May 2026
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    I’m turning 17 this summer and have been feeling really nostalgic about growing up, so I wanted to ask:

    What are some books that you feel are mandatory to read as a teenager?

    They don’t necessarily have to be coming-of-age or even with teen characters, but books that you feel are best experienced around this age— or ones that genuinely changed the way you saw things when you were 15–18. Books you read as a kid that stuck with you, or you wish you read when you were younger all count. Even children's books (Charlotte's Web is still one of my absolute favourite novels and I have such fond memories of it).

    What books would you recommend to someone who's soon going to college and… the real world…

    I'm not entirely against self-help books, but I'm primarily looking for fiction.

    Thank you!!

    by Fearless-Hunter-8560

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    27 Comments

    1. The Outsiders is great to experience as a teenager. It’s still a favorite for me as an adult but if you haven’t read it yet, I recommend.

    2. As someone born in the 80s… every girl read Flowers in the Attic around age 11 to 13.

    3. Bird_Commodore18 on

      All Quiet on the Western Front by Remarque

      Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Stowe

      Flowers for Algernon by Keyes

      And Every Morning The Way Home Gets Longer And Longer by Backman

      The Grapes of Wrath by Steinbeck (also East of Eden and The Winter of our Discontent)

      The Sound and the Fury by Faulkner

      The Old Man and the Sea by Hemingway

    4. EagleEyezzzzz on

      I read a book called Ishmael by Daniel Quinn at that age and it was really formative!! Check it out.

      Also agree with 1984. Especially now.

    5. LadyM_Macbeth on

      Personally the books that shaped me were the Brontes (Charlotte, Emily, and Anne), Jane Austen, Edith Wharton, and Virginia Woolf. My recommendations:

      1. The Tenant of Wildfel Hall by Anne Brontë
      2. The Age of Innocence by Edith Wharton
      3. The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton
      4. Night and Day by Virginia Woolf
      5. All of Austen by my personal favorite is Persuasion

      Other favorites I read were:
      1. North and South by Elizabeth Gaskell
      2. Evelina by Frances Burney

    6. Pride and prejudice.

      Bring out all the romance in you, and another five years you’re just gonna be cynical

    7. And another note the alchemist Paulo Coello is best enjoyed while we’re still idealistic

    8. ClosetGamer75 on

      Fahrenheit 451, Ender’s Game, 1984, This Boy’s Life, Slaughterhouse Five, Breakfast of Champions. Vonnegut in general will change your perspective on life for the better, with an improved sense of humor, and remaining optimistic despite all of the horrors in the world.

    9. Sirprize2211 on

      The Caine Mutiny. Great story. Insights on authority and changing into an adult.

    10. therealbillshorten on

      How to win friends and influence people.

      I read it around your age. I thought it would be a book about manipulating people but instead it’s a book about how to genuinely become a nicer person.

    11. frigginboredaf on

      Catch-22 by Joseph Heller.

      Then read it again in 10 years to see how much you missed the first time round.

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