
The following books were published by Puffin Books but are listed for completion and information. Five additional books in the series have been published starting in 2012. The series was later republished by Puffin Books (part of Random House Books) with new covers and the title Vet Volunteers. The first twelve books were published through American Girl. These books offer a first-hand account of animal emergencies and rescues. Laurie Halse Anderson has received both the Margaret Edwards Award and the ALAN Award for her contributions to young. In 2008, Chains was selected for the National Book Award Finalist and in 2009 was awarded for its Historical Fiction the Scott O'Dell Award.The series, written by Laurie Halse Anderson, is a middle grade series focused on various eleven-year-old volunteers at the Wild at Heart Animal Clinic.

Her book Fever 1793 won the American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults selection and the Junior Library Guild selection. For the masterpiece Speak, Anderson won the Printz Honor Book Award, a National Book Award nomination, Golden Kite award, the Edgar Allan Poe Award, and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. Vet Volunteers Books 4-6: Manatee Blues, Say Good-bye, Storm Rescue (Vet Volunteers Series) by Laurie Halse Anderson,Karen Bjornsti,Jessica Almasy,Lauren. Anderson has been nominated and won multiple honorary awards for her literary work. 40633 Manatee Blues Laurie Halse Anderson MG 4.1 3.0 English Fiction 7766 Mandie and the Cherokee Legend Lois Gladys Leppard MG 4.3 4.0 English Fiction 17873 Mandie and the Courtroom Battle Lois Gladys Leppard MG 5.1 7.0 English Fiction 7767 Mandie and the Fiery Rescue Lois Gladys Leppard MG 4.9 6. She also created the Wild at Heart series, which was originally published by American Girl but is now called the Vet Volunteers series and is published by Penguin Books for Young Readers. She has written numerous books for children including Turkey Pox, No Time for Mother's Day, Fever 1793, Speak, Catalyst, Independent Dames: What You Never Knew about the Women and Girls of the American Revolution, Chains and The Impossible Knife of Memory. Her first book, Ndito Runs, was published in 1996. Before becoming a full-time author, she worked as a freelance reporter.

in Languages and Linguistics from Georgetown University in 1984.

Laurie Halse Anderson was born in Potsdam, New York on October 23, 1961.
