Favorite Reads of 4-Year Seniors!
Eliza
Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
I have never been so breathless while reading a book. Woolf swept me up into her words and thoughts and endless sentences, and i kept having these wondrous moments of comprehension and sadness and wit. It is glorious. - Eliza
Jacob
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain
The man is a genius. He can capture the perspective of almost any character with incredible ease. Thum Thur book was right funny, yessir. – Jacob
Sarah
Nineteen Minutes by Jodi Picoult
Picoult takes the idea of school invasions and shootings and captures it perfectly. The book deals with the social cliques and the parents involved when one teenager shows up to school with a gun. As the readers, we are led to believe one side of the story and the end throws a quite surprising twist at us. With witness testimonies and many hours of work under their belts, the families and lawyers work hard to get to the bottom of the case. - Sarah
Spencer
Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling
Although I don’t not like any Harry Potter book, the second edition is especially enthralling because of the implications that rest in the realms of the Chamber’s existence, the dire consequences that Hogwarts faces in a year riddled with unforeseen triumphs and tragedies, and the turmoil and confusion that Harry, and his underdeveloped adolescent prefrontal cortex, face. - Spencer
Tanner
Beloved by Toni Morrison
This book has been the most inspiring book that I have ever read. From everything from the point of view of the author to the distinct emotions and personalities of the characters, the book has intrigued me and changed the way that i think about my life. The book dragged me into the plot more than any other novel, and forced me to think of the meaning behind just the words or how the pages were set up in front of me. – Tanner



