21 Books From The Last 5 Years That Every Woman Should Read

21 Books From The Last 5 Years That Every Woman Should Read
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The one struggle of being a woman who reads is that you want to read everything.

It's easy to get overwhelmed by bestseller lists, because there just isn't enough time in the day to read every hot new book. Between near-constant recommendations of amazing memoirs, new sequels and a terrifyingly long list of bookmarked Internet longreads, it can be stressful to choose what you should pick up next. Knowing which classics you're missing from your reading repertoire is easy -- it's a little harder to remember what you've missed from three years ago.

We've done a little bit of the hard work for you (or maybe just increased your book stress... sorry) by pulling together a list of incredible titles from the past few years that you should add to the pile on your bedside table. These books by women are just a few of the incredible titles published recently -- an exhaustive list would be hundreds of books longer. Those listed here are some of the most-discussed, thought-provoking and life-changing books from a diverse group of women writers. They make you rethink what being a feminist means, offer life advice to women of all ages, and reinforce your long-held belief that Tina and Amy should be your best friends and life coaches forever. The novels are some of the finest writing from woman authors. From lighthearted memoirs to harrowing thrillers, there's a genre here for everyone.

Here are 21 books published in the past 5 years that all women should read:

1
Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
"Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's fourth book, Americanah, is so smart about so many subjects that to call it a novel about being black in the 21st century doesn't even begin to convey its luxurious heft and scope. Americanah is indeed a novel about being black in the 21st century — in America, Great Britain and Africa, while answering a want ad, choosing a lover, hailing a cab, eating collard greens, watching Barack Obama on television — but you could also call it a novel of immigration and dislocation, just about every page tinged with faint loneliness."-- NPR
2
Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng
"Everything I Never Told You is an engaging work that casts a powerful light on the secrets that have kept an American family together — and that finally end up tearing it apart."-- The LA Times
3
The Goldfinch by Donna Tartt
"The Goldfinch is a rarity that comes along perhaps half a dozen times per decade, a smartly written literary novel that connects with the heart as well as the mind....Donna Tartt has delivered an extraordinary work of fiction."--Stephen King, The New York Times Book Review
4
Land of Love and Drowning by Tiphanie Yanique
"Through the voices and lives of its native people, Yanique offers an affecting narrative of the Virgin Islands that pulses with life, vitality, and a haunting evocation of place."-- Publishers Weekly
5
Bad Feminist by Roxane Gay
"In sharing the gritty, heartbreaking details of her own experiences and unrealized desires -- in showing us how, exactly, she is a 'bad feminist' -- Gay reminds us what feminism can and should be: A space where women can realize their difference and their nuances."-- The Huffington Post
6
Boy, Snow, Bird by Helen Oyeyemi
"In her manipulation of a succession of overlapping triangles of which the book's title is only one, Oyeyemi suggests the possibility of a kind of redemption; that identities eventually settle, configure, cohere and that we all learn to live with the life that we have fashioned for ourselves. In an intriguing, sinuously attractive book full of jeux d'esprit and lightning skies that often part to reveal pain and turmoil, it is a welcome hint of stability and optimism, if not one that we should trust in entirely."-- The Guardian
7
Her by Christa Parravani
"Add the twin mystique to a drug-fueled reality drama and you’ve got the recipe for double the intoxicating read in Christa Parravani’s memoir, Her, a sister book. Parravani offers a sinuous, startling, and intimate look at what it means to be share someone’s DNA by playing on the reader’s fantasies and stereotypes: confirming some—think Doublemint Gum commercials, Mary Kate and Ashley—while setting others straight. Here, we hear two distinct voices as Christa weaves italicized excerpts of her sister, Cara’s, journals both within and at the end of chapters. As Cara explains: 'People think having a twin means never being lonely. Nothing is lonelier than being separated. Cut yourself in half. See how that feels and you will stop wanting a twin.' Ouch."-- American Literary Review
8
Drink by Ann Dowsett Johnston
"That mysterious terrain of the soul drives the narrative trajectory in Ann Dowsett Johnston’s Drink. Her approach is not strictly reporting, nor is it a full-blown memoir. Rather, she creates a hybrid of the two, weaving back and forth between research and raw confessions as she untangles the messy realities behind women’s rising rate of alcohol abuse. A past editor of Maclean’s magazine in Canada and former vice principal at McGill University, Johnston makes awful sense of it all. 'We live in an alcogenic culture,' she writes, 'where risky drinking has been normalized.' Increasingly, it is women who are suffering the consequences."-- The Washington Post
9
The Lifeboat by Charlotte Rogan
"Grace Winter – new bride, new widow, apparently unscathed after 21 days drifting at sea in an overcrowded lifeboat – is a survivor. And survivors, as we all know, can be the most dangerous people of all. Charlotte Rogan's terrific debut novel opens with a bang, when the ship carrying newlyweds Grace and Henry back to New York after the outbreak of war in Europe suffers an explosion and sinks. Somehow, Grace is squeezed into a departing lifeboat, captained by ship's officer Mr Hardie, and along with a motley crew of passengers, mostly female, they push away from the wreckage, beating off drowning men and beseeching infants as they go."-- The Guardian
10
NW by Zadie Smith
"Smith’s novels are notable not just for their social acuity, but also for their ability to absorb philosophical ideas. Her last, On Beauty, managed to be interesting about aesthetics as well as about race and compassion, and the prose was well turned and sweet-natured to match. The themes in NW are more radical and the language more fractured. Though it remains absolutely rooted, stuck to the map, contexts change and narrative styles shift. This is a book in which you never know how things will come together or what will happen next."-- The New York Times
11
Swamplandia! by Karen Russell
"An alligator theme park, a ghost lover, a Styx-like journey through an Everglades mangrove jungle: Russell’s first novel, about a girl’s bold effort to preserve her grieving family’s way of life, is suffused with humor and gothic whimsy. But the real wonders here are the author’s exuberantly inventive language and her vivid portrait of a heroine who is wise beyond her years."-- The New York Times
12
Ten Thousand Saints by Eleanor Henderson
"Henderson’s fierce, elegiac novel, her first, follows a group of friends, lovers, parents and children through the straight-edge music scene and the early days of the AIDS epidemic. By delving deeply into the lives of her characters, tracing their long relationships not only to one another but also to various substances, Henderson catches something of the dark, apocalyptic quality of the ’80s."-- The New York Times
13
How Should A Person Be? by Sheila Heti
"A raw, startling, genre-defying novel of friendship, sex, and love in the new millennium—a compulsive read that's like 'spending a day with your new best friend.'"-- Bookforum
14
Room by Emma Donoghue
"Room is in many ways what its publisher claims it to be: a novel like no other. The first half takes place entirely within the 12-foot-square room in which a young woman has spent her last seven years since being abducted aged 19. Raped repeatedly, she now has a five-year-old boy, Jack, and it is with his voice that Donoghue tells their story."-- The Guardian
15
The Immortal Life Of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
"The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is a remarkable feat of investigative journalism and a moving work of narrative nonfiction that reads with the vividness and urgency of fiction. It also raises sometimes uncomfortable questions with no clear-cut answers about whether people should be remunerated for their physical, genetic contributions to research and about the role of profit in science."-- NPR
16
Bossypants by Tina Fey
"If nothing else, Bossypants should make any profile of Fey unnecessary, since it provides, in abundance, everything readers want from a story about a performer and none of the 'clever' observations about food intake/absence of makeup/appearance of child art upon which celebrity profiles are so dependent. In chapter after chapter, in a voice consistently recognizable as her own, Fey simply tells stories of her life: How a nerdy but self-confident half-Greek girl entered theatrical life (a wonderful community theater, lots of gay and lesbian friends), what Second City was like "back in the day" (cultish, hard, unbelievably fun), how 'Saturday Night Live' works (a chemical compound of Harvard grads and Improv people), what it's like to be a woman in comedy (harder than you think but not as hard as coal mining) or to run your own show or to satirize a vice presidential candidate when she's standing right backstage."-- LA Times
17
Behind The Beautiful Forevers by Katherine Boo
"This National Book Award-winning study of life in Annawadi, a Mumbai slum, is marked by reporting so rigorous it recalls the muckrakers, and characters so rich they evoke Dickens. The slum dwellers have a skillful and empathetic chronicler in Boo, who depicts them in all their humanity and ruthless, resourceful glory."-- The New York Times
18
The Orchardist
"William Talmadge is the titular orchardist. For most of 40 years he has lived alone, tending the orchard where he grew up with his mother and sister. His mother died when he was still very young, and his sister disappeared as a young woman — a loss Talmadge has never quite recovered from. And it may be that secret pain that prompts him to take care of two pregnant teenagers who wander onto his property looking for food. They're running away from a brothel run by a brutal drug addict who traffics in young girls. Talmadge's decision to shelter the girls changes his life forever, exposing him to both the pain and quiet joy of love."-- NPR
19
Wild by Cheryl Strayed
“A vivid, touching, and ultimately inspiring account of a life unraveling, and of the journey that put it back together.” -- Wall Street Journal
20
The Lowland by Jhumpa Lahiri
"This gripping and poetic novel explores themes of loneliness, isolation, family secrets, political will, and the power of unconditional love. Lahiri understands that unresolved conflicts from one's past can cause us to create the kind of life we most want to avoid. Someone who wants to find a lasting romantic connection may play a tremendous role in creating a life of romantic isolation. To this end, unresolved conflicts can lead people to choose unsuitable partners and deeply unsatisfying relationships. The Lowland demonstrates in meticulous detail that facing painful dimensions from the past and acknowledging family secrets is often the key to finding true happiness."-- The Huffington Post
21
Yes Please by Amy Poehler
"Yes Please is a memoir in that it contains some memories, many of which are offered as hard-won — advice seems too preachy, so we'll go with helpful suggestions. (A chapter called 'I'm So Proud of You' should be required reading in high schools.) Also featured are: haiku about plastic surgery, a chapter by Poehler's mother, a satiric birth plan, a chapter by Seth Meyers, an annotated history of 'Parks and Recreation,' a letter from Hillary Rodham Clinton, sex advice, a truly hilarious list of potential books about divorce and a moving account of an apology."-- LA Times

What would you add to our list? Comment below, or tweet @HuffPostWomen!

Before You Go

Readers Share: Books Every Woman Should Read
'Are You There God, It's Me Margaret' By Judy Blume(01 of57)
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Yearling | $6.99 | Amazon.com "It tackles religion, the awkwardness of adolescence, and the weird contraptions that women used to use when they first got their periods. (References to the "belt" definitely confused me as a kid.)" -Kathleen Massara, Editor, Huffington Post Arts (credit:Amazon )
'The Handmaid's Tale' By Margaret Atwood(02 of57)
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Anchor | $10.20 | Amazon.com"In the near future, the United States is overthrown by a group called the Sons of Jacob. The bank accounts of women and other undesirables are frozen, and a group known as Handmaids become the hosts for the future children of the ruling class. This book will haunt you, and is a reminder of how easy it is for extremists to take over... Once they do, the target is often women. (No thanks, Santorum!)" -Kathleen Massara, Editor, Huffington Post Arts (credit:Amazon )
'A Room Of One's Own' By Virginia Woolf (03 of57)
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Mariner Books | $10.40 | Amazon.com-Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'Diving Into The Wreck' By Adrienne Rich(04 of57)
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Norton | $10.55 | Amazon (credit:wwnorton.tumblr.com)
'The Wife Of Bath' By Geoffrey Chaucer(05 of57)
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Bedford/St. Martin's | $12.32 | Amazon.com-Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'As You Like It' By William Shakespeare(06 of57)
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Simon & Schuster | $5.99 | Amazon.com "I feel like he always includes extremely strong female characters, especially for the time period." -Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'Madame Bovary' By Gustave Flaubert(07 of57)
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Bantam Classics | $5.95 | Amazon.com -Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'The Virgin Suicides' By Jeffrey Eugenides(08 of57)
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Picador | $10.99 | Amazon.com"A much better pick for women than Middlesex...for some reason, he is REALLY able to capture what it is like to be a teenage girl in that book." -Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'Deenie' By Judy Blume (09 of57)
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Delacorte Books for Young Readers | $8.99 | Amazon.com-Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'Little Women' By Louisa May Alcott(10 of57)
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Signet Classics | $3.95 | Amazon.com -Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'Seventh Heaven' By Alice Hoffman(11 of57)
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Putnam Adult | $11.28 | Amazon.com "A coming of age novel for those who came of age in the 1960s. Beautifully written story about a brassy divorcee (yes, that's what they were called) moving into a Long Island subdivision (think Levittown) in the 1950s that busts the myth of life behind the white picket fences."-Ann Brenoff, Senior Writer, Huffington Post L.A. (credit:Amazon )
'The Women's Room' By Marilyn French(12 of57)
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Summit | $12.00 | Amazon.com"The best novel of the women's liberation movement" -Ann Brenoff, Senior Writer, Huffington Post L.A. (credit:Amazon )
'Fear Of Flying' By Erica Jong(13 of57)
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NAL Trade | $10.88 | Amazon.com "This one rocked my world! It was ground-breaking -- uninhibited story of Isadora Wing." -Ann Brenoff, Senior Writer, Huffington Post L.A. (credit:Amazon )
'Hateship, Friendship, Courtship, Loveship, Marriage' By Alice Munro(14 of57)
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Vintage | $10.20 | Amazon.com"-Meredith Melnick, Editor, The Huffington Post Nutrition and Fitness (credit:Amazon )
'Housekeeping' By Marilynne Robinson(15 of57)
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Picador | $10.20 | Amazon.com -Zoë Triska, Associate Editor, Huffington Post Books (credit:Amazon )
'Frida: A Biography Of Frida Kahlo' By Hayden Herrera(16 of57)
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Harper Perennial | $16.49 | Amazon.com-Kimberly Brooks, Founding Editor, Huffington Post Arts and Editor, Huffington Post Science (credit:Amazon )
'The Twilight Series' By Stephenie Meyer(17 of57)
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Little, Brown and Co. | $11.08 | Amazon.com "Just to know what 500 Million girls got so excited about!" -Kimberly Brooks, Founding Editor, Huffington Post Arts and Editor, Huffington Post Science (credit:Amazon )
'The Awakening' By Kate Chopin(18 of57)
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Avon | $4.99 | Amazon.com -Lori Leibovich, Executive Lifestyle Editor, Huffington Post (credit:Amazon )
'The Bell Jar' By Sylvia Plath(19 of57)
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Harper Perennial Modern Classics | $10.04 | Amazon.com-Lori Leibovich, Executive Lifestyle Editor, Huffington Post (credit:Amazon )
'Bossypants' By Tina Fey(20 of57)
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Reagan Arthur Books | $16.19 | Amazon.com-Lori Leibovich, Executive Lifestyle Editor, Huffington Post (credit:Amazon )
'Franny And Zooey' By J.D. Salinger (21 of57)
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Little, Brown and Company | $6.99 | Amazon.com-Farah Miller, Managing Editor, Huffington Post Parents (credit:Amazon )
'The Lovely Bones' By Alice Sebold (22 of57)
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Little Brown | $14.10 | Amazon.com -Ann Brenoff, Senior Writer, Huffington Post L.A. (credit:Amazon )
'When Everything Changed' By Gail Collins (23 of57)
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Little, Brown and Company | $18.47 | Amazon.com -Meredith Melnick, Editor, The Huffington Post Nutrition and Fitness (credit:Amazon )
'Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit' By Jeanette Winterson(24 of57)
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Grove Press | $10.17 | Amazon.com "An insanely ambitious novel which is really a memoir and doesn't apologize for that." Margaret Wheeler Johnson, Editor, Huffington Post Women (credit:Amazon )
'The Girls Of Slender Means' By Muriel Spark (25 of57)
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New Directions | $9.44 | Amazon.com "A women's boarding house novel is almost as great as a girls boarding school novel, especially if a bomb and a Schiaparelli dress are involved." -Margaret Wheeler Johnson, Editor, Huffington Post Women (credit:Amazon )
'The Liars Club' By Mary Karr (26 of57)
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Penguin | $8.47 | Amazon.com "My mother drove me across the Sabine bridge ten or twenty times in my childhood, and I never knew our safe passage could be a testament to her sanity until I read Karr's account of being charioted across it by her own mother who was in the middle of a psychotic break. Also a really fine portrait of flawed fatherhood. Karr is the master of revealing her (real) characters' dignity and crazy in equal turns." -Margaret Wheeler Johnson, Editor, Huffington Post Women (credit:Amazon )
'Get To Work: . . . And Get A Life, Before It's Too Late' By Linda R. Hirshman (27 of57)
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Penguin | $12.00 | Amazon.com"Her strategic plan for women: "don't study art," "never quit a job until you have another one" -Emily Peck, Managing Editor, Huffington Post Business (credit:Amazon )
'Nickel And Dimed: On (Not) Getting By In America' By Barbara Ehrenreich(28 of57)
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Holt Paperbacks | $1.99 | Amazon.com -Meredith Melnick, Editor, The Huffington Post Nutrition and Fitness (credit:Amazon )
'The Beauty Myth: How Images Of Beauty Are Used Against Women' By Naomi Wolf (29 of57)
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Harper Perennial | $10.19 | Amazon.com-Laura Schocker, Associate Editor, Huffinton Post Healthy Living (credit:Amazon )
'Women's Bodies, Women's Wisdom' By Christiane Northrup(30 of57)
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Bantam | $12.20 | Amazon.com"It's the body bible for every woman" -Alana B. Elias Kornfeld, Senior Editor, International Huffington Post Media Group, (credit:Amazon )
'Half The Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity For Women Worldwide' By Nicholas D. Kristof (31 of57)
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Knopf | $19.11 | Amazon.com-Jessica Prois, Editor, Huffington Post Impact (credit:Amazon )
'The Woman At The Washington Zoo: Writings On Politics, Family, And Fate' By Marjorie Williams (32 of57)
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PublicAffairs | $ | Amazon.com "Marjorie Williams has an incredible gift for profiles--the stories she writes about her subjects, from barbara bush to D.C. socialite, are so nuanced, so detailed and so intimate. The book also has a must-read collection of her columns about being a working woman and mother."-Bianca Bosker, Senior Editor, Huffington Post Tech (credit:Amazon )
'Last Night I Dreamed Of Peace: The Diary Of Dang Thuy Tram' By Dang Thuy Tram(33 of57)
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Broadway | $11.07 | Amazon.com"Not only is this book unique because it offers a Vietnamese perspective on the Vietnam War, but it also one of the few to offer a female point of view. Thuy Tram's diary offers an intimate look both into the war and into the life of a 20-something faced with becoming a woman in very challenging circumstances." -Michelle Persad, Intern, Huffington Post Women (credit:Amazon )
'The Feminine Mystique' By Betty Friedan(34 of57)
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Norton | 11.75 | Barnesandnoble.com (credit:Barnesandnoble.com)
'Backlash' By Susan Faludi(35 of57)
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Crown | $14.95 | Barnesandnoble.com (credit:Barnesandnoble.com)
'Collected Poems' By Edna St. Vincent Millay(36 of57)
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HarperCollins | $17.57 | Barnesandnoble.com (credit:Barnesandnoble.com)
'Big Girls Don't Cry' By Rebecca Traister(37 of57)
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Free Press | $26 | Barnesandnoble.com (credit:Barnesandnoble.com)
'Forever' By Judy Blume (38 of57)
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Simon Pulse | $8.99 | Amazon.com "I read this book shortly before I became sexually active. This book, featuring Planned Parenthood, spared me from teenage pregnancy." Julia Jensen (credit:Amazon )
'The Help' By Kathryn Stockett (39 of57)
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Amy Einhorn Books/Putnam | $14.82 | Amazon.comSubmitted by HuffPost Women reader Sara Hadley (credit:Amazon )
'The Guernsey Literary And Potato Peel Pie Society' By Mary Ann Shaffer (40 of57)
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The Dial Press | $15.93 | Amazon.comSubmitted by HuffPost Women reader Sara Hadley (credit:Amazon )
'The Night Circus' By Erin Morgenstern(41 of57)
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Doubleday | $17.79 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Sara Hadley (credit:Amazon )
'The Lantern' By Deborah Lawrenson(42 of57)
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Harper | $13.55 | Amazon.comSubmitted by HuffPost Women reader Sara Hadley (credit:Amazon )
'South Of Superior' By Ellen Airgood (43 of57)
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Riverhead Hardcover | $13.98 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Sara Hadley (credit:Amazon )
'The Language Of Trees' By Ilie Ruby(44 of57)
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William Morrow Paperbacks | $11.69 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Sara Hadley (credit:Amazon )
'The Penderwicks: A Summer Tale Of Four Sisters, Two Rabbits, And A Very Interesting Boy' By Jeanne Birdsall(45 of57)
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Knopf Books | $10.85 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Sara Hadley (credit:Amazon )
'Still Here: Embracing Aging, Changing, And Dying' By Ram Dass (46 of57)
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Riverhead Books | $10.09 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Rae Carson (credit:Amazon )
'Female Chauvinist Pigs' By Ariel Levy(47 of57)
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Free Press | $9.74 | Amazon.comSubmitted by HuffPost Women reader Lauren Hedinger (credit:Amazon )
'The Paper Garden' By Molly Peacock(48 of57)
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Bloomsbury USA | $13.60 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Shaunee Power (credit:Amazon )
'In The Land Of The Grasshopper Song' By Mary Ellicott Arnold(49 of57)
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Bison Books | $15.56 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Shaunee Power (credit:Amazon )
'Their Eyes Were Watching God' By Zora Neale Hurston(50 of57)
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Harper Perennial Modern Classics | $10.87 | Amazon.com Submitted by Journalist/Author Rebecca Traister (credit:Amazon )
'A Tree Grows In Brooklyn' By Betty Smith (51 of57)
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Harper Perennial Modern Classics| $11.55 | Amazon.com Submitted by Journalist/Author Rebecca Traister (credit:Amazon )
'Song Of Solomon' By Toni Morrison(52 of57)
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Vintage | $10.20 | Amazon.com Submitted by Journalist/Author Rebecca Traister (credit:Amazon)
'The Woman Warrior' By Maxine Hong Kingston(53 of57)
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Vintage | $11.20 | Amazon.com Submitted by Journalist/Author Rebecca Traister (credit:Amazon )
'To Kill A Mockingbird' By Harper Lee (54 of57)
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Grand Central Publishing | $7.99 | Amazon.com Submitted by Journalist/Author Rebecca Traister (credit:Amazon )
'My Antonia' By Willa Cather (55 of57)
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Mariner Books | $7.95 | Amazon.com Submitted by Journalist/Author Rebecca Traister (credit:Amazon )
'Pride And Prejudice' By Jane Austen(56 of57)
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Bantam Classics | $4.95 | Amazon.comSubmitted by HuffPost Women reader Syretta Jefferson (credit:Amazon )
'We Need to Talk About Kevin' By Lionel Shriver (57 of57)
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Harper Perennial | $10.19 | Amazon.com Submitted by HuffPost Women reader Belinda Cech (credit:Amazon )