College Admissions: 6 Great Summer Reads for College Students (And Their Parents)

Monday, August 10, 2015

 

View Larger +

From guides on how to study to this classic guide on how to handle the myriad challenges of dorm life, these books will help every college student (and parent) prepare for the big move this fall.

Lazy days of summer are here. If you have a student heading off to college in the fall, or if you are about to suffer the loss of having kids at home, here are some “must have” books that will help ease the transition and arm you with valuable strategies for success:

For College Students

The Naked Roommate: And 107 Other Issues You Might Run Into in College by Harlan Cohen-A humorous yet helpful look at what students should be prepared to encounter in college. From friendship issues to alcohol and drugs, this book tells students what to expect on campus and how to handle the bumps.

How To Study In College by Walter Pauk-Too many students go off to college today without the skills to succeed. This book focuses on how to absorb knowledge and use it effectively in college courses. The Cornell Note Taking System and other proven methodologies are used to teach students what they don’t learn in high school—HOW to study. It’s a game changer for students who want to be top achievers.

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

Making College Count: A Real World Look at How to Succeed In and After College by Patrick S. O'Brien and Pete Adams-I have always believed the saying “If you fail to plan, you plan to fail.” This book deals with how to chart your course and make the most of your college investment. From major selection to extra-curricular activities and internships, students are guided to think about how they can best use their four years on campus to propel themselves into a great career or grad school after graduation.

For Parents

You’re On Your Own (But I’m Here If You Need Me): Mentoring Your Child During the College Years by Marjorie Savage. Written by the parent liaison from U, Minnesota, this book deals with the real world issues that kids (and parents) face in college. It starts with things that crop up the summer before students head off for freshmen year, then academic issues, social obstacles and financial responsibility on campus. The common sense advice helps teach parents how to be supportive and mentor kids at a distance vs. being a helicopter parent via daily text messages and phone calls.

Letting Go: A Parents' Guide to Understanding the College Years by Karen Levin Coburn and Madge Lawrence Treeger-Kids, the title says it all! If your parents are having a hard time transitioning to your adulthood, this is the book to get them for the holidays. It contains hundreds of tips from colleges, students and parents to help parents cope and kids retain their sanity.

Barbara & Susan's Guide to the Empty Nest: Discovering New Purpose, Passion & Your Next Great Adventure by Barbara Rainey and Susan Yates- Are you the last child to leave home? Do you wonder what your parents will do now that they don’t have to be your chauffeur, pack lunches and hound you about homework? This guide will help your parents find their new mission in life while reducing text message overload from mom and dad on Saturday night.

View Larger +

Cristiana Quinn, M.Ed. is the founder of College Admission Advisors, LLC which provides strategic college counseling, SAT prep and athletic recruiting services www.collegeadvisorsonline.com.

This article originally ran in 2012

 

Related Slideshow: Reading With Robin’s Top Summer Picks

View Larger +
Prev Next

Providence Noir

The latest in the very popular “Noir” series is Providence Noir edited by Rhode Island’s own, Ann Hood.  “Noir is about sex and money and sometimes about revenge, “ Otto Penzlet, the owner of the Mysterious Bookshop in Manhattan, told the New Yorker in 2010.

Where better than Providence for Hood to feature essays by authors and local favorites such as : Peter Farrelly, Pablo Rodriguez, Taylor Polites, Amity Gaige and of course, Ann Hood.  This is a must-have for any self-respecting Rhode Island reader.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Girl in the Moonlight

Girl In The Moonlight by Charles Dubow is one of the books I read this past winter and was the first book I knew would be included in my summer reading event. (Summer Reading With Robin at the Dunes Club June 24th is sold out).

This novel is rich with passion and obsession as we follow Wylie Rose and his unrelenting pursuit of the elusive Cesca Bonet. Wylie having grown up with the Bonet children is cautioned by his father early on “ they’re beautiful, talented, rich. It’s all very seductive…” Will Wylie listen to his father? Who would?

View Larger +
Prev Next

The Mapmaker’s Children

I love reading a wonderfully written historical fiction novel and The Mapmaker’s Children is exactly that.

Sarah McCoy weaves the story of the very bold and artistic Sarah Brown who stumbles upon her father, Abolitionist John Brown’s work on the Underground Railroad with current day Eden Anderson’s story. Eden inhabits a house with a strong connection to the Underground Railroad and perhaps to Sarah Brown as well. This thrilling ride will keep you turning the pages until the very last stop.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Oh! You Pretty Things

I love sharing a debut novel and Oh! You Pretty Things by Shanna Mahin is one of those witty novels told with a sharp and original voice that is not to be missed. Set in Los Angeles this book is about celebrity and the people who push you down on their way up.

Mahin is a high school dropout who rallied late despite her ninth grade English teacher’s prediction of a lifetime of wasted potential. Who could possibly pass up the chance to read a novel by this author? Not me!

View Larger +
Prev Next

9 ½ Narrow…My Life In Sho

If these shoes could talk, well in this memoir they do. In this funny, poignant coming –of-age memoir, 9 ½ Narrow by Patricia Morrisroe shares the stories of a generation of women who have enjoyed a world of freedom and opportunity that there mothers did not have as well as Morrisroe’s own story.

From wedgies to earth shoes, heels and more this memoir spans five decades and countless footwear trends this clever book will induce you to look back and some of the shoes that carried you through.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Inside The O’Briens

Yes, that Lisa Genova from the author who brought us Still Alice and Love Anthony comes her latest novel about the O’Brien family of Charlestown, MA. (Bottom of the Hill as the area was called) Joe O’Brien is a respected Boston police officer and all around good guy when he begins experiencing bouts of strange, involuntary movements, fits of rage and disorganized thinking.

In this heartrending novel, what Genova did for Alzheimer’s disease in Still Alice, she will do once again for Huntington’s disease with her mesmerizing storytelling. Colorful language and passionate prose move this page-turner along all too quickly. Savor this one.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Royal Wedding

You are cordially invited to attend the royal wedding of Princess Mia Thermopolis of Genovia…well, not exactly. You are, however, invited to read the very first adult installment from Meg Cabot the author who brought us The Princess Diaries.

Fans of this popular series will be thrilled to know that Royal Wedding opens five years after Mia has graduated from college. Mia has a whole new life living in New York City, which is quite the opposite of her reign in Genovia. Even in the word of the royals there are bumps along the way and fairy-tales aren’t always what they seem.

View Larger +
Prev Next

I Regret Nothing

From the hilarious and brutally honest Lancaster comes the latest, a memoir about turning her midlife crises into a midlife opportunity. From attempting a juice cleanse and starting a new business to training for a 5K, Jen shares every effort at making her life better again and again. Lancaster embarks upon the first part of her journey with a warning from her husband, “Don’t get a tattoo.” Does she or doesn’t she?

View Larger +
Prev Next

The Dream Lover

Elizabeth and Berg –what else is there to talk about? From the beloved novelist who has written classics such as : Talk Before Sleep, True To Form and Ordinary Life: Stories, comes a gorgeous novel rich with history, bravado and passion. At the beginning of The Dream Lover we meet Aurore Dupin as she is leaving her estranged husband and their estate in the French countryside to begin a new life in Paris.

This storyline might not be quite as scandalous if it were set in modern day, but this story is set in the nineteenth century. It’s in Paris that upin gives herself a new name – George Sand and pursues her dream of becoming a writer and embracing the life she longs to write about.

View Larger +
Prev Next

Re Jane

Another debut and this one is a fresh and contemporary retelling of Jayne Eyre by Korean-American author Patricia Park. I had the pleasure of meeting Park recently and was so engrossed by her talk about this book that I couldn’t wait to add it to my summer reading stack.

Jane Re is a half-Korean, half-American orphan who has been trying to escape her life in Flushing, Queens. She just might find that new life a lot closer to home than she imagined. Jane embarks on a journey from Queens to Brooklyn and Seoul and back. Jane must find a balance between two cultures and learn to accept who she really is.

 
 

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.

 
 

Sign Up for the Daily Eblast

I want to follow on Twitter

I want to Like on Facebook