However, not as many second youths as they are marketed, your twenties will frequently provide fuel to clever depictions and Venn diagrams. Some books are intriguing, exhilarating, agonizing, or just cliché and should be read. Here are six books you should read in your twenties!!

F*ck! I’m in My Twenties by Emma Koenig

Emma Koenig is one such twenty-something facing unexpected adulthood. How will she adjust? Making a book out of amusing and horrifyingly exact delineations, agendas, and Venn diagrams that will make your friends turn each page with increasing suspicion at self-acknowledgment is a good place to start. “I’m volunteering at a Tamagotchi Pet Shelter,” is undeniably the most logical response someone could offer when asked why they aren’t living “the fantasy” yet.

High Fidelity by Nick Hornby

Rob, the record storekeeper, maybe in his mid-thirties rather than his twenties, but his love life’s documented development is timeless. Scratch Hornby’s mid-nineties breakthrough novel, and the male point of view rom-com it spawned, remain a benchmark for the single twenty-something… even if Tinder was light-years away back then.

Tiny Beautiful Things by Cheryl Strayed

Cheryl Strayed revealed herself as Sugar, the frank and astute exhortation editorialist who routinely draws a devoted following of The Rumpus Web page, in 2012. Tiny Beautiful Things is a twenty-something book of scriptures: a book you’ll need to carry in the vehicle for when you’re confronted with life’s most tough challenges. Aside from a flood of “sweet peas” and “honey buns,” Strayed employs revolutionary trustworthiness and complete candor about her experiences to help you deal with the difficult situations ahead.

Wild by Cheryl Strayed

Sugar was and is also Cheryl Strayed, the memoirist who led thousands of women up the Pacific Crest Trail to reflect on their lives after reading Wild. Soaring sales of climbing boots in the teeny-tiny village of Campo, California, are evidence of Strayed’s inspiring recovery journey. Read it for the disclosures, even if you’re not planning on putting on weather-beaten footwear anytime soon.

Also Read: Struggling With Peer Pressure? Here Are 4 Books You Must Read