August 2025
    M T W T F S S
     123
    45678910
    11121314151617
    18192021222324
    25262728293031

    I am now ninteen and not enjoyed a fiction book since I was sixteen. It seems that almost every book I try to read ends up boring me. I starting reading classics at a young age; for example, I read Pride and Prejudice at the age of ten. I have not been to successfully branch out from the classics that I enjoyed as a child. I have recently tried to read historical fiction books, as I love history, especially medieval and Renaissance European history and the Early Republic period of U.S. history (which is between the American Revolution and Civil War). However, I am yet to find a historical fiction book that interests. I am now open to almost all genres.

    Books I Enjoyed in the Past:

    1. Pride and Prejudice
    2. Persuasion
    3. Sense and Sensibility
    4. Northanger Abbey
    5. Wuthering Heights (my favorite book)
    6. Great Expectations
    7. Little Fires Everywhere (the sole modern book that I have liked)

    Conditions for Fiction Book Suggestions

    1. Genre

    Any fiction book that is not science fiction. Family sagas, historical fiction, and literary fiction interest me, but the books do not have to be in these genres.

    1. Not These Authors

    Charlotte Bronte, George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, Elizabeth Gaskell, Philippa Gregory, Bernard Cornwell, Ken Follet, Cormac McCarthy, and Ernest Hemingway. (I did not enjoy these authors' books)

    I also have read every book by Jane Austen.

    1. At Least one Complex Female Character

    The protagonist does not have to female, as long as there is at least one complex female character.

    1. Moral Ambiguity and Psychological Complexity

    2. At Least Somewhat Eventful Plot (No Slice of Life Books)

    3. A Decent Amount of Dialogue

    by Ok_Conclusion8121

    5 Comments

    1. thearmadillo on

      Emma, Jayne Eyre, or anything by the Bronte’s seems right up your alley.

      I would also suggest True Grit, which is a short western with a wonderful teenage girl as the main character.

    2. Perhaps *Tender is the Night* by F. Scott Fitzgerald.

      Oh! And definitely read Paul Gallico’s *Mrs. Harris goes to Paris*.

      Edit: And while it doesn’t have a female protagonist, you might like Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings‘ *The Yearling*.

    3. I also love a well-written book, like Jane Austen’s. Kazuo Ishiguro is a wonderful current author, maybe start with Never Let Me Go. It’s a bit less obvious than Austen; you need to figure out what’s going on for yourself.

    Leave A Reply