We find the lists
From libraries, schools, state programs, and national organizations.
Send us a list →
We gather publicly available reading lists from libraries, schools, and national organizations so families can quickly understand what’s being recommended and decide what deserves a closer look.
Thousands of books. Dozens of sources. One clear place to start.
Reading List Library does not create or curate these reading lists.
These are publicly available recommendations from institutions across the country. Our role is to make them easier to find, easier to explore, and easier to understand.
Recommendations are often scattered across websites, buried in PDFs, or shared without much context. That makes it difficult to know what’s being recommended, who recommended it, and how to evaluate it.
Reading List Library brings those lists into one place so families can move from guesswork to clarity.
Every section of this page points back to one action: opening the library and exploring the lists for yourself.
From libraries, schools, state programs, and national organizations.
Send us a list →So it’s easier to compare sources, see patterns, and understand what each list includes.
Open the library →Browse lists, review sources, and take a closer look at the books that matter to you.
Explore reading lists →Not every question needs a hot take. Some just need a clear place to begin.
Explore widely shared recommendations and see which titles appear again and again.
Find publicly shared lists that help shape what students are encouraged to read.
See what libraries and statewide initiatives are putting in front of young readers.
Notice patterns and decide for yourself what stands out.
If the goal is clarity, the most useful next action is simple: go to the library and see what’s actually on the lists.
Some reading lists may include books with mature themes. We encourage families to review titles carefully and make decisions based on their own values, standards, and children.