Hey guys so i'm a 15 year old girl and i love to read. But in book stores i can't find any books that i like now so could you tell me the novels and books you like? Thank you so much :)
Try Nokosee: Rise of the New Seminole and its sequel Nokosee & Stormy: Love & Bullets. Both are contemporary "pre-dystopian" books where the world is on the tipping point of environmental collapse written from a 17-year-old girl's POV. They come with lots of action and adventure and Stormy Jones, the girl in the stories, is a tsundere character (as is Nokosee) that will stick with you for a long time. She's far from perfect but she's real enough to want to love her and pull for her during her life on the run with Nokosee.
Cherry by Mary Karr. A memoir about teens, sex, drugs and growing up in rural Texas as told through the gritty, beautiful prose of one of America's best writers having taught at Harvard and currently teaching as the Peck Professor of English Literature at Syracuse University. It's a book every teen girl should read. If the opening paragraph doesn't do it for you, nothing will. On June 5, 2012, she released her first music CD as a co-writer with Rodney Crowel called "Kin."
The Liar's Club by Mary Karr. Another moving memoir recounting her earlier years (you should probably read this one first and then Cherry).
The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides. A moving story inspired by true events about the suicides of five teenage sisters as told from the viewpoint (for the most part) of randy teenage boys who try to explain it all.
I Never Promised You A Rose Garden by Joanne Greenberg. A critically appraised and touching semi-autobiographical story of a 16-year-old girl battling schizophrenia in a mental hospital.
The Adults by Alison Espach is the "defining novel for recovering debutantes from Connecticut. The novel is narrated by Emily, a high school freshman, who grows up in the privileged world of investment bank commuters and desperate housewives. Her padded life suddenly unravels when she wakes early one morning after a sleepover, and looks out her kitchen window to witness her neighbor’s suicide. Meanwhile, her classmates provide anything but comfort (i.e. The fat girl in class gets nicknamed ABOB, which stands for “Annie The Bird or Bear” because nobody can decide if her nose makes her a bird, or if her fat makes her a bear). Satire, obviously. But amidst the byzantine cruelty only privileged high schoolers are capable of, grace is found in the secret, illicit relationship that develops between Emily and her English teacher. Espach never excuses the relationship, but she never indicts it either. Amidst a world of cheese platters and art auctions, their relationship simply surfaces as something real while everything else in Emily’s world just seems sterilized... (This is) white girl fiction.” by Geoff Max for Flavorwire.
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To Kill A Mockingbird By Harper Lee
Wicked: The Life And Times of the Wicked Witch of the West by Gregory Maguire
The Phantom of the Opera by Gaston Leroux
Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens
Any books by Mary Higgins Clark or Carol Higgins Clark
The Cat Who books by Lilian Jackson Braun
Kelley Armstrong's Darkest Powers and Darkness Rising Books
Susan Conant's Dog Lovers Mysteries
Blaize Clemant's Dixie Hemingway mysteries
Mary Daheim's Bed and Breakfast Mysteies
The Hunger Games
The Divergent series
Hush Hush series
The Mortal Instruments
The Perks of Being a Wallflower
The Book Thief
xx
Tree Shepherd's Daughter
Bridge to Terabithia
For Couples Only
The Answer You're Looking for Is inside You
The Great Divorce
Carry On, Jeeves
Paper Towns
West with the Night
Expecting Adam
When You Reach Me
Pam Muñoz Ryan:
Esperanza Rising
Beverly Cleary:
Fifteen
The luckiest girl
Jean and Johnny
Louisa May Alcott:
Little Women
Lois Lowry:
The giver
Gail Carson Levine:
The two princesses of bamarre
Naomi Hirahara:
1001 Cranes
Also greek myths are great things to read, like:
Persephone and Hades
Eros and Psyche
Hope it helps.. :)
Looking for Alaska by John Green
The Alchemyst: The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel by Michael Scott
Mortal Instruments series, Cassandra Clare
Wolves of Mercy Falls by Maggie Stiefvater
The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
Shatter Me,Tahereh Mafi
Divergent, Victoria Roth
Legend by Marie Lu
The Giver, by Lois Lowry
Matched, by Ally Condie
Delirium, Lauren Oliver
The Maze Runner, by James Dashner
Teen romance:
Going too Far by Simone Elkeles
Leaving Paradise by Simone Elkeles
Perfect Chemistry & Rules of Attraction by Simone Elkeles
The Summer I Turned Pretty, We'll Always Have Summer, It's Not Summer Without You by Jenny Han
Twenty Boy Summer by Sarah Ockler
The Book of Luke by Jenny O'Connell
Dairy Queen, Catherine Gilbert Murdock
The Earth, My Butt and Other Big Round Things, by Carolyn Mackler
hey! I'm 16 and I love reading. I'm not sure what type of genre's your most interested in but some novels that I loved are:
-Smile for the Camera
-A Mango shaped space
-Angel Falls
-Firefly Lane
-Night Road
-Mystic Lake
-13 Reasons why
-The five people you meet in heaven
-And then there were none (kind of different from the rest it's a mystery but I loved it)
-Just listen
-The truth about forever
So yeah there are some books I absolutely loved and really enjoyed. Hope I helped! :)
Try Nokosee: Rise of the New Seminole and its sequel Nokosee & Stormy: Love & Bullets. Both are contemporary "pre-dystopian" books where the world is on the tipping point of environmental collapse written from a 17-year-old girl's POV. They come with lots of action and adventure and Stormy Jones, the girl in the stories, is a tsundere character (as is Nokosee) that will stick with you for a long time. She's far from perfect but she's real enough to want to love her and pull for her during her life on the run with Nokosee.
Cherry by Mary Karr. A memoir about teens, sex, drugs and growing up in rural Texas as told through the gritty, beautiful prose of one of America's best writers having taught at Harvard and currently teaching as the Peck Professor of English Literature at Syracuse University. It's a book every teen girl should read. If the opening paragraph doesn't do it for you, nothing will. On June 5, 2012, she released her first music CD as a co-writer with Rodney Crowel called "Kin."
The Liar's Club by Mary Karr. Another moving memoir recounting her earlier years (you should probably read this one first and then Cherry).
Jennifer Miller’s debut novel The Year of the Gadfly is a tale of prep school scandal and secret societies starring a very precocious 15-year-old young lady named Iris Dupont, whose best and only friend is the chain-smoking ghost of famed broadcast journalist Edward R. Murrow. If it sounds weirdly wonderful, it is – Iris would kill us for using a cliché here, but we can’t help but call the novel compulsively readable, and it feels a little something like a cross between The Secret History and Gossip Girl, although with significantly more masturbation scenes than the former and more dusty tomes than the latter. As reviewed by Emily Temple, Flavorwire
The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides. A moving story inspired by true events about the suicides of five teenage sisters as told from the viewpoint (for the most part) of randy teenage boys who try to explain it all.
I Never Promised You A Rose Garden by Joanne Greenberg. A critically appraised and touching semi-autobiographical story of a 16-year-old girl battling schizophrenia in a mental hospital.
The Adults by Alison Espach is the "defining novel for recovering debutantes from Connecticut. The novel is narrated by Emily, a high school freshman, who grows up in the privileged world of investment bank commuters and desperate housewives. Her padded life suddenly unravels when she wakes early one morning after a sleepover, and looks out her kitchen window to witness her neighbor’s suicide. Meanwhile, her classmates provide anything but comfort (i.e. The fat girl in class gets nicknamed ABOB, which stands for “Annie The Bird or Bear” because nobody can decide if her nose makes her a bird, or if her fat makes her a bear). Satire, obviously. But amidst the byzantine cruelty only privileged high schoolers are capable of, grace is found in the secret, illicit relationship that develops between Emily and her English teacher. Espach never excuses the relationship, but she never indicts it either. Amidst a world of cheese platters and art auctions, their relationship simply surfaces as something real while everything else in Emily’s world just seems sterilized... (This is) white girl fiction.” by Geoff Max for Flavorwire.
Read The Road Less Traveled.
I wish someobody would have given me that book to read when I was 15. My life would have been a lot easier. ;-)
Since you are a 15 year old girl, this may be just what you are looking for. Read a chapter free on Amazon.
http://www.amazon.com/Marcy-Marlene-Wise/dp/160799...
The Holy Bible.