I loved Atlas Shrugged and read it when I was 14 in about a week. Couldn't put it down. |
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Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
1984 The Bell Jar. Really, anything Sylvia Plath. Tom Robbins - specifically Even Cowgirls Get the Blues and Skinny Legs and All The Vampire Chronicles - Anne Rice Frankenstein Kerouac Vonnegut |
| Very interesting thread. Huge life-long reader here so I am scanning this with interest, although my kids are younger. One of my observations of teens/tweens today (I have many close family members in that age group) is that they are mostly engaged in multi-sensory/task activities at all moments. It makes me wonder whether some of these engrossing but slower paced novels that affected us as teens would have the same impact on current teens. I see elements of this with my younger kids and their friends - they are accustomed to the pace of books Harry Potter and Percy Jackson, and books that I loved like Henry Huggins, etc just can't capture their attentions. |
Agreed on comic books and graphic novels. My child picked up Xmen compilation and I was amazed at the quality of writing and level of vocabulary. Plus, the historical background and the allegory between peaceful civil protest and militant is explored in detail. For a more up-to-date read - he could try Ta-Nahesi Coate's re-boot of the Black Panther. |
| Agree that maybe graphic novels are the way to go. I really loved the Sandman series by Neil Gaiman, The Watchmen (do not be deterred if you saw the terrible movie), V for Vendetta (movie's actually pretty good). |
| The Mists of Avalon. |
| Good Omens |
LOL, yes I found this riveting as a teen. Not sure that means I would suggest it to my own teen. |
Uh, okay. |
| How to win friends and influence people - Dale Carnegie |
| Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult |
I was just pulling your leg. I had to hide the book from my mom. I then got heavily into grocery store romance novels and then Clan of the Cave Bear (a little cave man sex). At the same time though, I was reading (for pleasure, yes) Jane Austen, Emerson, and of all writers, Edith Wharton. |
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East of Eden
Invisible Man |
+1 though a bit young for a teen? |
Holes came out when I was in 7th grade and I enjoyed it. To this day, if someone says "if only" I go through the whole "if only if only" poem in my head so I guess it stuck with me. |