Outstanding
Books for the College Bound
Agee, James. A Death in the
Family. 1957. The enchanted childhood summer of 1915 becomes a
baffling experience for Rufus Follet when his father dies.
Allison, Dorothy. Bastard Out of Carolina.
1992. Bone confronts poverty, the troubled marriage of her mother and
stepfather, and the stigma of being considered "white trash"
as she comes of age in South Carolina.
Alvarez, Julia. In the Time of
Butterflies. 1994. Dede, the only survivor of the four Mirabel
sisters, code named Mariposas or butterflies, reveals their role in the
liberation of the Dominican Republic from the dictator Trujillo.
Anaya, Rudolfo. Bless Me, Ultima.
1972. Ultima, a wise old mystic, helps a young Hispanic boy resolve
personal dilemmas caused by the differing backgrounds and aspirations of
his parents and society.
Atwood, Margaret. The Handmaid's Tale.
1986. In Gilead, a Christian fundamentalist dystopia, fertile
lower-class women serve as birth-mothers for the upper class.
Butler, Octavia. Parable of the Sower.
1993. Lauren Olamina, who suffers from a hereditary trait called "hyperempathy"
that causes her to feel others' pain physically, journeys north along
thr dangerous highways of twentieth-first century California.
Card, Orson Scott. Ender's Game.
1985. In a world decimated by alien attacks, the government trains young
geniuses like Ender Wiggin in military strategy with increasingly
complex computer games.
Chopin, Kate. The Awakening. 1899.
Edna Pontellier, an unhappy wife and mother, discovers new qualities in
herself when she visits Grand Isle, a resort for the Creole elite of New
Orleans.
Cisneros, Sandra. The House On Mango
Street. 1991. In short, poetic stories, Esperanza describes life
in a low-income, predominantly Hispanic neighborhood in Chicago.
Dostoyevsky, Fyodor. Crime and Punishment.
1866. A sensitive intellectual is driven by poverty to believe himself
exempt from moral law.
Ellison, Ralph. Invisible Man.
1952. A young African American seeking identity during his high school
and college days, and later in New York's Harlem, relates his terrifying
experiences.
Emecheta, Buchi. Bride Price.
1976. Aku-nna, a very young Ibo girl, and Chike, her teacher, fall in
love despite tribal custom forbidding their romance.
Faulkner, William. The Bear.
1931. Ike McCaslin's hunting trips for the legendary bear, Old Ben, are
played out against opposing ideas of corruption and innocence.
Frazier, Charles. Cold Mountain.
1997. Inman, a wounded Civil War soldier, endures the elements, The
Guard, and his own weakness and infirmity to return to his sweetheart,
Ada, who is fighting her own battle to survive while farming the
mountainous North Carolina terrain.
Gaines, Ernest. A Lesson Before Dying.
1993. When Jefferson's attorney states, "I would just as soon put a
hog in the electric chair as this," disillusioned teacher Grant
Wiggins is sent into the penitentiary to help this slow learner gain a
sense of dignity and self-esteem before his execution.
Gardner, John. Grendel. 1971. In
a unique interpretation of the Beowulf legend, the monster Grendel
relates his struggle to understand the ugliness in himself and mankind
in the brutal world of fourteenth-century Denmark.
Gibbons, Kaye. Ellen Foster.
1987. Casting an unflinching yet humorous eye on her situation,
eleven-year-old Ellen survives her mother's death, an abusive father,
and uncaring relatives to find for herself a loving home and a new mama.
Heller, Joseph. Catch-22. 1961.
In this satirical novel, Captain Yossarian confronts the hypocrisy of
war and bureaucracy as he frantically attempts to survive.
Hemingway, Ernest. Farewell to Arms.
1929. World War I is the setting for this love story of an English nurse
and a wounded American ambulance officer.
Hesse, Hermann. Siddhartha. 1951.
Emerging from a kaleidoscope of experiences and tasted pleasures,
Siddhartha transcends to a state of peace and mystic holiness in this
strangely simple story.
Huxley, Aldous. Brave New World.
1932. In a chilling vision of the future, babies are produced in bottles
and exist in a mechanized world without soul.
Keneally, Thomas. Schindler's List.
1982. Oskar Schindler, a rich factory owner, risks his life and spends
his personal fortune to save Jews listed as his workers during World War
II.
King, Laurie R. The Beekeeper's
Apprentice, or, On the Segregation of the Queen. 1994.
Retired Sherlock Holmes meets his intellectual match in
15-year-old Mary Russell, who challenges him to investigate yet another
case.
Kosinski, Jerzy. Painted Bird.
1965. An abandoned dark-haired child wanders alone through isolated
villages of Eastern Europe in World War II.
Lee, Harper. To Kill a Mockingbird.
1960. A young girl tells of life in a small Alabama town in the 1930s
and her father's defense in court of an African American accused of
raping a white woman.
LeGuin, Ursula. The Left Hand of Darkness.
1969. First envoy to the technologically primitive world of Winter, Al
must deal with a hostile climate; a suspicious, bickering government;
and his own conventional sexual mores.
McCullers, Carson. The Member of the
Wedding. 1946. A young Southern girl is determined to be the
third party on a honeymoon, despite all advice.
McKinley, Robin. Beauty. 1978.
Love is the only key to unlocking a curse and transforming the Beast
into a man.
Malamud, Bernard. The Fixer.
1966. Victim of a vicious anti-Semitic conspiracy, Yakov Bok is in a
Russian prison with only his indomitable will to sustain him.
Markandaya, Kamala. Nectar In A Sieve.
1954. Natural disasters, an arranged marriage, and industrialization of
her village are the challenges Rukmani must face as the bride of a
peasant farmer in southern India.
Mason, Bobbi Ann. In Country.
1985. After her father is killed in the Vietnam War, Sam Hughes
lives with an uncle whom she suspects suffers from the effects of Agent
Orange, and struggles to come to terms with the war's impact on her
family.
Mori, Kyoko. Shizuko's Daughter.
1993. In the years following her mother's suicide, Yuki develops the
inner strength to cope with her distant father, her resentful
stepmother, and her haunting, painful memories.
Morrison, Toni. Beloved. 1987.
Preferring death over slavery for her children, Sethe murders her infant
daughter who later mysteriously returns and almost destroys the lives of
her mother and sister.
O'Brien, Tim. The Things They Carried: A
Work of Fiction. 1990. These stories follow Tim O'Brien's
platoon of American soldiers through a variety of personal and military
encounters during the Vietnam War.
O'Connor, Flannery. Everything That Rises
Must Converge. 1965. Stories about misfits in small
Southern towns force the reader to confront hypocrisy and complacency.
Potok, Chaim. The Chosen. 1967.
A baseball injury brings together two Jewish boys, one Hasidic, the
other Orthodox, first in hostility but finally in friendship.
Power, Susan. The Grass Dancer.
1994. Ending in the 1980s with the love story of Charlene Thunder and
grass dancer Harley Wind Soldier, this multigenerational tale of a Sioux
family is told in the voices of the living and the dead.
Shaara, Michael. Killer Angels.
1974. Officers and foot soldiers from both the Union and Confederacy
steel themselves for the bloody Battle of Gettysburg.
Steinbeck, John. The Grapes of Wrath.
1939. An Oklahoma farmer and his family leave the Dust Bowl during the
Great Depression to go to the promised land of California.
Uchida, Yoshiko. Picture Bride.
1987. Taro journeys to America in the early 1900s to marry a man she has
never met.
Watson, Larry. Montana 1948.
1993. The summer he is 12, David watches as his family and small town
are shattered by scandal and tragedy.
Wright, Richard. Native Son.
1940. For Bigger Thomas, an African American man accused of a crime in
the white man's world, there could be no extenuating circumstances, no
explanations and only death.
Yolen, Jane. Briar Rose. 1992.
Disturbed by her grandmother Gemma's unique version of Sleeping Beauty,
Rebecca seeks the truth behind the fairy tale.
A Wallingford Public Library Teen Reading
List-1999
From: American Library Association Outstanding
Books for the College Bound