For me it was Gerald’s Game by Stephen King. I think it’s a fantastic novel with amazing character development. The main character is extremely realistic and well written. Despite the seemingly silly premise, I was invested throughout the entire thing. The main character’s development is really what sells it for me.
That being said, I am absolutely not reading it again anytime soon. There are two scenes in particular(if you’ve the book I’m sure you know) that managed to make extremely uncomfortable, mortified, and disgusted. My biggest fear is being trapped and helpless, so this book really got to me. Fantastic book, I’m never picking it up again.
Either that or Lord of the Flies… Dear God.
Our teacher mad us read Lord of the Flies when we were only 12-13 years old. Traumatizing experience, I don’t think we were supposed to read that so young. Won’t re-read it anytime soon
I feel like that’s the prime time to read it imo. I was 13 and absolutely loved it.
I read it at 13 in one school, then moved states and got it again two years later. I loved it both times. I think it has a lot to do with 1) personality and maturity of the kid and 2) skill of the teacher to appropriately well, teach the material
I think I was used to less tough books. However I remember reading stuff like Hunger Games around the same age, that wasn’t a very chill book either… so maybe it was because the teacher made us reading it during vacations without warning us, and the unexpected turn of events, like the children killing each other, shocked me
I think I was used to less tough books. However I remember reading stuff like Hunger Games around the same age, that wasn’t a very chill book either… so maybe it was because the teacher made us reading it during vacations without warning us, and the unexpected turn of events, like the children killing each other, shocked me
I read it when I was 14 in class. The teacher was very good about going through rough sections in their entirety, then going back and helping us work through it. He was probably the best English teacher I’ve ever had. He didn’t try to look too deep into stuff, he just had us read it and help us work through what we just read. With hard stories like Lord of the Flies, I think that’s the best way to do it, even without a teacher
I loved having good teachers giving us good books to read. I remember being one of the few in class that actually read the books, while the others mainly looked up summaries on internet. That one teacher that gave us Lord of the flies wasn’t very good, but I’ve had some that were like you describe. The best book I had to read for class was probably The Stranger by Albert Camus, when I was 15 to 16