| The Outsiders |
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Going off of
Witch of Blackbird Pond (great pull) I remember also reading Julie of the Wolves The Steppe Island of the blue dolphins The Keeping Days Will try to think of others. They may be neweberry award winners and not classics |
And what did the parent write about themselves? |
| Don’t they read most of these books during middle school English? That’s what my daughter had to do! |
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To Kill a Mockingbird
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The Witch of Blackbird Pond
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Little Women Anne of Green Gables Jacob Have I Loved Bridge to Terabithia The Girl Who Drank the Moon |
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Goodreads is a pretty good site for recommendations. Here is what they recommend as classic books for teens
https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/2225.Best_Classic_Books_for_Teens I’ve read all of them except The Giver. I think they’re all fine for a 14 year old strong reader. |
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To kill a mockingbird
Catcher in the rye Great gatsby A separate peace |
| Daughter of Time. And all the others recommended here. |
I read A Tale of Two Cities and Great Expectations in freshman and sophomore years of high school, ages 14-15. Those are both routinely taught in early high school years and sometimes even at the middle school level. Some people argue strenuously for introducing Dickens early, some argue for waiting until later years of age. It depends on each individual kid’s maturity and especially reading comprehension skills - Dickens is very dense, but very very richly rewarding. Any student who can appreciate Dickens should be a strong reader going into adulthood. I think it is definitely worth offering Dickens at 14, especially to an excellent student. And there are so many wonderful film and TV adaptations that can be used as incentive to read. I would recommend David Copperfield, Oliver Twist or Great Expectations. |
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Lots of good suggestions.
I’ll add: Animal farm The old man and the sea The grapes of wrath Mayor of casterbridge Wuthering heights Julius Caesar Joan of Arc (GB Shaw) |
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Sometimes you can get a good sense by looking at schools summer reading lists.
This is old - but a starting point. The summer reading list from NCS for rising 8th graders a bunch of years ago: Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass, Lewis Carroll The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman, Ernest J. Gaines The Bean Trees, Barbara Kingsolver The Bread Givers, Anzia Yezierska Cold Sassy Tree, Olive Ann Burns Fahrenheit 451, Ray Bradbury Girl with a Pearl Earring, Tracy Chevalier The Grapes of Wrath, John Steinbeck The Great Train Robbery, Michael Crichton Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck The Once and Future King, T.H. White The Price of a Child, Lorraine Cary Rebecca, Daphne Du Maurier Red Scarf Girl, Ji Li Jiang |
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The Bluest Eye
Diary of Anne Frank Dracula A Tree Grows in Brooklyn |
I read this about that age, too, and thought it was so great. |
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A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
I Capture the Castle LM Montgomery’s non-Anne of Green Gables work, especially The Blue Castle, A Tangled Web, and Jane of Lantern Hill 9th grade was my Jane Eyre year as well. |