I guess I wasn’t quite as clear as I could have been in my OP. I should have titled it, “Books that should have been read in high school English Lit class.”
Nothing wrong with the others that have been stated or implied, but if they are to be read in high school, they belong in other classes. I was inspired by the other thread that dealt with books we read and hated in English Lit, after all, so if we can stick with English Lit here, great.
Good choice, or something like it. A class on how to watch the news with cynicism/
Good choice.
Way too dark and violent at the end.
. Yes, a basic econ class- how to balance a checking account, credit cards, basic scams, and how to do a basic tax return. Explain about inflation at least a little.
Huckleberry Finn for older kids- high school. Steinbeck.
Agreed. I did read it in high school but only because we had an independent project where we could choose from a list of books to read on our own. Still one of the best books I’ve ever read. I’m not sure the content would fly in the average high school classroom, though.
I don’t understand why Huckleberry Finn is such a problem. Yes, there are issues with language but I think a good teacher could get some healthy discussion going about the use of the n-word. I expect I’ll be crucified for this position.
The World According to Garp or for the squeamish parts of the country A Prayer For Owen Meany.
For fun I would suggest one of Terry Pratchett’s Discworld novels, preferably a Vimes novel.
Some Chandler or Hammett could be interesting and possibly engaging for high school kids. Certainly more interesting for them than Moby Dick.
I am not into self-help books at all but this is an early one and a good one. Well worth a read. I read it in high school but not sure why (whether school made me or family or friends). Glad I did though. Perfect time to read it I think.
That thing is a tough ‘read’ - it’s over 500 pages! When would highschoolers have time? (It’s like back when the first Dune movie came out and Roger Ebert criticized it for being too long and obtuse, and my husband scoffed: ‘why doesn’t he just read the book?’ … Well, he was a busy movie critic writing his own books on films, writing reviews, and watching a lot of movies in order to do so. Mr. Ebert also had a life outside of his work, was he expected to labor through Dune, too?
In a perfect world, every high school in the country would make this mandatory reading. In the real world, it’s probably already banned in a significant number of (if not the majority of) schools in parts of the U.S.
My son (who was in high school around 2000) was adamantly against reading fiction, which he considered a colossal waste of his time. His English teacher assigned them to read a historical novel of their choice and he moped on about it until I suggested E.L. Doctorow’s Ragtime. He loved it!
The times they sure have changed, but the message of immigrant hope and inclusion in that book might make for some thoughtful discussions today.
In HS I read 2001 in an afternoon. It took me a month to finish Dune. I have a coworker who wanted to read it, to coincide with the then-new films. I said, let’s both read it, and discuss. I finished it a lot quicker than I did 40 years ago, but he still hasn’t! I think he just gave up.