Top 31 best books to Read for teenagers - ReadersHub

 Best books for teenagers to read

Today's world is getting busy in social media and just wasting their time. We should know that we are wasting our time in stuffs which will not build our future but they will definitely destroy our future. The only best thing to do in our free time is to read good books. In this article I will suggest the best books to read if you are a teenager and not only teenagers everyone can go for it. It will surely change you and your life. 


Tuesdays with morrie by mitch albom 

Tuesdays with morrie by mitch albom 

 

I ’m just done reading this book, and this is one of those books where I find myself agreeing with the positive reviews and the negative reviews with nearly equal enthusiasm. On one hand, you have a relationship between a pupil and his dying professor, who has seen life and its meaning, and who's ready shower the pupil with a lot of wisdom( so he can make millions off dealing the book, perhaps). You know, it's such an irony, where Morrie talks about plutocrat and how it should n’t be a precedence in life when there are other more important effects in life. And also there’s Mitch, picking the exchanges, making a book, and making a fortune out of it. I find it really funny. It’s like creating a financial conglomerate by dealing the ideas of Karl Marx in a book!

Anyway, the way everything is described in the book seems like such an ideal world, where everything can be pasted on a greeting card and vended off. Everything is extremely dramatic and prolonged, and filled with clichés like ‘ Love conquers everything ’( Oh really, I noway heard that one ahead!)
Surely, this book is ‘ nice ’. You know, that feeling of virtuousness, happiness mixed with a bit of anguish, where you read effects and the world seems like a better place because the words touch as they describe an ideal way of living, an ideal life, and defines the true meaning of life. Well, you get that feeling reading this book, right from the first runner.

‘ Tuesdays with Morrie ’ surely encourages the anthology to stop and suppose about what's important in life. still, I suppose it falls short in giving any new perceptivity over the subject. It does tell you how to figure out life’s meaning or precedences for your own tone, it'll not help you in achieving that balance in life where you live like there’s no hereafter, while contemporaneously being apprehensive of your future liabilities.
Morrie was a great joe, a nice joe. He has great effects to say throughout the book. nearly half the book can be simply picked up and passed on as a profound quotation against a beautiful background and would make up for a great greeting card. The book isn't really a story, but more like a discussion between a pupil and his dying schoolteacher. numerous corridor, where Morrie talks about the real meaning of life, about giving, about love, about participating the happiness, it really touches your heart and you would surely feel the emotion. still, the communication from the first runner is enough simple and nothing new- “ compass yourself with favored bones and know what's important, and do not get caught with plutocrat and business. We've heard that a million times! ”. Well, everybody knows that, nothing new.

Some sections in the book, I didn't like at each. For case, Morrie’s views on marriage or having children. Well, these are effects veritably private to each existent.
Some of my favorite quotations from the book
- “ Well, for one thing, the culture we've doesn't make people feel good about themselves. We are tutoring the wrong effects. And you have to be strong enough to say if the culture does not work, do not buy it. produce your own. utmost people can not do it. ”
- “ Love is how you stay alive, indeed after you're gone. ”
- “ Do n’t cleave to effects because everything is impermanent. ”
- “ So numerous people walk around with a pointless life. They feel half-asleep, indeed when they are busy doing effects they suppose are important. This is because they are chasing the wrong effects. The way you get meaning into your life is to devote yourself to loving others, devote yourself to your community around you, and devote yourself to creating commodity that gives you purpose and meaning. ”
- “ Life is a series of pulls back and forth. A pressure of contraries, like a pull on a rubber band. utmost of us live nearly in the middle. A wrestlingmatch.Which side wins? Love wins. Love always wins ”
- “ This is part of what a family is about, not just love. It's knowing that your family will be there watching out for you. Nothing additional will give you that. Not plutocrat. Not fame. Not work. ”
- “ If you are trying to show off for people at the top, forget it. They will look down on you anyhow. And if you are trying to show off for people at the bottom, forget it. They will only begrudge you. The status will get you nowhere. Only an open heart will allow you to float inversely between everyone. ”
- “ There's a big confusion in this country over what we want versus what weneed.you need food. You want a chocolate sundae. ”

To conclude, It’s a light read and a short book, you can pick it up and finish over a weekend. Some people will just love it, while more mature compendiums might suppose it else. Cheers!


Life's amazing secrets by gaur gopal das

Lifes amazing secrets by gaur gopal das 


“ Life’s Amazing Secrets ” written by none other than one of the most popular spiritual personality on Youtube- Gaur Gopal Das. I've been following two personalities on Youtube when it comes to spiritual knowledge- No bone can beat my following for Sadhguru and 2nd, this gentleman- Gaur Gopal Das. He has such a polite and well- speaking oratory chops that you can hear him for hours. Also, his generalities, exemplifications and sense that he gives in his vids are so over to the mark that it teaches you commodity new each time you watch one of his new vids. Though I don't like the way ISKCON endorses spiritualism by circulating the knowledge only from the one dimension that they believe in but still, this man speaks collectively by not relating himself under the premise of the institution’s docket. Unfortunately, everything that I've spoken about his important knowledge sharing capacity in his vids can not be said for his debut book.

The book gives me a veritably introductory knowledge of how to lead life which you have yourself kept hearing since nonage from your parents and colony’s uncles and aunts. Not a single chapter in the book is as poignant as similar tone- help and spiritual book are anticipated of. As Das has himself said in the launch of the book that writing the book wasn't his original study, but the publisher asked him to, this book also displays the same that author just completed it for the sake of at least start with jotting books. Author has gone the Robin Sharma way where he has written the book in the conversational format still dividing it into different chapters but could n’t deliver the same simple keys that can help us in changing our life and approach towards living.
The author has spoken about the four introductory bus of life in the book- Balancing particular life, maintaining connections, regulating work life and managing social benefactions. The only section that I set up little different than what I've regularly read is the one talking about managing work life. Except that, there's a section in which the author has described how should one sit in an asana and release the stress off which also sounded result- evidence.
  

The alchemist by paulo Coelho

The alchemist by Paulo Coelho

This book is about you, me and anyone and everyone. It's about our life, our troubles and agonies, our pretensions and the purpose of our actuality. To determine our thing( or particular Legend as Coelho terms) and to pursue and achieve it isn't delicate if we're focused because in the words of Coelho,". when you want commodity, all the macrocosm conspires in helping you to achieve it."

The story is that of a shepard boy named, Santiago, from Andulasia. The boy embarks upon a trip in hunt of a treasure that he'd conceited of. Each bone of us are, infact, Santiago, unfit to realise when and where we divulged' the ladle of oil painting'. As you go through the book you learn that all isn't lost and there's stopgap.
Recited in a simple lucid manner, the story is interspersed with conceits, fables and apologues. Compelling, intriguing and full of stopgap and positivity, The Alchemist is a bedrock of alleviation that instills a strong sense of faith in yourself.

similar is the power of this book that you'll want to read it again and again. Paulo Coelho has an uncanny knack to soothe your soul and boost your morale. This book, in my opinion, should be read by everyone, youthful and old, atleast formerly.

Think and grow rich by napoleon hill


Think and grow rich by napoleon hill 

Yes, this book will change your life ever. It surely changed mine. In what enterprises to Personal Development textbooks, I would say this is the most complete book about the subject in the request. Napoleon Hill, indeed, covers enough much all aspects about the power of the mortal mind to materialise anything we ask in life. And, believe me when i say, I've read tons of books about particular development. But so far, this book is the stylish. still, to make it more clear, this book isn't the stylish in terms of furnishing detailed information in each and every aspect of the process of incarnation. nonetheless, it does cover all aspects of it in a reasonable profound manner. Obviously, if your intention is to expand your knowledge in a veritably specific aspect of the process of incarnation, for illustration continuity, or Law Of magnet, also i would advise you to get a book fastening solely on that specific aspect. likewise, If you're new into this type of knowledge, this would be the first book to start with. It'll give you with a general overview of this Power, and will boost your provocation to expand your knowledge about it. After reading this book, i would explosively recommend Bob Proctor's Book" studies are thinks'. Again, another amazing book! The nethermost line is, once you start reading this type of subject, you must continue reading further and further about it. The reason for that's you must etch this conception into your subconscious mind in order to use this power duly and painlessly. And, the further knowledge you accumulate, further your subconscious mind will accept it and use it in your favour. Wish you all the stylish in your particular development trip. And flash back , Be ALWAYS Blessed! Be ALWAYS a Blessing! 


Men's search for meaning by victor e frankl 

Men's search for meaning by victor e frankl

The book is principally divided into three corridor, the first one describes the way the Jews captures were treated in the Nazi Concentration Camps and how their life was. In the alternate part, the author described the basics of Logotherapy, a way of treatment of the Psychotherapeutic Cases. And eventually, in the third part, he described what he actually meant by Man’s Hunt for meaning. 
 
 Being a Jew, the author was transferred to the Auschwitz, Dachau and other attention camps during the Nazi occupation in Austria. Then, in the first part of the book, the author described his days in those attention camps, where is were no chance of seeing the morning sun in the coming day. And this happed every day. He described the way the SS guards used to treat the captures, the corruption prevailed in the camps, the malnutrition, the life of the camp Jews etc. The way he described the tortures the captures suffered, would surely bring gashes to your eyes. During his description, he also refocused out the cerebral condition of the other comrades in those camps. When utmost of the captures lost all stopgap of his life, some of them still kept the faith, that good days were coming. 
In the alternate part, the author principally described the Logotherapy ways. And the most intriguing part of the book is the third part. Then the author describes “ Man’s hunt for meaning ”. We, the mortal beings on this earth are living for a purpose. Until & unless we ca n’t find the purpose of our life, there's no reason for us to be then alive. utmost of the captures in the camps lost all of their expedients and also failed because they lost their purpose, as per the author. It's a must- read book for all I suppose. 
 
 The book also consists of many life- changing quotations which I liked in the book and would like to partake 
1. For success, like happiness, ca n’t be pursued; it must postdate, and it only does so as the unintended side- effect of one’s fidelity to a cause lesser than oneself or as the by- product of one’s rendition to a person other than oneself. 
 
 2. There are effects which must beget you to lose your reason or you have none to lose. 
3. Suffering fully fills the mortal soul and conscious mind, no matter whether the suffering is great of little. thus the ‘ size ’ of mortal suffering is absolutely relative. 
 
 4. No man should judge unless he asks himself in absolute honesty whether in a analogous situation he might not have done the same. 
5. The mortal being is fully and ineluctably told by his surroundings. 
 
 6. Suffering is an ineradicable part of life, indeed as fate and death. Without suffering and death, mortal life ca n’t be completed 
7. Emotion, which is suffering, ceases to be suffering as soon as we form a clear and precise picture of it. 
 
 8. There's no need to be shamed of gashes, for gashes bore substantiation that a man had the topmost of courage, the courage to suffer. 
9. A man who becomes conscious of the responsibility he bears toward a human who affectionately waits for him, or to an untreated work, will noway be suitable to throw down his life. He knows the “ why ” for his actuality, and will be suitable to bear nearly any ” how ”. 
 
 10. The body has smaller inhibitions than the mind. 
11. No bone
 has the right to do wrong, not indeed if wrong has been done to them. 

The school of life by Alain de Botton 

There are so numerous perceptivity then and if you could imbibe them all what a important lucid and happier life you would enjoy, and everyone differently in your route for that matter. The book is easily an blend of perceptivity from lots of distant sources, yet reads like a book written by a singleauthor.However, culture, the trades and psychology in a continuance and this was one and the other was Dorothy Rowe's companion to life, If you read two books on society. largely recommended. 


As a man thinketh by James allen 

As a man thinketh by James allen 

“ As he thinks, so he is; as he continues to suppose, so he remains. ” 
 The book explores the idea of a man being the sum aggregate of his studies. It dives into the realm of formative studies and explores their impact on our character, health, vision and purpose. 
 
 James aptly inspires the anthology to work towards weeding out the negativity and mould our studies to inspire positive conduct. conduct which can lead to the ultimate thing of achieving a calm and serene mind. 

 James Allen has penned down the perfect form to push you out of your mundanemid-week blues. Can not recommend this book enough! 

The richest man in babylon George S clason

The richest man in babylon by George S. Clason 

The author, writes about the wisdom of wealth held by ancientBabylonians.All chroniclers agree with the fact that babylon was the richest of all of the ancient fiefdoms, although it was located in the middle of a dry, thirstydesert.The information contained in this book is acquired by the careful transliteration of the ancient complexion tablets discovered by archeologists over the numerous times after the discovery of the remains of this formerly great area in ancientmesopotamia.The first section deals with advice on plutocrat- making by a veritably rich & important man namedArkad.He's really the richest man in Babylon for he indeed lends gold to the emperor in the times of extremity. The after half describes tales which are directly taken from the ancient tablets, all containing profound fiscal advice on the art of wealth- incremement. 
 150 odd runners, took me about 5 hours to finishit.Go for it, its really a good book unlike all those other books on the same subject that pledge to give a lot but is full of pseudoscience & BS. 

The secret by rhonda byrne

The secret by rhonda byrne 


The book is of excellent quality, I wish all other books of paperback should be like this with affordable price. 
 About the content in the book- 
 All that we're is the result of what have allowed
 . We're made of our studies; we're moulded by our studies. The below was a meaning of shloka from bhagavadgita. Buddha, swami Vivekananda are also some of great humans whose training tells us that the substance of human was his studies. THIS BOOK IS A GOOD ONE which tells us about law of magnet that repeated studies about what we want will produce a force of magnet which attracts our thing towards us. 
 Because our studies come our words, words come conduct, conduct come habits, habits led you to your fortune. 

The art of saying no by Damon Zahariades

The art of saying no by Damon Zahariades 

This is a super book for anyone looking for ways to ameliorate their capability to say no to delicate people. I felt a weight lifted off me after reading this and have started putting some of Damon’s suggestions in place formerly and it’s working a treat! My anxiety situations are much lower and I've way less sweat saying no. A great, structured book that I'll keep dipping in and out of! largely recommend 


Learning how to fly by APJ Abdul Kalam 

Learning how to fly by APJ Abdul kalam


The book is a collection of 18 lectures and speeches given by lateA.P.J. Abdul Kalam. These lectures were addressed to academy and university scholars, and preceptors. It's a must read by anyone who wants to read some motivational and inspirational words of our great late chairman of India. The book length is 163 runners. 

The kite Runner by Khaled hosseini

The kite runner by khaled hosseini 


This is a story about fellowship, immolation, love, lies, penitence, tragedy, pain and redemption. 
 Amir and Hassan, who lives in Afghanistan were nursed by a same woman as both of them lost their maters
 incontinently after their birth. As they grew up together in a same home they came thick. Hassan was the closest thing to a stylish friend Amir ever had. But he noway accepted that in public as they both belonged to a different community. Hassan was a Hazara boy who belonged toShi'a community. He was the son of Amir's menial. Whereas Amir was a Pashtun and was the son of one of the most famed man of the city, a Sunni. 
 Hassan was a stalwart and honest boy, a pious friend and he was the stylish" vampire runner" of the city. He was deadly with his slingshot. He was a pure soul and a true friend. Whereas Amir was a sissy, mean and an egoistic boy. His head was always buried in books. He'd come a good pen and a minstrel at a veritably youthful age. Hassan on the other hand noway went to academy. Amir used to read Hassan colorful stories but occasionally he teased Hassan for the words he'd noway heard of as he was an illiterate. Hassan being innocent and kind noway inclined that. 
 When Amir was youthful he used to long for his father's love. He could go to any length to achieve his father's affection and love which was missing from his life. In the downtime of 1975, Amir won the" Kite fighting event" and won his father's love too. But that happiness did not last too long as in the same downtime a horrible event occured which destroyed everything. 
Hassan had always went out of his way to help Amir. Whenever they were in trouble Hassan used to take stage for Amir and always saved him from any melee . But when Amir's time came to pay Hassan back for what he'd done for him, he backed out. He betrayed his own friend who had always been there for him like his own family. Amir pretended as if he did not see anything. Little did he know that thing will hang him ever and indeed after 26 times he'll not be suitable to sleep peacefully at night. 
 So this is the story of Amir's hunt for redemption and peace. That how he returned back to a new but jeopardized Kabul from his comfortable life in America and how he got his peace back ever but in broken pieces. 
 The desolation of Afghanistan, the abatement of monarchy, the Russian irruption and also Taliban rule has been described veritably bravely and is really heartbreaking. This book isn't for the light- hearted people at all. This is a woeful story which will leave you sad and agonized. 
 I've read the other two books of Khaled Hosseini as well. This book is a lot better than" And the mountains echoed" but still I like" A thousand splendid suns" the stylish. 

A thousands splendid sun by khaled hosseini

A thousand splendid suns by khaled hosseini 

Maybe one of the most affecting and heart wrenching books I've ever read, the story is compelling, sad, instructional and a realistic account of the woeful lives of every day people in a foreign world and country. To suppose that this is a fairly ultramodern day account of the way a women and children were treated and of how a man, hubby and father could be non responsible for his atrocity and violence against his family is mind blowing. tête-à-tête it makes me feel so fortunate to have lived in the same period as these women but have as numerous boons as a citizen as I have, with a direct link to an NHS system, legal rights and instant help and backing from our exigency services and the occasion to have had a free and comprehensive education. The book set in a world were these people were burdened with their lives from birth, just because they were born in the circumstances that were dominated by the total control of government, their family and woeful circumstances.

To kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee 

For all those booklovers who have not read this amazing book by#harperlee you have to read it asap! 
 It's written from a little girl's point of view but has amazing studies for everyone. Indeed after being written so numerous times agone
 , it still has some veritably applicable assignments for everyone, there's commodity for everyone in it! surely one of the#mustread books. 
 Then are some of my favourite#quotes from the book 
" You noway really understand a person until you consider effects from his point of view. Until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it." 
" People generally see what they look for, and hear what they hear for." 
" There are just some kind of men who- who're so busy fussing about the coming world they have noway learned to live in this one, and you can look down the road and see the results." 

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