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topic: Lots of Other Lists... > Best Adult Books for HS Students





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message 25: by Briansgirl "Master Book Sale Huntress" (last edited Feb 06, 2009 09:50AM) (new)

1895628 Emily wrote: "I've only heard of one--People of the Book. Hmm. I'd be interested in knowing what adult books GoodReads users would recommend for high schoolers (I'm a future high school English teacher).

Here..."


I have recently found All Quiet on the Western Front and Red Badge of Courage (for 50 cents each). I havn't read either one yet though.

In highschool we had to read The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton.


1895628 Lori wrote: "Wow. I have not heard of any of those. They are adult novels????"

Not only have I not heard of any of the books, I havn't heard of any of the authors either. I have my preteen reading books like Swiss Family Robinson. (He already finished the Harry Potter books last year. He's 11)


message 23: by Melissa (new)

309083 First "adult" book I read was either Jane Eyre (finished)or Les Miserable (finished half of the entire book).


message 22: by Megan (new)

1861824 I think Midwives would be a good transition novel for teens because the narrator is a teenager and the book is interesting, but straight forward.


message 21: by Monique (new)

1630217 Conception: A Novel - Kalisha Buckhanon is on my reading list. I have heard really good things about it.

Never heard of any of the other ones.


message 20: by Susanna (new)

1109068 Yep. And - Gregory Peck!


message 19: by Emily (new)

1573273 Beautiful movie. One of those rare film adaptations that lives up to the quality of the source material.


message 18: by Susanna (new)

1109068 I recall that most of us liked it, and we all loved the movie, which they showed us as a reward for reading it.


message 17: by Emily (new)

1573273 Yeah, don't know why I didn't think of To Kill a Mockingbird--a classic for kids and adults alike. One of those forced school-reads that actually connects with young people.


message 16: by Catamorandi (new)

754081 I agree with To Kill a Mockingbird. It is a classic and a very good story besides.


message 15: by Susanna (new)

1109068 Definitely To Kill a Mockingbird.

I went to high school back in the dark ages, Emily, but we read, out of your list - All Quiet on the Western Front and The Red Badge of Courage.


message 14: by Emily (new)

1573273 I've only heard of one--People of the Book. Hmm. I'd be interested in knowing what adult books GoodReads users would recommend for high schoolers (I'm a future high school English teacher).

Here's some I think:
I Capture the Castle
The Go-Between
The Catcher in the Rye
All Quiet on the Western Front
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn
Reservation Blues
The Metamorphosis
The Red Badge of Courage
Of Mice and Men
The River

Maybe they already teach some of these in HS. Anyway, how about you?


message 13: by Allison (new)

1415539 Okay, I finished Someone Knows My Name (The Book of Negroes)by Lawrence Hill and it was excellent. I'd definitely recommend it to everyone.


message 12: by Allison (new)

1415539 I am reading Someone Knows my Name by Lawrence Hill right now (only it was published as The Book of Negroes in Canada). Otherwise, I haven't read any of the others on that list.


message 11: by Andrew (new)

1417440 I'm in Highschool and have not read any of them O.o. hehe oops.


message 10: by Donna (new)

1334924 This list is supposed to be Adult Fiction but is recommended for YA's.


message 9: by Cynthia (new)

1058995 I've read The Heretic's Daughter and What Was Lost - both we're excellent reads - If I was an English teacher I'd pair The Heretic's Daughter with The Scarlet Letter. And I also plan to read The People of the Book.


message 8: by Rachel (last edited Dec 19, 2008 02:03PM) (new)

572197 'What I Was' by Meg Rosoff isn't an adult novel - it's definitely written for teenagers. I've not read it, but it's shelved with in the Junior Fiction section in my school library and definitely sounds like a teen novel. I recently read 'How I Live Now' by her and I felt that I would have appreciated it more if I was a young teen.

I saw 'What Was Lost' by Catherine O'Flynn on Amazon a while back and have it on my Want To Read list. Other than that, I haven't heard of any of these books, and I'm a high school student! I'm currently reading 'March' by Geraldine Brooks and I've heard of Maya Angelou.

Does it say why these books are recommended to high school kids? And are these books designed to help teenagers who aren't particularly well-read? We have a list of Recommended Books in my school library for students who are studying English but don't read at all.


message 7: by Donna (new)

1334924 That is good to know


message 6: by Elizabeth (new)

1777256 I also heard that The Heretic's Daughter is excellent. I'm stubbornly waiting for it to come out in paperback. I can see how it could be a good read while learning about that time in history. The author is an actual descendent of the "witch" in the book who is hung for her crimes. I thought that added a bit of intrigue.


message 5: by Donna (new)

1722935 In the fiction list I have heard of People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks, it's on my TBR list. She won the Pulitzer prize for her book, March (civil war time period), and she also has a wonderful book, A Year of Wonders, about the plague years in England. Both would be great books for HS.

The Heretic's Daughter by Kathleen Kent is also on my TBR list. It's about the Salem witch trials. Friends who have read it say it is very good. Probably would fit in well in a HS literature/history program.


message 4: by Donna (new)

1334924 Neither have I that's why I decided to post this I was waiting for someone to shed some light on this LOL


message 3: by Lori, Super Mod (new)

369169 Wow. I have not heard of any of those. They are adult novels????


message 2: by Kandice (new)

1396160 Good thing I am no longer a teenager. I have not read single book on this list!


message 1: by Donna (last edited Dec 18, 2008 07:29AM) (new)

1334924 I get a subscription of the School Library Journal and thought that these lists were pretty interesting. Maybe you will too!

Fiction

IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER BY AUTHOR LASY NAME

The Story of Forgetting - Stefan Merrill Block
People of the Book - Geraldine Brooks
Conception: A Novel - Kalisha Buckhanon
Tigerheart: A Tale of the Anyplace - Peter David
Gardens of Water - Alan Drew
Someone Knows my Name - Lawrence Hill
The Heretic's Daughter - Kathleen Kent
The Rich Man of Pietermaritzburg - Sibusiso Nyembezi
What Was Lost - Catherine O'Flynn
Anthem of a Reluctant Prophet - Joanne Proulx
What I Was - Meg Rosoff
All Souls: A Novel - Christine Schutt
Homespun - Nilita Vachani

Nonfiction

This Being the True Story of the Greatest Elephant in the World - Paul Chambers
The Taste of Sweet: Our Complicated Love Affair with Our Favorite Treats - Joanne Chen
The Big Necessity - Rose George
Maya Angelou: A Glorious Celebration - Marcia Ann Gillespie, Rosa Johnson Butler, & Richard A. Long
Women of COurage: Intimate Stories From Afghanistan - Scott Heidler
American Earth: Environmental Writing Since Thoreau - Bill McKibben
The Ender's Hotel: A Memoir - Brandon R. Schrand
Your America: Democracy's Local Heroes - John Siceloff & Jason Maloney
Gang Leader for a Day: A Rouge Sociologist Takes to the Street - Sudhir Venkatesh


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Books mentioned in this topic

The Book of Negroes (other topics)
Someone Knows My Name (other topics)
Reservation Blues (other topics)
All Quiet on the Western Front (other topics)
The Metamorphosis (other topics)
More...

Authors mentioned in this topic

Lawrence Hill (other topics)
S.E. Hinton (other topics)