Anonymous wrote:The Splendid and the Vile by Erik Larsen. Non fiction history about the first year of WW2 in Britain. He really brings alive the gravity of the situation, the mood of the people, the key characters like Churchill.
Another WW2 history my teen liked is Doublecross by Ben MacIntyre. About the British double agents who helped D-Day succeed
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about some old school spy novels, like John Le Carre?
My son has been enjoying John Grisham (The Testaments is set in D.C.), Robert Ludlum Bourne Identity series, and I am getting him the first Jack Reacher books.
Great ideas, thank you?
Anonymous wrote:What about some old school spy novels, like John Le Carre?
My son has been enjoying John Grisham (The Testaments is set in D.C.), Robert Ludlum Bourne Identity series, and I am getting him the first Jack Reacher books.
Anonymous wrote:The Road is dark — a father and son wandering a near-lifeless post-apocalyptic landscape as the father is slowly dying, trying to protect his son — and if I recall there is at least one murder, more bleak than graphic.
It’s extremely bleak, though there’s a tiny spot of hope, and a bit of a reframe, near the very end.
Station Eleven is a post-apocalyptic book that’s really beautifully written, and manages to hold simultaneously both humanity’s bleakness and its aspirations.
What about a book like Curious Incident that manages to be both very well written and centers on a teenager? Too YA?
George Saunders is great — clever and a great writer and also able to empathize with humanity even as he sees its flaws. His short story collection December 10 (?) is very smart and might appeal. A Swim in the Pond in the Rain gets pitched as a writing book, but it’s actually a collection of some incredible Russian short stories with saunders analysis about why they work. The short stories are GREAT too (Master and Man! So gripping!).
And on that subject what about Dostoevsky? Crime and Punishment is a great read, and though it is about an act of murder, it is ultimately about the psychology of redemption. Brothers Karamazov wrestles with questions of humanity and goodness in a flawed world, and it’s quite funny.
Franny and Zooey wrestles with a lot of the questions in a way that resonated for me as a teen and also as an adult. It’s been a while since I read it though, so perhaps look at some reviews.
Einstein’s Dreams by Alan Lightman is an amazing little read — it’s essentially a series of thought experiments imagining different universes in which time operates differently than it does in ours. It’s beautifully written and explores not only time but also human responses to the world we are given. I love this book.
Anonymous wrote:The Road is dark — a father and son wandering a near-lifeless post-apocalyptic landscape as the father is slowly dying, trying to protect his son — and if I recall there is at least one murder, more bleak than graphic.
It’s extremely bleak, though there’s a tiny spot of hope, and a bit of a reframe, near the very end.
Station Eleven is a post-apocalyptic book that’s really beautifully written, and manages to hold simultaneously both humanity’s bleakness and its aspirations.
What about a book like Curious Incident that manages to be both very well written and centers on a teenager? Too YA?
George Saunders is great — clever and a great writer and also able to empathize with humanity even as he sees its flaws. His short story collection December 10 (?) is very smart and might appeal. A Swim in the Pond in the Rain gets pitched as a writing book, but it’s actually a collection of some incredible Russian short stories with saunders analysis about why they work. The short stories are GREAT too (Master and Man! So gripping!).
And on that subject what about Dostoevsky? Crime and Punishment is a great read, and though it is about an act of murder, it is ultimately about the psychology of redemption. Brothers Karamazov wrestles with questions of humanity and goodness in a flawed world, and it’s quite funny.
Franny and Zooey wrestles with a lot of the questions in a way that resonated for me as a teen and also as an adult. It’s been a while since I read it though, so perhaps look at some reviews.
Einstein’s Dreams by Alan Lightman is an amazing little read — it’s essentially a series of thought experiments imagining different universes in which time operates differently than it does in ours. It’s beautifully written and explores not only time but also human responses to the world we are given. I love this book.
Anonymous wrote:The Road is dark — a father and son wandering a near-lifeless post-apocalyptic landscape as the father is slowly dying, trying to protect his son — and if I recall there is at least one murder, more bleak than graphic.
It’s extremely bleak, though there’s a tiny spot of hope, and a bit of a reframe, near the very end.
Station Eleven is a post-apocalyptic book that’s really beautifully written, and manages to hold simultaneously both humanity’s bleakness and its aspirations.
What about a book like Curious Incident that manages to be both very well written and centers on a teenager? Too YA?
George Saunders is great — clever and a great writer and also able to empathize with humanity even as he sees its flaws. His short story collection December 10 (?) is very smart and might appeal. A Swim in the Pond in the Rain gets pitched as a writing book, but it’s actually a collection of some incredible Russian short stories with saunders analysis about why they work. The short stories are GREAT too (Master and Man! So gripping!).
And on that subject what about Dostoevsky? Crime and Punishment is a great read, and though it is about an act of murder, it is ultimately about the psychology of redemption. Brothers Karamazov wrestles with questions of humanity and goodness in a flawed world, and it’s quite funny.
Franny and Zooey wrestles with a lot of the questions in a way that resonated for me as a teen and also as an adult. It’s been a while since I read it though, so perhaps look at some reviews.
Einstein’s Dreams by Alan Lightman is an amazing little read — it’s essentially a series of thought experiments imagining different universes in which time operates differently than it does in ours. It’s beautifully written and explores not only time but also human responses to the world we are given. I love this book.