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Best Books for Teen Boys: The Ones Worth Trading Screen Time For

If you have a teenage boy, you probably already know that getting them to read can feel like negotiating a peace treaty.

I’m not above a little strategic motivation. Around here, reading can earn you your favorite dinner, a little cold hard cash, or both. On the flip side, if you don’t touch a book, you won’t touch your phone. The investment will pay off in ways that last far longer than summer break.

Because once you find the right books, something shifts. Boys who “don’t like reading” suddenly can’t put a book down. The key is choosing stories that are fast-moving, real, and full of grit, courage, and purpose.

Here are some of our favorite, teen boy-approved reads:

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1. The Wright Brothers by David McCullough

Two bicycle mechanics from Ohio with no college degrees, no government funding, and no guarantee of success, changed the world forever. This is a story about failure, persistence, and the audacity to believe you can do what no one has ever done. This book is for the teen who wants to read about how an impossible dream can come true!

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2. The Boys in the Boat by Daniel James Brown

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Nine young men from America who went to the 1936 Berlin Olympics and stunned the world (including Adolf Hitler) by winning the gold medal in rowing. This is one of the most thrilling underdog stories ever told, and it’s all true. Brown focuses especially on Joe Rantz, a boy who grew up with almost nothing, and shows how teamwork, sacrifice, and sheer will can carry you further than talent alone. Your son won’t want to put this book down.

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3. Chop Wood Carry Water by Joshua Medcalf

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This short book may be the most quietly life-changing one on the list. It follows a young man named John who travels to Japan to become a samurai, and the wisdom his sensei teaches him isn’t about archery at all. He learns how to build a life worth living through daily discipline, humility, and process over outcome. In a world of instant everything, this book teaches boys something countercultural and essential: that greatness is built in the ordinary moments, one day at a time. Great for any boy involved in sports, the arts, or anything he wants to pursue with excellence.

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4. Endurance: Shackleton’s Incredible Voyage by Alfred Lansing

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In 1914, Ernest Shackleton and his crew set sail for Antarctica. Their ship became trapped and crushed by ice. What followed was nearly two years of survival against conditions so brutal it’s almost impossible to believe. Lansing reconstructs the story from diaries and interviews, and the result is one of the greatest survival narratives ever written. This book will make your son look at his own challenges differently. Whatever he’s going through, it’s not the Antarctic. And somehow, that’s incredibly motivating.

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5. God’s Smuggler by Brother Andrew

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Brother Andrew was a young Dutch man who began smuggling Bibles behind the Iron Curtain in the 1950s, driving through communist checkpoints with nothing but his faith and a prayer. This memoir reads like a spy thriller, except it’s real, and the stakes were life and death. It’s a story of one person’s radical faith, courage under pressure, and conviction that some things are worth risking everything for. I recommend this book for any teen asking big questions about faith, purpose, and what it means to stand for something.


6. The Lincoln Highway by Amor Towles

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This one is a little different from the rest of the list. It’s a novel set in 1954 and follows eighteen-year-old Emmett Watson, freshly released from a work farm, who plans to drive west with his younger brother to start a new life. Instead, two uninvited companions hijack the trip and send everything sideways. Towles is a masterful storyteller, and this book is funny, surprising, and genuinely wise about brotherhood, justice, and what it means to forge your own path. A great choice for the boy who likes his stories with a little more grit and imagination.


7. The Blind Side by Michael Lewis

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If your son loves football, hand him this book first and don’t say another word. Michael Lewis tells the remarkable true story of Michael Oher, a homeless teenager from Memphis who was taken in by a family and became an NFL first-round draft pick – but it’s also a fascinating deep dive into how the game of football itself evolved, and why protecting a quarterback’s blind side became one of the most valuable skills in sports. Lewis makes you care about strategy, statistics, and a kid’s life all at once. For football lovers, this is the one that turns them into readers.


8+. Heroes of History Series by Janet & Geoff Benge

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Heroes of history series

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If you haven’t discovered the Heroes of History series by Janet and Geoff Benge, you’re in for a treat. These biographies are written in a narrative, story-driven style that makes history feel like a fast-paced fiction novel.

Start with George Washington: a man of humility, faith, and extraordinary perseverance who held a struggling nation together through impossible odds. Then try Daniel Boone, a frontier adventurer who embodied courage and self-reliance in the American wilderness, or Abraham Lincoln, a man of honesty and moral conviction who navigated America’s darkest hour with quiet strength. Benjamin Franklin captures the story of a scrappy, apprentice who became one of history’s greatest inventors, writers, and statesmen, proof that curiosity and hard work are a powerful combination. And don’t miss George Washington Carver, a man born into slavery who became one of America’s most brilliant scientists through faith, perseverance, and a refusal to let his circumstances define his ceiling. Round it out with Theodore Roosevelt, a sickly, asthmatic boy who became an amazing leader. And for the boy who loves exploration and or US History, Meriwether Lewis is a must – the fearless co-leader who helped map an uncharted continent and opened the American West.

Any one of these is a great starting point. Your sons might end up like me, wanting ro read the entire Heroes of History series.

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The Bribe Is Worth It

Whether it’s Culver’s or cash or staying up late to read one more chapter – don’t hesitate to incentivize. Reading is a habit, and habits need momentum. Once a teenage boy discovers that a book can genuinely thrill him, challenge him, and even change the way he sees himself, you won’t need the bribes anymore.

This summer, give him stories worth reading. The rewards will last a lifetime.

What book does your teenager love? Leave a comment!

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Kathryn: I am a mom to four young boys and wife to one handsome man. I love hot coffee and good books! I'm a midwest girl living and loving life in Minnesota. I'm originally from Indiana, but have lived in: Ohio, Florida, Oklahoma, Illinois, Colorado, and NOW Minnesota!!
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