5 Middle Grade Books About That Summer When Everything Changes

Summary

Five middle grade novels that explore the unexpected changes to friendship, family, and identity that can happen during the summer months.

Summer can be an exciting season, inviting more time with friends and family, campouts under the stars, or fun-filled travel plans. However, the break in predictable school-centered schedules can also invite big changes! For me growing up, summers often meant relocation and new schools, for others it can bring big shifts in friendships or new family dynamics. Follow the kids in these five middle grade novels, as they navigate tricky summers when everything for them changes.

Why it matters: Low key, vacation-centric summers are pleasant, but some kids face a different kind of “heat” during their break from school. These stories may help a challenging summer feel less isolating. 

Go Deeper: For readers seeking emotionally touching summer reads that won’t fade like tan lines, these five middle grade novels are bound to stick.

Read Time: 4 Minutes

five young people paddle away from shore on different water crafts on the cover of the firefly summer.

“The Firefly Summer” (2023) by Morgan Matson

Summary:
Ryanna spends the summer with her mother’s estranged family in the Blue Ridge Mountains, where she meets relatives she barely knows and begins uncovering family secrets. What starts as an unfamiliar summer becomes a journey of discovering where she belongs and what family really means.

Perfect for: readers navigating family changes, blended families, and searching for belonging.

a young person approaches a victorian house surrounded by flowers and fireflies with a ferris wheel in the distance on the cover of ferris.

“Ferris” (2024) by Kate DiCamillo

Summary:
Ferris Wilkey’s summer is turned upside down when her grandmother claims to see a ghost, her family is dealing with personal struggles, and everything feels slightly out of control. Through the chaos, Ferris learns more about her family, herself, and the complicated emotions that come with growing up.

Perfect for: readers looking for a funny, heartfelt story about family and change.

a young girl holds a lighthouse at night on the cover of ruptured.

“Ruptured” (2023) by Joanne Rossmassler Fritz

Summary:
During a summer vacation in Florida, Claire’s family is shaken when her mother experiences a medical emergency that changes the entire trip. Claire has to navigate fear, uncertainty, and the reality that sometimes one moment can change everything.

Perfect for: readers navigating a family crisis or searching for resilience, and lovers of novels in verse or deeply emotional stories.

a large group of chinese summer camp goers create a human tower on the cover of summer at squee.

“Summer at Squee” (2024) by Andrea Wang

Summary:
Phoenny Fang returns to Squee, a Chinese cultural summer camp, expecting another perfect summer with her friends, but things quickly change when friendships shift and new challenges emerge. As she navigates camp life, identity, and expectations, Phoenny learns that growing up means adapting to change.

Perfect for: readers experiencing friendship changes, identity questions, or who love a good summer camp adventure.

three girls of color sit on a picnic table braiding each others hair on the cover of the braid girls.

“The Braid Girls” (2023) by Sherri Winston

Summary:
Best friends Maggie and Lena spend the summer building a braiding business while balancing friendship, family expectations, and their dreams for the future. As their business grows, they learn that growing up means figuring out who you are and what kind of friend you want to be.

Perfect for: readers who enjoy friendship-focused stories, have an eye for creativity, or want to see characters exploring entrepreneurship.

In Closing:

When summer brings unexpected challenges or new beginnings, these five stories remind readers that not only can change be the start of something meaningful, but they are certainly not alone.

Until next time, remember: 💔📚 = ❤️‍🩹

Amanda Stone
Amanda Stone loves museums and took a ton of photographs when she visited The Met in New York City. If those pictures are worth 1,000 words each, then she better get writing! When she’s not busy clacking away on the keyboard writing articles for The Mixed-Up Files or making up stories for kids, you’ll find her in the studio painting with her hands and fingers. Follow Amanda Stone’s writing journey on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/alstonewrites/

Leave a Reply