Best Literary Fiction books for young adult readers, including adult-YA crossover books.
YA & Adult-YA Crossovers:
Literary Fiction
Total books found: 1,092
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Girls in Pants
by Ann Brashares
6/13/2006, 368 pages.
The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants are facing their last summer together before they go to college. Or, to be precise, four different colleges. And so they launch the Pants on ...
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Maybe A Miracle
by Brian Strause
5/30/2006, 384 pages.
By turns humorous and heartbreaking, personal and sweeping, familiar and extraordinary, Brian Strause's first novel takes readers on an unforgettable emotional journey into ...
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Sweet Sixteen Princess
by Meg Cabot
5/23/2006, 96 pages.
Mia doesn't always have the best luck with parties, so even though it's her sweet sixteenth, she doesn't want a birthday bash. As usual, Grandmère has other ideas, and thinks ...
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Bucking The Sarge
by Christopher Paul Curtis
5/9/2006, 144 pages.
Featuring characters so lively they seem to jump off the page, this vibrant modern-day battle between greed and morality proves that there is more than one way to come out on top. ...
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Pretty Birds
by Scott Simon
5/9/2006, 368 pages.
As a journalist, Scott Simon covered the siege of Sarajevo. Here, in a novel as suspenseful as a John le Carré thriller, he re-creates the atmosphere of that place and time ...
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Family and Other Accidents
by Shari Goldhagen
4/4/2006, 272 pages.
A finely nuanced, universally resonant portrait of the ties, however strange or awkward, that bind two brothers and their families together through the decades.
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The Highest Tide
by Jim Lynch
4/1/2006, 272 pages.
A mesmerizing, allegorical, and beautifully wrought first novel about one boy's wonder with the sea during the
summer that will change his life, and the lives around him.
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The Ninth Life of Louis Drax
by Liz Jensen
1/10/2006, 240 pages.
The story of a family falling apart, told in the vivid voices of its comatose son and Dr. Dannachet as he is drawn into the family's circle. Full of astonishing twists and ...
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An Unfinished Life
by Mark Spragg
8/9/2005, 272 pages.
Set in the high-country of Wyoming, this is a riveting tale of hard-won friendship, old wounds, fresh pain and love lost and found.
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How I Live Now
by Meg Rosoff
7/31/2005, 208 pages.
'Rarely does a writer come up with a first novel so assured, so powerful and engaging that you can be pretty sure that you will want to read everything this author is capable ...
The reviewer of each book decides which categories it belongs in - but we're only human, mistakes happen. If you see a book that you think is in the wrong place, tell us!