Skip to main content

Top Ten Books That I Wish Were Taught in Schools

This week's Top Ten Tuesday is quite appropriate for the start of the school year! There are so many books that I wish were taught...

1. Forever by Judy Blume

Freshman or sophomore English class. Or Health. Just reading this book would be so much more useful than the Health class at my high school was. It realistically depicts the emotional and sexual unfolding of a teenage relationship.

2. Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants series by Ann Brashares

I'd recommend these for junior and senior classes, for similar reasons to above. These books very realistically depict teenage lives in high school and college. I also think that the writing would be an extremely good model for kids to write stories of their own.

3. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Diaz

This book changed my life when I read it in a class (in college) and I think it's a particularly engaging and insightful book on issues from multiculturalism to poverty to nerd culture. Plenty of room for discussion on writing style and content.

4. Tripmaster Monkey by Maxine Hong Kingston

A classic at universities, it's equally worthy of injecting into the high school classroom, probably at a senior level, for a more nuanced look at racism and narrator reliability. Pairs well with The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.

5. Dune by Frank Herbert

The richness of the characters, worlds, and politics, not to mention environmental economics, all make Dune an enlightening as well as entertaining thought experiment. For a freshman or sophomore English or Biology class, and/or a Bioethics elective.

6. Born Confused by Tanuja Desai Hidier

I feel like I promote this book for everything, but it would really be great for a junior English class. Parts of it would work well for a Photography class or a class focused on recent history. Besides being a culturally rich and slice-of-teen-life read, it is steeped in a particular historical moment; NYC's South Asian American community in the '90s.

7. The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin

What if there was a world where anyone could be either gender? I feel like this kind of read stimulates critical thinking and leads to productive questions about social paradigms that could lead to fantastic essays.

8. Prep by Curtis Sittenfeld

My friend and I were talking about how we learned as kids to please adults and peers and how instead we should have learned to balance others' needs with our own. Prep is an extreme example of what happens when you allow social pressures to rule your life. The intense self loathing and secretive loathing of others that the protagonist engages in haunts me to this day, and sophomore or junior English classes should teach students not to end up like Lee Fiora.

9. The Vagina Monologues by Eve Ensler

Come on. Everyone needs to know more about vaginas and how our society feels about them. Plus, it's a play! Freshies, welcome to high school! (Maybe bump it up to sophomores if they're really giggly).

10. The Hundred Secret Senses by Amy Tan

I was debating which Amy Tan book to pick. Almost any of them would be great for cultural reasons, but this one has an especially rich historical component and leaves lots of questions about narrator reliability. Much better than The Joy Luck Club. For freshman or sophomore English class or World History class.

Comments

Huh. Dune would actually be a great high school read. It's enjoyable in its own right, but I can just see how a proper class discussion would enhance it so much.

Popular posts from this blog

Book Review: The Speed of Clouds by Miriam Seidel

Book Review: The Speed of Clouds by Miriam Seidel *To Be Released from New Door Books on April 10, 2018* Mindy Vogel is haunted by the future. In frequent daydreams, she toggles between her real, wheelchair-bound life and the adventurous life of her fanfic alter ego, SkyLog officer Kat Wanderer. She's haunted by all that Kat can do which she cannot---belong to an organization of comrades, walk, and fall in love---yet. Because at twenty-four, Mindy's future is very much ahead of her, wheelchair notwithstanding. Through Mindy's "SkyLog" fanzine and related emails, Seidel evokes Star Trek fandom around the turn of the millenium, but also creates a new and compelling science fictional universe, similar to what Rainbow Rowell's Fangirl  does for the Harry Potter fandom with "Simon Snow." Mindy is among the pioneers transitioning fandom from print to digital, boldly encountering like-minded individuals from the comfort of her chair behind the monito...

Books with Single-Word Titles

Happy Top Ten Tuesday over at That Artsy Reader Girl! Books with Single-Word Titles These are all my favorite books that I could think of with one-word titles. A lot of fantasy, a few nonfiction (minus subtitles) and Kindred , whether you consider it scifi or historical fiction. Also two portmanteaus using the word "bitter." I suppose it's a word that lends itself to amelioration. 1. Sweetbitter by Stephanie Danler 2. Bitterblue by Kristin Cashore 3. Fire by Kristin Cashore 4. Heartless by Marissa Meyer 5. Inheritance by Christopher Paolini 6. Meditations by Marcus Aurelius 7. Stoned by Aja Raden (has a subtitle) 8. Educated by Tara Westover 9. Fledgling by Octavia Butler 10. Kindred by Octavia Butler

Books Read in July 2024

 Pitch It by Evie Blum-- Kind of a weirdly suspenseful romcom but I enjoyed the perspective of a woman working in Silicon Valley,  which I don't see a lot. The business jargon was on point. The author is really talented at writing physicality too; be prepared for a lot of spicy scenes.  My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand, Bro di Ashton, and Jodi Meadows--I'd wanted to read this for a while (Tudor history nerd, hello!), and I just saw and loved the show on Prime and finally got the book from Kindle Unlimited.  Both are so, so good! Very tongue-in-cheek, intrusive narration, and so many riffs on Shakespeare, Tudor history, and more. Plus it's a surprise fantasy world with people who turn into animals instead of Protestants vs. Catholics--totally brilliant. Can't wait to read the rest! An Improper Situation by Sydney Jane Bailey-- On Stuff-Your-Kindle romance day, I took a chance on a lot of different books. This was the first one I tried. I really enjoyed the 19th century Sp...