Yes.
Catcher in the Rye, The Great Gatsby, The Old Man and the Sea / For Whom the Bell Tolls, Hamlet (drama), etc.
These are all essential reads if you want to maintain literacy going into adulthood. Even a rote, memorising-centric understanding of those works will do you good. In fact, there are many novels that should be read during high school and not during College / University. English Literature degrees, for instance, shouldn't be a vocation for people who aren't going to pursue a career in teaching. The reason those books don't get updated to better equivalents (and instead you get mediocre 'modern replacements' like Life of Pi) is because when you study literature and poetry you end up becoming a middle-manager type at a big publishing house who doesn't teach kids for a living (or doing some job that isn't related to the culture of writing).
Anyway, don't believe people who say reading books is pointless. Culture is more important to physical labor and technical jobs than we give credit for.
"Prepping for a meeting with the boss? Try Sychophant Strawberry!" - Crow T. Robot, ... Eyes of Sumuru (2022)