Note that the first answerer misused the word ostentatious.
Have you read 'The Hobbit'? (A must before you attempt the Lord of the Rings trilogy.)
How about the Chronicles of Prydain series? (Those are The Book of Three, The Black Cauldron, The Castle of Llyr, Taran Wanderer, and The High King)
2006-09-17 11:16:30
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Call the high school in your area and explain your situation. Maybe they will lend you books from there that are age appropriate since it is a school requirement. Doesn't hurt to check. You could always go after school if the library is open then. Good luck!
2006-09-17 11:11:25
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answer #2
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answered by flower 6
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don't understand your question?...
if your school requires you to test at the grade level you are...then find fourth grade level books frrom your school library and read and test on those.
if your school requires you to test at the level you actually read, then test on the books you buy and read (at tenth grade level).
and alot of good books are available at the library for free.
2006-09-17 11:23:00
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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You should complain to your parents about the restrictions, and your parents should complain to the school. They have you in a no-read situation. Supposed to read at your level of capability (good; or above), but no books in your level. What about getting them from the library? Whose permission would you need?
2006-09-17 11:15:39
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answer #4
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answered by auntb93again 7
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Librarians are your friend. I'm sure you're not the only student in that predicament. I teach kids at the other end, for whom reading is a struggle, and the books that are at their ability level are too childish. So, I asked my favorite librarian to buy books that were easier, but more interesting to older students. She did.
2006-09-17 11:18:45
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answer #5
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answered by honneebee68 2
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Schools can be so stupid. I believe your problem is that books at that level have teenage/adult content. I had to make arrangements with my son's teachers - I had to buy books and that they thought were approriate for his age and he was allowed to read these for school reading. Finding books was fairly difficult & It cost me a lot to buy books, but it was better than him getting bored and losing interest in reading.
2006-09-17 11:20:13
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answer #6
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answered by obenypopstar 4
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If you need to, try a public library or a book store like barnes and noble.
You'll find tons of books to read there.
2006-09-17 11:14:47
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answer #7
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answered by Steven B 6
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Well you could always go to the library, one tenth grade book is the odyssey. Good luck
2006-09-17 11:09:53
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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i understand the place you're coming from. there is human beings like that at my college to boot. don't be terrified of her, forget approximately approximately her. She's a freshman, she's intimidated with the aid of a severe college and tries to be the vast undesirable wolf. In my PE classification, the newcomers combat regarding the stupidest stuff because of the fact they are scared. they have calmed down, and so will she. Plus if she starts yelling at you, stay calm and say "So all of this grew to become into began over a bitter Patch newborn?" it will tutor her that she's a fool. do no longer subject. Plus, on no account EVER throw the 1st punch if it is composed of that. enable her do it. That way, you will no longer get in difficulty. yet she sounds innocuous, all bark no chew. do no longer show regret to her. have confidence me. wish this enables! to boot, if she gets mad, that's her own fault ;)
2016-10-15 02:39:52
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answer #9
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answered by ? 4
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Go to the library and ask the children's librarian for help. She should be able to guide you to just the right book that would qualify. If not, then ask your teacher for guidance. You can't be expected to do the impossible so ask her/him what to do to quality for your test.
2006-09-17 11:24:16
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answer #10
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answered by chris 5
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