13+ Reading Lists | Recommended Reading for Ages 13 to 16

The transition from childrens books to teenage fiction to adult novels can be hard to navigate. Here are four reading lists to give you a helping hand.

Year 8

From Malorie Blackman to Alex Shearer to Suzanne Collins, there are some fantastic authors out there for young teenagers. If your child is a confident reader, they might also like to try some classic novels. Animal Farmand Of Mice and Men are great places to start, as theyre action-packed and not too long.

Thrillers

The Angel Factory– Terence Blacker

The Stolen – Alex Shearer

Feather Boy– Nicky Singer

Fantasy

Noughts & Crossesseries – Malorie Blackman

The Hunger Gamesseries – Suzanne Collins

The Midwich Cuckoos– John Wyndham

Crime

And Then There Were None– Agatha Christie

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – Arthur Conan Doyle

Adventure

Journey to the River Sea – Eva Ibbotson

Classics

My Family and Other Animals– Gerald Durrell

Animal Farm– George Orwell

Of Mice and Men– John Steinbeck

Refugee Boy– Benjamin Zephaniah

Humour

Adrian Moles Diaryseries – Sue Townsend

Historical novels

The Roman Mysteries– Caroline Lawrence

Year 9

Fourteen and fifteen year-olds often find choosing books tricky without the help of reading lists. Having outgrown childrens literature, lots of Year 9 students still find adult novels daunting. Alexander McCall Smiths No.1 LadiesDetective Agencyseries is perfect for this age group, as are Agatha Christies murder mysteries. For something more challenging, try Kazuo IshigurosNever Let Me Goor F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby.

Classics

Alices Adventures in Wonderland– Lewis Carroll

The Great Gatsby– F. Scott Fitzgerald

Rebecca– Daphne du Maurier

TheCatcher in the Rye– J.D Salinger

Historical novels

The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas– John Boyne

Chinese Cinderella – Adeline Yen Mah

The Help– Kathryn Stockett

Adventure

Never Let Me Go– Kazuo Ishiguro

The Lost – Alex Shearer

Elsewhere Gabrielle Zevin

Crime

The Mysterious Affair at Styles – Agatha Christie

The Lighthouse– P.D James

Bridge to the Stars– Henning Mankel

The No.1 LadiesDetective Agency series – Alexander McCall Smith

Fantasy

The Fire Eaters– David Almond

The Amulet of Samarkand– Jonathan Stroud

Year 10

As teenagers start their GCSEs, they are faced with tougher reading material on a daily basis. They are also mature enough to enjoy more difficult reading lists. Gothic tales like Wuthering Heightsand The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hydeare popular with this age group, as are modern thrillers like The Girl on the Train. For historically-minded students, Philippa Gregory and Lindsay Davis have written a huge number books for readers to get their teeth into.

Classics

Wuthering Heights – Emily Bronte

The Catcher in the Rye– J.D Salinger

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie– Muriel Spark

The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde– Robert Louis Stevenson

Modern fiction

The Island– Victoria Hislop

The Poisonwood Bible – Barbara Kingsolver

Short story collections

Kiss Kiss– Roald Dahl

Sleep No More– P.D. James

Crime

The Murder of Roger Ackroyd – Agatha Christie

The Monogram Murders – Sophie Hannah

Thrillers

Before I Go to Sleep– S. J. Watson

The Girl on the Train– Paula Hawkins

Historical novels

The Falcoseries – Lindsay Davis

Memoirs of a Geisha– Arthur Golden

The Other Boleyn Girl– Philippa Gregory

Year 11

By Year 11 most teenagers are sampling adult fiction. For students hoping to pursue English Literature at A Level, the likes of Emma and Oliver Twistare well worth reading. Meanwhile, Virginia Woolfs Mrs Dallowayoffers a brilliant introduction to Modernism and Ian Rankins Knots and Crosses is crime writing at its finest.

Classics

Emma– Jane Austen

Oliver Twist – Charles Dickens

The Picture of Dorian Gray– Oscar Wilde

Mrs Dalloway– Virginia Woolf

Modern fiction

Captain Corellis Mandolin– Louis de Bernières

Birdsong– Sebastian Faulks

Small Island– Andrea Levy

Life of Pi– Yann Martel

The Children Act– Ian McEwan

Historical novels

The Tattooist of Auschwitz– Heather Morris

Innocent Traitor– Alison Weir

Thrillers

Room– Emma Donoghue

Gone Girl – Gillian Flynn

Crime

Knots & Crosses – Ian Rankin

The Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle– Stuart Turton

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