
The Last Unicorn
Peter S. Beagle
4.7 on Amazon
2 HN comments

Ready Player Two: A Novel
Ernest Cline, Wil Wheaton, et al.
4.2 on Amazon
2 HN comments

The Hate U Give
Angie Thomas and Nikki Giovanni
4.8 on Amazon
2 HN comments

Carrie
Stephen King
4.7 on Amazon
2 HN comments

The Perks of Being a Wallflower
Stephen Chbosky
4.7 on Amazon
2 HN comments

Dandelion Wine: A Novel (Grand Master Editions)
Ray Bradbury
4.5 on Amazon
2 HN comments

Worlds of Wonder: A Coloring Book for the Curious
Johanna Basford
4.9 on Amazon
1 HN comments

Lore
Alexandra Bracken
4.4 on Amazon
1 HN comments

Catching Fire: The Hunger Games, Book 2
Suzanne Collins, Tatiana Maslany, et al.
4.7 on Amazon
1 HN comments

The Shack: Where Tragedy Confronts Eternity
William P. Young
4.7 on Amazon
1 HN comments

Speak
Laurie Halse Anderson
4.6 on Amazon
1 HN comments

Looking for Alaska
John Green
4.6 on Amazon
1 HN comments

Turtles All the Way Down
John Green
4.6 on Amazon
1 HN comments

Madam: A Novel
Phoebe Wynne
3.5 on Amazon
1 HN comments

I Am Malala: How One Girl Stood Up for Education and Changed the World (Young Readers Edition)
Malala Yousafzai and Patricia McCormick
4.7 on Amazon
1 HN comments
derekp7onJan 27, 2020
Then there is the shared cultural knowledge at the time, such as Adam Curry (I think?) who on his own created MTV.com. Then later got sued and had to had the domain over when they realized there was value to it. On top of that, there was one of the first spoof pages I recall, "Madam Furry", which poked fun at Adam Curry's page. (Hopefully I'm remembering all these names correctly).
And lets not forget about Gopher, with Veronica and Archie, along with something else called WAIS (Wide Area Information Services), which always seem very slow and barely workable.
Oh, and how did we figure out the who/what/where? The Internet Yellow Pages, of course. Thick book that had everything categorized. I've still got mine around, brought it into work to put in the commons area book shelf.