Four Books Your Students Will Love

We asked four XQ teachers to share their students' favorite books on #ReadABookDay.

By Team XQ

OUR SUPER SCHOOL TEACHERS SHARED SOME OF THEIR FAVORITE BOOKS TO TEACH THEIR LANGUAGE ARTS CLASSES.

In celebration of Read A Book Day, we’re sharing 4 titles as selected by XQ Super School teachers. They were chosen not only for their readability and appeal to high school students, but they also satisfy standards while taking on tough subjects like slavery in America, political strife abroad, the story that helped usher in the concept of “Kafkaesque, ” and the big questions people face over the course of their lives. In fact, you may find yourself revisiting them one by one–we know we did.

1. The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury

“Wouldn’t it be fine if we could prove things with our mind, and know for certain that things are always in their place. I’d like to know what a place is like when I’m not there. I’d like to be sure.

I know there will be a ton of newer books that deal with identity and cultural issues head-on, which I think is awesome, but I wanted to go to bat for a classic piece of literary fiction that cleverly inspects the human condition. 

This book is about a man whose tattoos tell stories…figuratively and literally. The Illustrated Man has 18 tattoos that coincide with a short story that explores the depths of humanity—salvation, fear, curiosity, growth, etc.—in nuanced ways that speak to both American nostalgia and a future of uncertainty due to society’s decisions. 

We’re in a very similar situation today in our country, which is why this book from 1948 still feels relevant. Today’s teens hear a history of their parents’ and grandparents’ generational greatness but see a culture around them of conflict and confusion. Maybe we can learn from the stories we see in those tattoos, as long as we don’t look too long.”

– Dustin Hensley
Library Media Specialist/Special Projects Lead, Elizabethton High School (Elizabethton, TN)

2. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass

Impassioned and decisive, Frederick Douglass’s memoir was an influential and instructive document, serving to influence the abolitionist movement. An essential history of a towering public figure whose commitment to “agitating the American conscience” continues to resonate in our fraught political climate.

“[This book] allows kids to learn history, read a powerful story, and better understand the world around them. My students expressed a connection and admiration for the author and his bravery. They were very engaged and encouraged by his story. They also told me it helped them have a better understanding of slavery.”

– Brent Wamsley
English Teacher, Da Vinci RISE High (Los Angeles, CA)

3. Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi

Set against the backdrop of the Islamic Revolution in Iran and viewed through the lens of its preadolescent narrator, Persepolis weaves generational upheaval with the confusion of growing up in a time of chaos. Dynamic, realistic, and elevated by its illustrations, Persepolis is a riveting story that captures the full spectrum of the human experience page after page.

“[Student] Deion Jordan chose this book for our humanities block to complement our then-project centered around immigration and migration. The book follows the author’s struggle to survive and cope while growing up in Iran during and after the Islamic Revolution. Students are drawn to the themes of struggle and triumph over adversity presented within a truly historical context. It’s a graphic novel which 21st-century students love because they tend to be drawn to visual stimuli that can help them process complex topics like political turmoil and mass migration. Perfect for any social studies or English classroom.”

– Ryan Pryor
Humanities Teacher, Crosstown High School (Memphis, TN)

4. Metamorphosis by Franz Kafka

There’s good reason Kafka’s Metamorphosis continues to horrify and delight readers more than a century after its publication. Off-kilter yet mundane, exacting yet dreamlike, the world of Gregor Samsa-its environment and the people who populate it–is instantly recognizable, and for that reason, is all the more shocking. 

“My students almost always react to Kafka’s Metamorphosis. They read the first paragraph, put the book down, read the first paragraph again, pause, read the next few paragraphs, then the next few pages and then they stop. And the next day they almost all come to me and say, ‘Pruett, is Gregor really a giant bug? What the…?’ And it is at that point that I know the book has got them.”

– Nate Pruett
English Teacher, Iowa BIG (Cedar Rapids, IA)