Top Ten Tuesday #35
Books Commonly Assigned in School that I Didn’t Read
I honestly love the original prompt, but I haven’t been feeling well since Sunday and I forgot to get my Top Ten Tuesday post ready. I find I’m in a bit of a rush and I can’t spend the needed time to find the covers I’d like for that prompt. Instead, I’m going to save today’s prompt for later and pivot to one I saw Bookwyrm Knits do for the school freebie back in August. The prompt is “Books Commonly Assigned in School that I Didn’t Read.”
When I was in high school, I hated reading. I avoided it at all costs if I could help it. To get through my classes, I watched movie adaptations or checked out the novel’s Cliff Notes (predecessor to Spark Notes). The only book I read in an English class was THE SCARLET LETTER.
Anyway, here are ten books I didn’t read when they were assigned to me in school:
The only book on this list that I’ve since read on my own is THE JOY LUCK CLUB. I do want to read a couple of the others, but many of these still hold no interest for me.
I’m still not feeling the greatest so I may not respond until later this week. I’ll try to return the favor as well, and I may just let this week passby without worrying about it. Thanks for commenting still on this post!
What about you? Were there any books you were assigned in school to read and didn’t? Do we have any in common?
I’ve read half of these, but the only ones I really liked were THE OUTSIDERS and THE JOY LUCK CLUB. I don’t know why kids are assigned such boring books in school—even if they are classics! I prefer more exciting reads 🙂
I hope you start feeling better soon. Take care!
Happy TTT!
Susan
http://www.blogginboutbooks.com
Right?! I don’t know why they assign such boring books in school either. I did take a sci-fi class in high school and I read DUNE in that class. It was the only book I got through and I loved it! I also read a couple of Mary Higgins Clark books for another class and I enjoyed those. I don’t really count them as assigned reading, though. 😀
First off, I really hope you feel better soon Jenni! The only one of these I had to read for school was Lord of The Flies and I HATED IT. Such a dull book, if I hadn’t had to read it for my exam, I definitely would have given up. I think the only book I ever didn’t finish that I had to read for school was Jane Eyre, I moved up an English set towards the end of the summer term in Year 9, and had to catch up on where they were in the book so I did but I found it so dull that I didn’t carry on, and then our sets changed for GCSE anyway, so I didn’t have to finish it!
My TTT: https://jjbookblog.wordpress.com/2022/09/27/top-ten-tuesday-387/
Thank you so much, Jo! 😀 I’ve heard a lot of hate for LORD OF THE FLIES. I’d like to read it someday just to see what all the controversy and hate is about. I like to punish myself, lol.
In the UK we tend to refer to school as the place you go until you are 16 or 18. I don’t remember being given certain books to read, other than the three we did for our English Literature O Level. (An exam we took at 16). I had to read Of Mice and Men and I loathed it. We also read The Pearl by Steinbeck and that was no better, so I just don’t think his books are for me! A Kestrel for a Knave (made into a film called Kes) was also popular but I think that was because it was set fairly locally.
At University any reading was related to the degree I was studying for, so they were all science books/journals.
It’s interesting how different school systems are. I only know how school works in the UK because of Harry Potter and I know that’s just fantasy. Harry Potter did teach me about prefects, the OWL- and NEWT-like exams, and that school starts around September 1. When I first read Harry Potter, I had no idea that Rowling used real British boarding schools as inspiration until I started reading other books. 😀