Books about reputation

US schools assign 3 books about reputation, 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 that cite it.

Books on file
3
Lexile range
1100L–1100L
Grade span
1012

Authors who explore reputation

Arthur Miller · William Shakespeare

reputation books by grade

10th grade (3) · 11th grade (3) · 12th grade (3)

reputation canon

How US schools teach reputation

reputation appears in 3 titles across the US-school assigned-reading canon ReadingList tracks. The theme spans grades 10 through 12 and a Lexile range of 1100L to 1100L — meaning teachers can pick a reputation text appropriate to most reading-level cohorts. Where a topic like reputation appears in standards documents, it is typically tied to specific reading-skill anchors: Common Core's "analyze how complex characters develop" (RL.7.3 and parallels), the AP English Literature "central idea and supporting details" task, and IB Diploma Language A's literary-analysis criteria all reward students who can trace a theme like reputation through plot, character, and figurative language across multiple texts.

Across grade bands, teachers approach reputation differently. In elementary classrooms (grades K-5), reputation is usually introduced through short, illustrated stories with concrete characters and a clear emotional arc — the theme is named explicitly and the reader is asked to recognize it. In middle school (grades 6-8), reputation is layered with ambiguity: characters confront the theme imperfectly, and students are asked to evaluate the choices rather than simply identify them. By high school (grades 9-12), AP and IB courses treat reputation as one of several interrelated motifs — students are expected to compare how two or more authors handle reputation differently, often across literary periods. This page's 3-title corpus reflects that progression.

Authors who treat reputation extensively in the US-school canon include Arthur Miller, William Shakespeare. Arthur Miller's work in particular is widely cited in state ELA framework documents as an exemplar of how a reputation arc can be sustained across a full novel. For a deeper read, follow the linked author pages below — each lists which other themes that author treats, what grades assign their work, and which states or curricula cite each title.

Common questions

How many books about reputation does US-school reading list include?
3 books that explore reputation 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's the Lexile range for reputation books?
Lexile measures for reputation titles in this corpus range from 1100L to 1100L. Books without a published Lexile (poetry, drama, graphic novels) are not included in this range.
What grades read books about reputation?
Books exploring reputation are assigned across grades 10 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

Copy + paste this snippet into any school newsletter, classroom blog, library site, or homeschool resource page. The embed shows the top 12 titles and links back to the full list. Updates automatically when ReadingList’s data changes.

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