Spyke
Redhotkurtreply
kbin.social

I had to look that one up. Looks like I barely missed that one, I had just aged out of the target demographic when it was published. Huh, it won a Newbery, so it must be good! Wait, what the heck, this book sounds like it was huge, how did I now hear of this before? Ok, well, I guess I gotta pick up a copy now.

4

I liked Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. I felt To Kill a Mocking Bird was only ok, although I got pretty confused in some of the court scenes.

7

In High School
Of Mice and Men
The Old Man and the Sea
Both are easy reads, but I found a lot of depth in them in my formative years. Things don't always go as planned, but we carry on.

In Uni
Catch-22, I genuinely laughed out loud at so much, it still helps me laugh at infuriating bureaucracy.
Fear and Loathing in LV.
Both for an Americal Lit elective, read everything I could find by HST afterwards.

5

Metamorphosis.

And from my youngest days, "The Murder of The Math Teacher"

3

Probably To Kill a Mockingbird and Fahrenheit 451 were my two favorites from my high school years.

3

I enjoyed that one too, I never forgot Sophie was it and her extra toes.

3

Not to be That Guy, but I LOVED the catcher in the rye as a teenager. It spoke to my angsty teen heart.

3

That's the beauty of it, aint it? It perfectly captures teen angst, so much so that you see it very differently when you're a teen vs an adult.

2
lemm.ee

I specifically remember really liking bud not buddy, but also remember very little about it

2
papalonianreply
kbin.social

Oh my God, I've never seen any reference of this book anywhere. I read it when I was super young and couldn't understand anything except some of the racial stuff (I'm mixed), read it again as a teenager and was so glad I did. I don't want to touch it now and ruin the nostalgia but I really loved it as a kid.

2

I don't really ever hear anyone else talk about it either. I'm guessing it was picked by my teacher and wasn't a common book to read in school. Ms. Hoke was wonderful. I'm white but went to magnet schools so I was surrounded by folks of all different races and financial backgrounds as a kid, and that book was probably my first introduction to the idea that some folks treat others differently for the color of their skin

2

Connected to another post here: Brothers Karamazov. It was a mandatory read for philosophy class when I was 17. It’s one off my favorite books.

We had many other mandatory reads, but most were from my home country and are not that internationally famous.

2

The owl who called my name, catch-22, invisible man, Lord of the flies and so many more.

2

Out of Mind by J. Bernlef really stuck with me. A story about a man suffering from Alzheimer's, his life seamlessly flowing over into memories. At times he suddenly awakens from them, realizes his current state, and a terrible emptiness engulfs him.

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What's a book you read in school that you actually enjoyed quite a lot? | Spyke