter Isaacson’s biography of Elon Musk offers an incredibly intimate, unvarnished look at one of the most controversial figures of our era. While the heavily technical passages and Musk’s own polarizing arrogance can make the book a dense read, its deep insights into tech monopolies, privilege, and the psychological roots of ambition make it a compelling addition for high school non-fiction collections and advanced biography readers.