Most Read Young Adult Books
Most Read Young Adult Books
These are the Young Adult books most read by Seekquel members, ranked by real reading activity across 210 titles — not scraped popularity.
Based on Seekquel member reading activity. Updated weekly.
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Harry Potter and the Prisoner of AzkabanJ. K. Rowling · 1999Harry Potter #3Community rating: 4.51 out of 5Harry Potter's third year at Hogwarts begins under a shadow. Sirius Black, convicted of betraying Harry's parents to Lord Voldemort and of killing thirteen people with a single curse, has escaped from Azkaban — the first person ever to do so. The Ministry of Magic believes Black is coming for Harry. The school is placed under the guard of the dementors, soul-draining prison wardens whose effect on Harry is more severe than on anyone else, plunging him into traumatic flashbacks every time they appear. Amid this, Harry finds an unexpected mentor in the new Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher, Professor Lupin, whose calm competence and personal connection to Harry's past make him the most significant adult figure Harry has encountered since Hagrid. A stolen Marauder's Map, a time-turner, and a truth that contradicts everything Harry has been told about his parents' deaths combine to make this the most structurally inventive instalment in the series. Widely regarded as the moment the Harry Potter novels found their full emotional and thematic range, Prisoner of Azkaban marks the shift from middle-grade adventure to something darker, more morally complex, and more deeply concerned with justice, loyalty, and the way the past refuses to stay buried.
- time loop
- mentor figure
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Fourth WingRebecca Yarros · 2023The Empyrean #1Community rating: 4.54 out of 5Violet Sorrengail expected a quiet life among the scribes, cataloguing history in the archives of Navarre. Instead, her iron-willed mother—the kingdom's most feared general—orders her into the Riders Quadrant at Basgiath War College, where cadets bond with dragons or die trying. Smaller and more physically fragile than the warriors around her, Violet is given almost no chance of surviving the first day, let alone graduating. To live, she'll have to outthink opponents who could snap her in half, earn the respect of a dragon that could incinerate her on a whim, and navigate the lethal politics of a college where ambition is settled with blades. Chief among the threats is Xaden Riorson, the brooding, dangerous wingleader whose father was executed for leading a rebellion against Violet's mother—giving him every reason to want her dead. But as the war beyond Navarre's borders grows harder to ignore and the kingdom's defenses begin to fail, Violet starts to suspect that the leadership is hiding the truth about what's really happening on the front lines. The first book in Rebecca Yarros's Empyrean series, Fourth Wing pairs a deadly dragon-rider academy with a slow-burning, high-heat romance and a mystery that reframes everything Violet thought she knew.
- enemies to lovers
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The Hunger GamesSuzanne Collins · 2009The Hunger Games #1Community rating: 4.11 out of 5A dystopian survival story: Katniss Everdeen volunteers for a televised fight to the death to save her sister, then has to out-think both the arena and the Capitol's cameras to stay alive.
- survival
- reluctant hero
- love triangle
- sacrifice
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Harry Potter and the Chamber of SecretsJ. K. Rowling · 1998Harry Potter #2Community rating: 4.29 out of 5Before Harry Potter can even return to Hogwarts for his second year, a house-elf named Dobby appears in his bedroom with a frantic warning: do not go back to school. Harry ignores him — and arrives to find the castle under a shadow of genuine terror. Someone, or something, has begun attacking students, leaving them petrified and frozen with fear, and cryptic messages scrawled on the walls: the Chamber of Secrets has been opened. Enemies of the Heir, beware. As suspicion spreads and the attacks continue, Harry discovers he has an unsettling ability: he can hear a voice in the walls that no one else can detect, and he can speak to snakes in a language called Parseltongue — a gift that, in the Wizarding World, carries a disturbing reputation. Working with Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley, Harry follows the evidence into Hogwarts' hidden history, uncovering the story of a student who opened the Chamber fifty years earlier and the nature of the monster that has been sealed inside ever since. Darker in tone than its predecessor, the second Harry Potter novel deepens the mythology of the Wizarding World and introduces the concept of magical memory as a vessel for evil — a plot thread that will echo through all seven books.
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Harry Potter and the Deathly HallowsJ. K. Rowling, Mary GrandPré · 2007Harry Potter #7Community rating: 4.63 out of 5With Voldemort in control of the Ministry of Magic and Hogwarts no longer safe, Harry, Ron and Hermione abandon school and go on the run, tasked with finding and destroying the remaining Horcruxes — the objects in which Voldemort has hidden fragments of his soul to escape death. The hunt takes them to the Ministry, to Gringotts, and finally back to Hogwarts, and it is gruelling: the three are isolated, hunted, and fractured by the pressure while the Wizarding World collapses around them. Threading through the quest is a second mystery — the legend of the Deathly Hallows, three objects said to make their possessor the master of death. Voldemort is chasing them too, and what Harry decides to do about them shapes the confrontation both are moving toward. The seventh and final Harry Potter novel resolves the series' major threads in a battle at Hogwarts, and closes with an epilogue set nineteen years later. It is, above all, a book about death — about facing it, and about what a life given in love can accomplish that no amount of power can undo.
- chosen one
- quest
- coming of age
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Harry Potter and the Order of the PhoenixJ. K. Rowling · 2003Whispers of the Wild #4Community rating: 4.45 out of 5The fifth Harry Potter novel is the longest and darkest in the series, and the one in which the full weight of Voldemort's return begins to be felt. The Ministry of Magic, unwilling to accept that Voldemort has returned, launches a campaign to discredit both Harry and Dumbledore. A Ministry-appointed teacher, Dolores Umbridge, arrives at Hogwarts to enforce Ministry control over the school, and her particular brand of institutional cruelty proves in some ways more threatening than the Death Eaters themselves. Isolated, disbelieved, and struggling with a violent connection to Voldemort's mind that he cannot control, Harry leads a group of students in forming Dumbledore's Army — a secret organisation dedicated to learning real defence magic in defiance of Umbridge's educational decrees. Meanwhile, a prophecy that connects Harry and Voldemort from the moment of Harry's birth moves closer to the centre of the narrative. At over 750 pages, Order of the Phoenix is the series at its most emotionally demanding — a book about institutional failure, the loneliness of being right when the world is determined not to listen, and the cost of fighting a war that the powerful would rather pretend isn't happening. Rowling has acknowledged that Umbridge was inspired by a real person she once disliked intensely, describing them as someone with a pronounced taste for twee accessories.
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Harry Potter and the Goblet of FireJ. K. Rowling · 2000Harry Potter #4Community rating: 4.49 out of 5The fourth Harry Potter novel marks the series' decisive shift into darker, more complex territory. The Triwizard Tournament — a prestigious competition between three European wizarding schools, last held a century ago and abandoned due to its high casualty rate — has been unexpectedly revived. Hogwarts, Durmstrang, and Beauxbatons will each put forward a champion, selected by the impartial Goblet of Fire. Then a fourth name emerges from the Goblet: Harry Potter's, despite his being too young to enter and having submitted no application. Bound by magical obligation to compete, Harry faces three increasingly dangerous tasks while the real threat — Lord Voldemort's desperate attempt to restore himself to full power — assembles in the background. The tournament brings new students, new rivals, the Yule Ball, and the first glimpse of the wider Wizarding World beyond Britain. It also ends with a death that marks the point of no return for the series, transforming what began as a children's adventure story into something altogether more consequential. The first Harry Potter book published simultaneously in the UK and US, and at the time of publication the fastest-selling book in history, Goblet of Fire is also the longest and most structurally ambitious entry to that point — the book in which Rowling reveals the full scope of what she was building.
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A Good Girl's Guide to MurderHolly Jackson · 2019A Good Girl's Guide to Murder #1Community rating: 4.41 out of 5Five years ago, Andie Bell was murdered in the quiet town of Little Kilton. Everyone knows the story: her boyfriend, Sal Singh, killed her and then took his own life. The case is closed. But Pippa Fitz-Amobi has never quite believed it. When she chooses the murder as the subject of her senior capstone project, she tells herself she is only reopening old questions for a school assignment. The deeper Pip digs, the less the official version holds together. With the help of Ravi Singh, Sal's younger brother, who has spent years living under the weight of his brother's supposed guilt, she starts tracing the last hours of Andie's life through interviews, old messages, and secrets the town would rather keep buried. Someone notices. As anonymous threats begin to arrive, it becomes clear that the truth is still dangerous, and that the real killer may be much closer than anyone imagined. Told through Pip's project log, transcripts, and maps alongside the narrative, Holly Jackson's debut is a tightly plotted whodunit that helped define a wave of modern young-adult crime fiction. It is a story about the cost of certainty, the pull of an unsolved case, and how far an ordinary teenager will go to be sure she has found the truth.
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Harry Potter and the Philosopher's StoneJ. K. Rowling · 1997Harry Potter #1Community rating: 4.54 out of 5On the morning of his eleventh birthday, an orphan boy named Harry Potter discovers he is a wizard — and that he is already famous in a world he never knew existed. Raised by his contemptuous aunt and uncle in a cupboard under the stairs, Harry has spent ten years convinced he is utterly ordinary. Then a giant named Hagrid arrives with a letter of invitation to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, and Harry's life changes forever. At Hogwarts, Harry learns to cast spells, makes his first true friends, and discovers that his parents — far from dying in a car crash as his relatives always claimed — were killed by a powerful dark wizard named Voldemort, who then mysteriously lost his powers when he turned them on infant Harry. Now something is hidden beneath the school: something powerful enough to restore Voldemort to full strength. And someone inside Hogwarts is determined to reach it. Warm, inventive, and propulsive from its first page, this is the opening chapter of a seven-book saga that defined fantasy fiction for a generation — a story about the weight of destiny, the transformative power of friendship, and what it means to finally discover who you truly are.
- chosen one
- found family
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The Great GatsbyF. Scott Fitzgerald · 1925Scribner library #1Community rating: 4.06 out of 5Community spice: 2.0 out of 52.0Set on Long Island in the summer of 1922, The Great Gatsby is narrated by Nick Carraway, a young Midwesterner newly arrived in New York and renting a modest cottage next door to a vast mansion. His neighbor is Jay Gatsby, a self-made millionaire famous for the lavish parties he throws every weekend, though almost no one knows where his fortune came from or what he truly wants. Through Nick, we learn that Gatsby's glittering displays are all in service of a single obsession: Daisy Buchanan, the woman he loved before the war and who is now married to the wealthy, brutish Tom Buchanan. As Nick is drawn into the tangled lives of the East Egg and West Egg elite, the distance between old money and new, between illusion and reality, becomes impossible to bridge. F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel is a compact, lyrical portrait of the Jazz Age and a piercing critique of the American Dream. Its symbols — the green light across the bay, the fading eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg, the valley of ashes — have become part of the language, and its story of longing, class, and self-invention remains one of the most enduring in American literature.
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The Fault in Our StarsJohn Green · 2012Community rating: 4.04 out of 5Hazel Grace Lancaster is sixteen and has lived with terminal thyroid cancer for years, kept alive by an experimental drug and tethered to a portable oxygen tank. Wry, guarded, and impatient with the platitudes that surround the dying, she attends a support group mostly to appease her mother. There she meets Augustus Waters, a confident seventeen-year-old in remission from osteosarcoma who lost part of a leg to the disease and who is preoccupied with the fear of leaving no mark on the world. Their friendship turns into a tentative, clear-eyed romance built on shared humor, a love of books, and an unwillingness to pretend that illness is noble. Hazel's favorite novel, An Imperial Affliction, ends mid-sentence, and Augustus arranges a trip to Amsterdam so the two can ask its reclusive author what happens to the characters after the final page. John Green writes about young people facing mortality without sentimentality or easy uplift. The Fault in Our Stars is a story about first love, the search for meaning, and the difference between being remembered and being loved while you are here. Sharp and funny as often as it is devastating, it became one of the defining young-adult novels of its decade.
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Harry Potter and the Half-Blood PrinceJ. K. Rowling · 2005Harry Potter #6Community rating: 4.57 out of 5The sixth Harry Potter novel operates as both a detective story and a sustained act of revelation. The Wizarding World is at war — openly now, with the Ministry no longer able to deny Voldemort's return — and Dumbledore knows his time is limited. He takes Harry on a series of private lessons using a Pensieve to reconstruct Voldemort's past, piece by piece, in order to understand the mechanism of his immortality and identify the objects in which he has hidden fragments of his soul. Harry, meanwhile, becomes obsessed with an annotated copy of his Potions textbook, annotated by a mysterious former student who signed themselves the Half-Blood Prince — whose spells and insights are unlike anything in the standard curriculum. The annotator's identity, when revealed, transforms the book's moral landscape entirely. The sixth instalment is also the one most concerned with the consequences of war on the people who are not fighting it: the students navigating first love and loss while Hogwarts itself becomes a target. Draco Malfoy, assigned a mission by Voldemort, is developed here into a genuinely tragic figure rather than a simple antagonist. Rowling confirmed years before the book's publication that Dumbledore's death — which ends the novel — had been planned since before the first book was written.
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Catching FireSuzanne Collins · 2010The Hunger Games #2Community rating: 3.99 out of 5Katniss and Peeta return home as victors, but their defiance has lit a fuse across the districts — and the Capitol answers by throwing them back into the arena for a lethal Quarter Quell.
- survival
- love triangle
- sacrifice
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The Catcher in the RyeShao jia yun, J. D. Salinger · 1951Community rating: 3.79 out of 5Since its publication in 1951, J. D. Salinger's only novel has become one of the defining portraits of adolescent alienation in American literature. Over the course of a few restless winter days, sixteen-year-old Holden Caulfield narrates his flight from Pencey Prep — the latest boarding school to expel him — into the streets of New York City, where he drifts from hotel bars to Central Park, from an old teacher's apartment to a carousel in the rain, unwilling to go home and face his parents. Holden's voice is the novel's engine: caustic, funny, evasive, and quietly grieving. He rails against the "phoniness" of the adult world while circling the losses he can barely name — chief among them the death of his younger brother — and clings to a fantasy of protecting childhood innocence, imagining himself as the "catcher in the rye" who keeps children from falling off a cliff. A landmark of postwar fiction and a perennial fixture of banned-book lists, The Catcher in the Rye endures because Holden's confusion, tenderness, and refusal to grow up still read as painfully honest. It is a short, deceptively simple book about depression, connection, and the terror of leaving childhood behind.
- coming of age
- unreliable narrator
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The Lightning ThiefRick Riordan, Robert Venditti · 2005Percy Jackson and the Olympians #1Community rating: 4.49 out of 5Twelve-year-old Percy Jackson has bounced between boarding schools his whole life, dogged by ADHD, dyslexia, and a knack for trouble he cannot explain. When a museum field trip goes violently wrong, he learns the truth: he is a demigod, the son of the Greek sea god Poseidon, and the monsters of myth are very real. Whisked to Camp Half-Blood, a sanctuary for children of the gods on Long Island, he begins to understand a world hidden just behind the mortal one. But his arrival coincides with crisis. Zeus's master lightning bolt has been stolen, and the king of the gods blames Percy. With war among the Olympians looming, Percy is given ten days to find the real thief and return the bolt before the summer solstice. He sets out across the United States with two companions: Annabeth, a sharp daughter of Athena, and Grover, a satyr charged with his protection. Their road trip becomes a gauntlet of mythological dangers, leading at last to the Underworld and a confrontation that reveals a deeper conspiracy stirring beneath the squabbles of the gods. Narrated in Percy's wry, self-deprecating voice, the story blends fast adventure with a coming-of-age tale about belonging, absent fathers, and finding strength in the very traits that once made him an outsider.
- chosen one
- found family
- quest
- coming of age
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The Book ThiefMarkus Zusak · 2005Community rating: 4.11 out of 5Narrated by Death itself, The Book Thief follows Liesel Meminger, a young girl sent to live with foster parents in a small German town after the death of her brother and the disappearance of her Communist mother. In her new home on Himmel Street, Liesel's foster father, Hans, teaches her to read using a book she stole at her brother's graveside, and reading soon becomes both an escape and a quiet act of defiance in a country consumed by Nazi rule. As the war tightens its grip, the Hubermanns take an even greater risk: hiding Max Vandenburg, a young Jewish man, in their basement. Liesel's friendship with Max, and with the boy next door, Rudy Steiner, gives the novel its warmth even as Death — who narrates with weary, unsentimental compassion — reminds readers throughout how precarious and temporary these small kindnesses are. Markus Zusak's novel is at once a coming-of-age story, a meditation on the power of words to console and to destroy, and an unusual, deeply humane account of ordinary Germans living under a regime built on cruelty.
- coming of age
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TwilightStephenie Meyer · 2007The Twilight Saga #1Community rating: 3.76 out of 5When seventeen-year-old Isabella "Bella" Swan leaves sunny Phoenix to live with her father in the perpetually rain-soaked town of Forks, Washington, she expects little more than a dull, gray exile. Instead she becomes fascinated by Edward Cullen, a strikingly beautiful and aloof classmate who seems to alternate between saving her life and warning her away from him. As Bella pieces together the truth about Edward and his family, she realizes he is a vampire — one who has chosen to resist human blood, but whose very nature makes loving her dangerous. Their bond deepens into an intense, all-consuming romance, even as Bella learns that not every vampire shares the Cullens' restraint, and that being close to Edward may cost her everything. The first book in Stephenie Meyer's blockbuster Twilight Saga, this is a moody, atmospheric teen romance about desire, danger, and the pull between what we want and what is safe. Told in Bella's earnest first-person voice, it launched a global phenomenon and defined a generation of paranormal romance.
- forbidden love
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MockingjaySuzanne Collins · 2011The Hunger Games #3Community rating: 3.99 out of 5War has reached Panem. From the hidden District 13, Katniss is pressed into becoming the Mockingjay — the face of a rebellion that turns out to be just as willing to use her as the regime it's fighting.
- survival
- betrayal
- sacrifice
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The Perks of Being a WallflowerStephen Chbosky · 1999The Perks of Being a Wallflower #1Community rating: 4.24 out of 5Stephen Chbosky's 1999 debut has become a touchstone of young-adult literature, an epistolary coming-of-age novel narrated entirely through letters that a shy freshman named Charlie writes to an anonymous "friend." Each begins "Dear friend" and ends "Love always, Charlie," giving the book the intimacy of a diary kept by someone still learning how to be a person among others. Set in a Pittsburgh suburb in the early 1990s, the novel follows Charlie through his first year of high school as he is taken under the wing of two seniors, stepsiblings Sam and Patrick, who pull him into a world of friendship, first love, mixtapes, and midnight drives. Charlie is a watchful, tender narrator, but his letters slowly reveal the grief and trauma he carries — the recent suicide of a friend and buried memories that surface as the year goes on. Frank about depression, abuse, sexuality, and the strange exhilaration of belonging, The Perks of Being a Wallflower has been both widely beloved and frequently challenged. It remains a defining portrait of adolescence for readers who have ever felt like a wallflower watching life from the edge of the room.
- epistolary
- coming of age
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Six of CrowsLeigh Bardugo · 2015Six of Crows #1Community rating: 4.29 out of 5Ketterdam is a bustling hub of international trade where anything can be had for the right price — and no one knows that better than Kaz Brekker, a young criminal prodigy who runs the streets of the Barrel with cold precision. When Kaz is offered a payout large enough to set him up for life, the catch is a heist no one has ever survived: break into the impregnable Ice Court in Fjerda and free a prisoner whose knowledge could tip the balance of world power. The job is impossible for any one person, so Kaz assembles a crew of six dangerous outcasts — a convict, a sharpshooter, a runaway, a spy, a Grisha Heartrender, and a demolitions expert — each with their own reasons for taking the risk and their own secrets to protect. Told through rotating points of view, the novel unfolds as an intricate caper thick with double-crosses and improvised gambles, gradually revealing the old wounds and hard-won loyalties that bind the crew together. Set in the same world as the Shadow and Bone trilogy but standing fully on its own, Six of Crows pairs a twisting heist plot with morally complicated characters who feel real in their damage and their wit. It launched the Six of Crows duology and became one of the defining fantasy series for young adult readers.
- heist
- found family
- morally grey
- multiple povs
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One Of Us Is LyingKaren M. McManus · 2017One of Us Is Lying #1Community rating: 3.71 out of 5When five students file into detention at Bayview High — Bronwyn the overachiever, Addy the prom queen, Nate the criminal, Cooper the athlete, and Simon, the outcast who runs the school's notorious gossip app — only four walk out alive. Simon dies from an allergic reaction that looks less and less like an accident, and the police quickly zero in on the four students left in the room: each of them was about to be exposed by one of Simon's next posts, and each had a reason to want him silenced. As the investigation drags on and the media descends, the four suspects are forced into uneasy alliance, piecing together what really happened even as the secrets Simon meant to reveal threaten to come out anyway — from each other, if not from him. Told in alternating first-person chapters, One of Us Is Lying is a fast-paced YA mystery about the personas built to survive high school and what happens when they start to crack. Karen M. McManus's bestselling debut launched a series and was adapted into a television show, and it remains a touchstone of the modern YA thriller boom.
- multiple povs
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As Good As DeadHolly Jackson, María Cárcamo Ramos · 2021A Good Girl's Guide to Murder #3Community rating: 4.32 out of 5Pip Fitz-Amobi is supposed to be moving on. College is weeks away, the podcast that once thrilled her now feels like a burden, and the toll of her past cases has followed her home in ways she can barely admit. Then the messages start: an anonymous stalker leaving chalk figures and dead pigeons, asking a single chilling question. The police dismiss her fears, but Pip recognizes the pattern. It matches an old case she thought was long closed, and it is pointing straight at her. As the threat closes in, Pip is forced to confront how far the justice she believes in has actually reached, and how much of herself she has lost chasing the truth for other people. This final book pushes her to a breaking point and asks what a good girl does when the system fails and the danger is personal. The devastating conclusion to Holly Jackson's A Good Girl's Guide to Murder trilogy trades tidy whodunit for something rawer and more morally fraught. It is a darker, more intense read than the earlier books, closing Pip's arc with choices that leave no one, including the reader, entirely comfortable.
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The HobbitJ.R.R. Tolkien, Douglas A. Anderson, Michael Hague, Jemima Catlin · 1938Community rating: 4.06 out of 5Bilbo Baggins is a comfortable, respectable hobbit who wants nothing more than a quiet life in his hole at Bag End. That peace ends when the wizard Gandalf arrives with thirteen dwarves and recruits a reluctant Bilbo as the burglar for an expedition to the Lonely Mountain. There the dragon Smaug guards a vast treasure that once belonged to the dwarves, and their leader Thorin Oakenshield means to reclaim both the gold and his ancestral kingdom. The journey takes the company across a perilous landscape of trolls, goblins, giant spiders, and shape-shifters, testing a homebody who never expected adventure. Along the way Bilbo stumbles upon a magic ring and a strange creature named Gollum in the dark beneath the mountains, an encounter that will matter far beyond this tale. As the company nears its goal, Bilbo grows from timid passenger into the resourceful heart of the expedition, and the prospect of recovered treasure draws armies toward a single mountain. Written for younger readers but rich enough for any age, it is a tale of courage found in unlikely places, the pull of home, and the cost of greed, set in the world that would become Middle-earth.
- reluctant hero
- quest
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Throne of GlassSarah J. Maas · 2013Throne of Glass #1Community rating: 4.13 out of 5After a year of brutal imprisonment in the salt mines of Endovier, eighteen-year-old assassin Celaena Sardothien is offered a chance at freedom. The Crown Prince of Adarlan, Dorian Havilliard, and his Captain of the Guard, Chaol Westfall, pull her from the mines with a proposition: compete in the king's tournament to become the royal champion, and if she wins — and serves the king for four years — she goes free. What follows is part competition, part murder mystery, as the other competitors begin dying in strange and violent ways. Celaena must identify the killer while surviving a court designed to destroy her, managing two very different men who are drawn to her in very different ways, and concealing the full scope of who and what she is. Set in a world where magic has been outlawed and its users brutally suppressed, Throne of Glass establishes the foundations of a war that will take seven books and an entire continent to resolve.
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Good Girl, Bad BloodHolly Jackson · 2020A Good Girl's Guide to Murder #2Community rating: 4.32 out of 5Pip Fitz-Amobi swore she was done with detective work. The case that made her a local celebrity nearly cost her everything, and she has promised herself, her family, and Ravi Singh that she will not go looking for trouble again. But when Jamie Reynolds, the older brother of her friend Connor, disappears the night of the town's memorial for the Bell and Singh case, the police treat him as an adult who simply walked away, and no one else will look for him. So Pip does. This time she brings her audience with her, documenting the search in real time on her true-crime podcast as the episodes climb the charts. Following Jamie's last movements pulls her into a tangle of secret online relationships, a controversial figure from the town's past, and a stalker whose obsession may have turned deadly. The larger her platform grows, the more the investigation escapes her control, and the more she has to weigh how much of other people's pain she is willing to broadcast. The second book in Holly Jackson's bestselling trilogy deepens Pip's story with darker stakes and sharper questions about the ethics of true crime. It is a fast, twisting mystery that sets up the series' devastating finale while standing as a gripping disappearance case in its own right.
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Iron FlameRebecca Yarros · 2023The Empyrean #2Community rating: 4.37 out of 5Having survived her brutal first year in the Riders Quadrant, Violet Sorrengail returns to Basgiath War College to find the rules have changed. The new leadership—led by a sadistic vice commandant—makes it clear that cadets who don't fall in line won't survive to graduate, and Violet's loyalties are under a microscope. She and Xaden Riorson are more entangled than ever, but the secrets he's still keeping put a wall between them at the worst possible moment. As the physical trials grow crueler and the interrogations more dangerous, Violet is forced to decide who she can trust with the truth about Navarre's crumbling defenses. The threat she glimpsed at the end of her first year is no longer a rumor, and proving it will mean risking everything—her rank, her dragons, and the people she loves. The second book in Rebecca Yarros's Empyrean series raises the stakes on both the battlefield and the romance, pushing Violet from a fight for personal survival toward a fight for the kingdom's future. Expect brutal training, hard-won alliances, and a relationship tested by secrets and impossible choices.
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Crooked KingdomLeigh Bardugo · 2016Six of Crows #2Community rating: 4.19 out of 5Crooked Kingdom picks up in the aftermath of the crew's audacious Ice Court job. Back in Ketterdam and double-crossed out of their promised reward, Kaz Brekker and his band of outcasts find themselves hunted by rival gangs, corrupt merchants, and foreign powers all circling the city. To collect what they're owed — and to rescue one of their own — Kaz must spin a con more dangerous than any heist, playing Ketterdam's ruthless power brokers against one another. As the schemes escalate, the novel deepens each character's backstory and tests the loyalties that hold the crew together, building toward a conclusion that pays off the duology's threads of revenge, grief, and hard-won trust. Told through the same rotating viewpoints as Six of Crows, Crooked Kingdom trades some of the first book's tight caper structure for a sprawling, city-wide chess match. The second and final volume of the Six of Crows duology, it closes out one of the most beloved character arcs in modern young adult fantasy while standing as a satisfying payoff to the crew's story.
- found family
- morally grey
- multiple povs
- revenge
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Archer's VoiceMia Sheridan · 2014Where Love Meets Destiny #1Community rating: 4.27 out of 5Bree Prescott arrives in the small lakeside town of Pelion, Maine, hoping to outrun the violence that shattered her life the night she watched her father die. She plans only to pass through, but the quiet town — and one of its most solitary residents — gives her reasons to stay. Archer Hale lives on the edge of Pelion, watched over from a distance by a town that pities and avoids him in equal measure. A childhood tragedy left him unable to speak and largely cut off from the world, and he has spent his life in near silence, tending his land and keeping to himself. When Bree wanders onto his property, the two begin an unlikely friendship built on written notes, patient attention, and a slowly dawning trust. As Bree teaches Archer to reach beyond the walls his family built around him, buried secrets about his past — and the people who profited from his isolation — begin to surface. Archer's Voice is a tender, emotionally charged love story about two wounded people who find healing in each other, and about the courage it takes to claim a voice of your own.
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Crown of MidnightSarah J. Maas · 2014Throne of Glass #2Community rating: 4.27 out of 5Having won the king's tournament, Celaena Sardothien now serves as Adarlan's royal champion — officially an assassin bound to the Crown, dispatched to silence the king's enemies. In practice, she is deceiving him. The men she is sent to kill are not dying; she is faking their deaths and letting them escape. But maintaining that deception becomes more dangerous as the king's suspicions grow and the stakes of what she is hiding rise beyond her own survival. Meanwhile, her closest friend Nehemia is pursuing her own agenda at court — one that carries consequences Celaena will not see coming until it is too late. The world of Throne of Glass expands decisively in this second instalment, which introduces Wyrdmarks, ancient magic, and the first glimpse of the larger war that will define the series. Crown of Midnight is the book in which the series shifts register — darker, more complex, and unwilling to soften its losses.
- court intrigue
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The GiverLois Lowry · 1993The Giver Quartet #1Community rating: 4.27 out of 5Jonas lives in a community without pain, hunger, fear, or war. Everything is orderly and pleasant: spouses and jobs are assigned, families are formed by application, and every choice that might cause conflict has been quietly removed. It is a world of comfortable Sameness, and until his twelfth year Jonas has never had a reason to question it. Then, at the Ceremony of Twelve, Jonas is singled out for a rare and honored assignment: he will become the community's next Receiver of Memory. Under the guidance of a weary old man known only as the Giver, Jonas begins to receive the memories of the world as it used to be — color, music, love, snow, and also suffering, loss, and death — everything his community has traded away for its serene, controlled existence. As his understanding deepens, so does his horror at what that peace truly costs. A landmark of dystopian fiction and a Newbery Medal winner, Lois Lowry's The Giver is a spare, haunting novel about memory, individuality, and the price of a world engineered to feel safe. Its quiet power and famously open ending have made it a fixture of classrooms and a touchstone for generations of readers.
- coming of age
- mentor figure