Fantasy books assigned in US schools

US schools assign 21 books in the Fantasy genre, sourced from state ELA standards, AP/IB syllabi, and Common Core exemplar lists. Each title links to its grade range, Lexile, and the specific curricula citing it.

Books on file
21
Grade span
312

Recurring themes

courage (8) · family (6) · friendship (6) · destiny (4) · dragons (3) · identity (3) · love (3) · mythology (3)

Authors in this genre

Tui T. Sutherland (3) · Rick Riordan (2) · Kate DiCamillo · Lincoln Peirce · Suzanne Collins

Fantasy titles

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How Fantasy fits US school reading lists

Fantasy appears in 21 titles across the US-school assigned-reading canon ReadingList tracks. The genre is assigned across grades 3 through 12, with Lexile measures spanning the standard Lexile bands. Fantasy occupies a specific pedagogical slot in US ELA standards: state frameworks pair the genre with reading-skill anchors that the form is structurally well-suited to teach — Common Core's RL.3 (character development) and RL.5 (structure of texts) tasks lean on Fantasy conventions, and AP English Literature's free-response prompts regularly draw on works of Fantasy as exemplar texts.

Within US schools, Fantasy is taught with explicit attention to genre conventions: students are expected to identify the genre's defining structural moves, the standard narrative or rhetorical patterns Fantasy follows, and the way authors either honor or subvert those patterns. Common themes across Fantasy titles in this corpus include courage, family, friendship, themes that recur because the genre's structural conventions naturally surface them. For teachers assembling a thematic unit, this means a Fantasy text usually slots into the curriculum at a particular skill-targeting moment — not interchangeably with texts from other genres.

Authors whose Fantasy work appears most frequently in US-school canons include Tui T. Sutherland, Rick Riordan, Kate DiCamillo. Each works in Fantasy with a distinct voice and structural emphasis — meaning the corpus is not a single uniform reading experience but a range of approaches to the form. Students moving through Fantasy titles across grade levels typically encounter the genre's most accessible exemplars in middle school (focused plots, clear character arcs) and its most demanding exemplars in AP and IB courses (multiple narrators, period-specific vocabulary, sustained ambiguity).

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Common questions

How many Fantasy books do US schools assign?
21 books classified as Fantasy appear across the curricula and state ELA standards tracked by ReadingList. Each is cited from a state department of education, AP/IB syllabus, Common Core exemplar list, or peer-reviewed source.
What grades read Fantasy?
Books in the Fantasy genre are assigned across grades 3 through 12 in US schools tracked by ReadingList. Specific grade placements are listed on each book's detail page.
Embed this list on your site

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