Washington 9th grade reading list
Washington 9th grade students are commonly assigned 15 books in US schools, drawn from WA K-12 Learning Standards plus Common Core, AP, and IB references. Lexile range: 600L–1170L.
- Books on file
- 15
- Lexile range
- 600L–1170L
- Citation source
- WA K-12 Learning Standards
About the Washington 9th grade reading list
In Washington schools, 9th grade students are most often assigned books drawn from WA K-12 Learning Standardsalongside the national curricula that apply nationwide — Common Core State Standards Appendix B, AP English, and the International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme. ReadingList currently tracks 15 titles for 9th grade in Washington, each tied to a Washington-specific curriculum citation. Across the list, Lexile measures span 600L–1170L.
9th grade sits in the 9-12 grade band, where students are high-school readers. At this stage the emphasis is on close reading, literary analysis, rhetoric, and preparing for AP, IB, and college coursework. Assigned reading skews toward canonical literature, drama, poetry, and AP/IB set texts, with text complexity that, per Common Core’s Appendix A reading bands, typically falls around roughly 900L to 1300L. Measured against that 1050–1335L range, of the 12 titles here with a Lexile score 2 are grade-level, 10 are more accessible (often assigned for theme over challenge), and 0 are stretch texts that may need scaffolding. Because readers in a single 9th grade classroom can span several hundred Lexile points, this list is best read as a starting point rather than a fixed requirement.
Washington’s English Language Arts requirements are set by WA K-12 Learning Standards (k12.wa.us). Most states pair their own standards with the Common Core text-complexity framework, so the 9th grade list below blends Washington-specific assignments with the widely-taught national canon. Every title links to its primary source on the book’s detail page, so you can confirm exactly where and why it is assigned.
How to use this list:match a title to your child’s most recent Lexile or guided-reading level rather than to the grade alone. Teachers building a 9th grade unit can pair a Washington-cited core text with a grade-appropriate companion novel; parents previewing summer or supplemental reading can check each book’s content notes and challenge history before assigning it.
Other Washington grades
Browse 9th grade reading by theme
- Identity (19)
- Family (13)
- Coming Of Age (11)
- Survival (7)
- Loyalty (6)
- Holocaust (5)
- Ambition (5)
- Friendship (5)
- Justice (5)
- Power (5)
- Race (5)
- War (5)
- Love (4)
- Poverty (4)
- Disability (3)
- Education (3)
- Fate (3)
- Freedom (3)
- Grief (3)
- Identity And Reputation (3)
- Language And Thought (3)
- Marriage And Class (3)
- Mental Health (3)
- Resilience (3)
- Revolution (3)
- Social Class (3)
15 books cited for Washington 9th grade
Assignments tied directly to Washington’s WA K-12 Learning Standards or national curricula with a Washington-specific citation.
A Raisin in the SunLorraine Hansberry
Animal FarmGeorge Orwell · 1170L
Fahrenheit 451Ray Bradbury · 890L
Lord of the FliesWilliam Golding · 770L
Maus: A Survivor's TaleArt Spiegelman
MonsterWalter Dean Myers · 670L
Of Mice and MenJohn Steinbeck · 630L
Romeo and JulietWilliam Shakespeare
SpeakLaurie Halse Anderson · 690L
Stamped: Racism, Antiracism, and YouJason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi · 1000L
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time IndianSherman Alexie · 600L
The Book ThiefMarkus Zusak · 730L
The OdysseyHomer · 1130L
Things Fall ApartChinua Achebe · 890L
To Kill a MockingbirdHarper Lee · 870L
Common questions
- How many books are assigned to 9th grade students in Washington?
- 15 books appear on ReadingList for 9th grade students in Washington, sourced from WA K-12 Learning Standards and national curricula (Common Core, AP, IB) with applicable grade citations.
- What's the Lexile range for 9th grade reading in Washington?
- Lexile measures across the 9th grade Washington reading list range from 600L to 1170L. Books without a published Lexile (poetry, drama, picture books) are not included in this range.
- Where does this reading list come from?
- Entries reference WA K-12 Learning Standards (published at www.k12.wa.us) plus national curricula that apply to Washington schools: Common Core State Standards Appendix B, AP English Literature and Language, IB Diploma Programme, and Cambridge Assessment International. Every assignment row on each book's detail page links its primary source.