Solid_Parsley_

Solid_Parsley_ t1_j2cg40s wrote

It’s been a while, but the ones I remember are:

9th grade: 1984, Animal Farm (there were definitely more this year, but I think I spaced out on most of the class)

10th grade: Dracula, Frankenstein, Beowulf, Canterbury Tales, Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility

11th grade: literally all I remember from this year is The Great Gatsby

12th grade: A Separate Peace, Things Fall Apart, Dante’s Inferno, Catcher in the Rye, Macbeth, Othello, Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, A Midsummer Night’s Dream

To be honest, I despised almost every book I read in high school, so a few years later, I decided to give some of them another shot. Turns out, as an adult, a lot of these books have more meaning. I ended up loving A Separate Peace, I enjoyed Dracula, big fan of Gatsby. Still can’t rock with Shakespeare. I appreciate the art form and the stories, but if I’m being honest, it takes more focus to understand them than I want to put in for leisure reading.

In terms of impact, I reference A Separate Peace every once in a while and no one knows what the hell I’m talking about. That’s about it.

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Solid_Parsley_ t1_iyeooj1 wrote

121 last year, and my goal was 100 for this year, but I hit a slump (between illness, broken ankle, depression and burnout), so I'm sitting around 65 at the moment.

But just a note, it doesn't matter how much anyone reads... 2 books or 200 books, as long as they're reading, are both great. I just have no obligations outside of work, no family, no children, low-need pets, so I have a lot of time to read. Not everyone has six hours at a time to sit down and just smash through an entire book.

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