1. The Catcher in the Rye
J.D. Salinger · 1951
A sixteen-year-old gets kicked out of prep school and wanders New York for three days, narrating the whole thing in a voice so specific it either becomes your favorite book or genuinely annoys you -- rarely anything in between.
The book lives or dies on whether Holden’s voice works for you, and there’s no way to know in advance – it’s short enough that the honest move is just to read it and find out rather than take someone else’s verdict on faith. Skip Phoebe’s scenes and you’ve missed the actual heart of the book; they’re where Holden’s armor comes off.
Read it if: you want the book that basically invented the modern voice-driven teenage narrator, phoniness-detector and all
Skip it if: Holden Caulfield's cynicism and repetitive complaining wear on you fast -- some readers find him insightful, others find him insufferable, and both reactions are reasonable





