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[Closed] Good (classic) books for a teenager

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My 16yo is trying to broaden horizons in the lockdown, including starting to prep for A level English Lit

Any recommendations for a good reading list of 'classic' novels that are still entertaining. We've done To Kill a Mockingbird, Alice's Adventures, and a couple of others. Any ideas?


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 9:59 pm
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Billy Liar


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:03 pm
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Call of the wild and white fang - Jack london Great adventures and the historic setting is eye opening

Orwell? down and out in Paris and London makes good reading and Rad to Wigan Pier is hard hitting

Catcher in the Rye? I enjoyed reading that as a kid

Three Men in a Boat? funny as anything and lovely historical detail


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:04 pm
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One day in the life of Ivan Denisovitch by Solzhenitsyn.
Androcles & the lion by G K Chesterton (a play, but still a good read.)

Bit is a difference between the two but both books I read as an older teenager in amongst loads of sci-fi and history stuff.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:04 pm
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Catcher in the Rye
Slaughterhouse 5
Faranheit 451


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:06 pm
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Good call on Denisovitch - I actually used that for my higher english - great read

If you like a war story " All quiet on the Western Front"


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:08 pm
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Wodehouse
Wodehouse
Wodehouse
And perhaps a little Wodehouse

Then, some Orwell, Three Men in a Boat as above. Add in a bit of Tom Jones, a dash of Frankenstein and Dracula (better than you expect them to be!). Cannery Row and On The Road for a little Americana.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:09 pm
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Still got this on the bookshelf, been passed down since it was released to all our family . Been reread a few times.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Kestrel-Knave-Penguin-Modern-Classics/dp/0141184981


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:17 pm
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Grapes of Wrath, East of Eden, Cannary Row, basically anything by Steinbeck

I read GoW when I was 19, had an impact like nothing I’d read before or up to the point where I read it again aged 52 where it had just as profound an effect. Truly one of the greatest pieces of writing of all time.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:18 pm
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Yep, Steinbeck's shorter and more amusing novels would be my recommendation:
Cannery Row
Sweet Thursday
Tortilla Flat

I'd then go straight for East of Eden.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:29 pm
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Grapes of Wrath every single day of the week. A book without parallels in my opinion.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:33 pm
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Catch-22 by Joseph Heller.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:42 pm
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The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:46 pm
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'The Reader' by Bernhard Schlink.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:50 pm
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1984
Catcher in the Rye


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:51 pm
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As much Dickens as they can take.

And Sherlock Holmes.

I’m also a sucker for the Edgar Rice Burroughs Barsoom / John Carter of Mars series


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:53 pm
 TomB
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1984
Catch 22
Catcher in the rye
Cannery Row
Huckleberry Finn


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 10:59 pm
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John Buchan - 39 Steps. And his other stuff. Bit of historic adventure/spy/war.

Or Iain Banks. The Wasp Factory and The Crow Road are modern classics, quite fun.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:00 pm
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Not lierature/novels, but Hamlet is a good read, and I do like a bit of TS Eliot poetry. So that too. And another vote for Orwell.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:08 pm
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The Magic Faraway Tree.
Classic😀.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:11 pm
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Both my eldest girls enjoyed Milk, Sulphate and Alby Starvation by Martin Miller around that age. You might want to read it first to check you are happy with the themes, but both mine loved it.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:12 pm
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Lord of the Flies


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:29 pm
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Good call on 1984 - a very interesting read.

Also Clockwork Orange - it can be a bit hard work with the language, but a very good read.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:44 pm
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As a former English teacher myself I’d rather eat my own liver than endure any Depression era American novels.

Brave New World is a much better novel than 1984. Huxley is also a vastly superior and more interesting author than Orwell.

Other classics that are actually readable: Don Quixote, most novels by Graham Green, The Woman in White, Frankenstein.

Rushdie is worth reading, but not The Satanic Verses, which is a work of opaque pretentiousness.

JP


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:46 pm
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Stig of the dump.

Razzle.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:47 pm
 IHN
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See, now, I'm going to disagree about Grapes of Wrath and East of Eden.

Don't get me wrong, both absolutely incredible books. I read them both in my late teens, early twenties, thinking myself terribly sophisticated to have done so. Then I read them again in my mid thirties and actually 'got' them. There's absolutely no way anyone with no 'life experience' can really appreciate them fully.

But, the shorter Steinbecks, deffo. One not often recommended that I'd suggest is Once There Was A War.

As for Wodehouse, sorry, no.


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:49 pm
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1970's Playboy. Lots of interesting articles which is the only reason my uncle ever bought it


 
Posted : 10/04/2020 11:55 pm
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@IHN - totally disagree. I read GOW in my early twenties, loved it and it stayed with me. It doesn’t take much to understand the underlying message of it and any half-intelligent teenager should get it.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 12:15 am
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Meridian

A bit different from your average Western.

Might be a bit 18/R rated for a teenager though - it's pretty savage


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 5:11 am
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Dracula


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 9:54 am
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My first thought from the title was Red Dwarf books. Not quite what has been suggested, but I couldn't put them down as a teenager and I'm sure there's some cultural value in them.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 10:01 am
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Rushdie is worth reading, but not The Satanic Verses, which is a work of opaque pretentiousness.

Midnight's Children is fantastic.

There are various reading lists out there, but I would personally focus on the more accessible end of the spectrum. A bit of Thomas Hardy, Austen, maybe JG Farrell, EM Forster, and don't forget poetry - Yeats, Hardy again, WH Auden, Plath.

Reading for pleasure will make diving into some of the denser texts easier later on.

Oh, and definitely some Wodehouse! 🙂


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 10:05 am
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May I suggest substituting John Steinback for Neville Shute.

Also, Flemming - Dr No and You Only Live Twice were two of my favourites.

Classic storytelling if not classic content, Wilbur Smith, I liked Hungry as the Sea but the Courtney series starting with When the Lion Feeds is great.

Catch 22 is my favourite book, I also liked Martin Millar although he's a bit leftfield - The Good Fairies of New York was a highlight. Iain Banks, yes. Frank Herbert's Dune if you can stomach spaceships and magic. Michael Crichton was a very clever author.
The Beach - Alex Garland. Stephen King's early novels.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 10:23 am
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Anything by Orwell (including the essays, Politics and the English Language?), Down and Out?
Gorky's 'My Childhood'
Ch 1 of Terry Eagleton's 'Introduction to Literary Theory'


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 11:26 am
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thanks all

As she's been recently getting an interest in politics as well, we're going for 1984 as a starter.....great story with enough to think about as well.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 11:34 am
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1984 is great.

Fahrenheit 451 is an absolute belter its a pretty good stab at the future which is now considering it was written in 1957 ( i think).

Catcher in the rye though. Second only to shakespeare in the category for most bullshit thing i was made to read in school. Its absolutely aweful.

The boy who wanted peace by george friel is pretty decent describing life in poverty stricken glasgow tenements. As are some of his other books Grace and Miss Partridge. But they're pretty scottish it may not have much to interest if you haven't experienced weegie land.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 11:43 am
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As mentioned before then, perhaps One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich should be next.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 11:48 am
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Slight digression but if she's interested in politics then Richard Wilkinson's 'The Spirit Level' is seismic in its scope and applications.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 11:49 am
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Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner

Secret History?


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 12:02 pm
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Hiw about some Jules Verne?


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 12:10 pm
 aP
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I was going to ask what books has she read recently, which did she enjoy, and what interests her. Then we can suggest a combination of further reading 😉
In the time honoured tradition of STW I'll pile in.
If John Buchan - anything but 39 Steps - Greenmantle is better IMHO. Geopolitics, and adventure.
CP Snow - Strangers and Brothers series. Set just before and after WW2 provided an insight into that period. Can be a bit dry at times.
Wilkie Collins - The Woman in White
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich as said several times previously is a must read.
Walter Mosley
John Berendt - Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
Ayn Rand - The Fountainhead
Thomas Pynchon - start with The Crying of Lot 49
Walpole - The Castle of Otranto
If interested in politics then NF must include Noam Chomsky and John Pilger.
Mike Davis has written good stuff about how we inhabit our world.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 12:17 pm
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My tuppence worth. Agreed re Steinbeck though I found East of Eden hard going. Grapes of Wrath is a great read, with possibly the most powerful ending I've ever read. The lighter books are a good start, Cannery Row particularly.

Graeme Greene wrote some cracking books. Our Man in Havana and Brighton Rock are probably my favourites.

Someone mentioned Jules Verne above. Definitely worth a read.

Kidnapped by RLS is a great adventure tale. His other books are worth a read too.

And finally H G Wells. The War of the Worlds is one of my favourite novels of all time, and much of his other stuff is superb too. Though to be honest The Time Machine didn't live up to my hopes.


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 12:18 pm
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when I say interest in politics, she's no William Hague. I mean we're started to talk about the major UK parties, what policy differences they have, why we can't trust everything we see on Facebook and so on....some of these are maybe things I should read, but might be a bit deep for a just turned 16yo right now.

Thanks for all the suggestions though!


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 12:32 pm
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I won’t repeat any mentioned already but I will keep to a Russian theme.

The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov
Diary of a Madman by Nikolai Gogol
Novel with Cocaine by M Ageyev


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 12:44 pm
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Classics,

1984, We, Brave New World, Lord of the Flies, Dracula, The Hobbit, The Count of Monte Cristo, Of Mice and Men, One Flew Over the Cuckoos Nest, The Picture of Dorian Grey.

Non-Classics,

anything by Brandon Sanderson esp, the Alcatraz series of shorts (so funny!) and Mistborn series.

Currently enjoying some Sarah J Maas myself


 
Posted : 11/04/2020 1:06 pm
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