
Non-YA Books About Teens for Adults Who Just Can’t Leave High School Behind
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I turned 28 this May, yet I’m finding myself increasingly drawn to the YA section of my local library. For as long as I can remember, I’ve loved to read books about teens. When I was little, they helped me imagine my future. Now they offer up a dose of nostalgia. At their best, books about high school-age characters help me make sense of the complicated ways in which adolescence shapes our grown-up selves. While there plenty of gems geared toward a young adult audience, my absolute favorite sub-genre consists of adult books about teens.
I started reading about teens early. In 3rd grade I eagerly moved from the children’s section to the YA shelves after discovering the Roswell High series by Melinda Metz. I channeled my excitement about getting older, all the dramas and freedoms I imagined would come with it, into these fictional worlds. Even a story about 16-year-old aliens felt instructional.
As an adult, I haven’t been able to leave teen fiction behind, nor have I really tried. I read widely, across genres, age groups, and subjects. Yet in my moments of profound doubt about what to read next, I always return to books about teens. There’s no shame in reading tons of YA as an adult (I read plenty myself) but if you’re looking to branch into the adult fiction shelves, these books are a great place to start.
I just finished this one, and hoo boy the unique voice gripped me from page one. Eighteen-year-old Blue van Meer has moved all over the country with her father, an eccentric professor and writer. For her senior year of high school, they settle down at St. Gallway School in Stockton, South Carolina, and Blue soon finds herself in the thrall of a mysterious, charismatic teacher named Hannah Schneider.
If nonfiction is more your speed, check out Coates’s debut memoir. Prior to Coates becoming a household name with his smash success Between the World and Me, he published this beautiful reflection on his experience coming of age as a young black boy in Baltimore.
I loooove books that focus on all-consuming, borderline unhealthy friendships between young women (so much so that I am attempting to write my own). Julie Buntin’s debut is one of the most beautiful, devastating takes on the subject I’ve ever read. It follows the intense, short-lived relationship between Cat and Marlena.