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| Young Adult Fiction Discussion forum for YA fiction, such as J K Rowling, Phillip Pullman, Robin McKinley, Tamora Pierce, and Garth Nix. |
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| | #31 (permalink) | |
| Young at Heart Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 3,136
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Quote:
Also, this class of books is a good between section for the young reader to develop the skills he needs as a reader. As the child transitions between child reading material and adult reading material this is a good stop so he can find what entertains him and help him finish developing and polishing the basic reading skills. Most of the time it's a short stop, not more than a few years before they discover and develop what they need to move on to the more hard core books - 'the adult section of the store.' Not everyone is born with that desire to read. Some of us actually have to develop that ability. I actually find them entertaining. While I read them, I laugh at loud at the funny parts. It gets the kids attention and they want to know what is so funny. In reply I say 'oh it's complicated, you'll have to read the book to find out.' More books get read that way... | |
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| | #32 (permalink) | |
| rune Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,560
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Quote:
My Dad got me into reading, but I started getting adult books very young. YA books back then were just to immature for me. By my mid teens I was reading horror like James Herbet then after I had got through my pile of books swapping with my Dad's and reading his Kung Fu and Western novels which included even more adult material. I dont think this is the right way for all young teens. I had up grow fast and was brought up in a disturbed family environment which contributed to my more mature tastes at the time. I actually found it amusing that though my Dad liked violent western novels he found the horror i read disturbing ![]() | |
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| | #33 (permalink) | |
| Outside Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,332
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Quote:
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| | #34 (permalink) | |
| Young at Heart Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 3,136
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Quote:
Anyways, your right. Maturity does play an important role in the reading material. | |
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| | #35 (permalink) |
| Ink-stained Wretch Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: California
Posts: 4,586
| Re: Young Adult Fiction When I was 9 or 10 I was pretty much fed up with the school library because it didn't have enough of the more adult books I wanted to read. As a result of being so precocious, I missed out on any number of really excellent children's and YA books. Fortunately for me, a schoolmate called some of those books to my attention when I was in my late teens, and I had the pleasure of reading them after all. This had the added advantage of setting up a pattern of reading books and authors I like no matter how they are labeled. This was doubly fortunate, because otherwise I would have missed some wonderful books for younger readers that weren't even written when I was still a young reader myself. |
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| | #36 (permalink) |
| Fierce Vowelless One Join Date: Apr 2003 Location: Florida
Posts: 3,663
| Re: Young Adult Fiction As a kid I never read them because my first adventures in reading were a direct result of being deadly bored and digging through boxes in the attic for entertainment. Found a box of dad's books and was hooked from there. I only started reading the more YA titles in the past few years (mostly a direct result of walking through the library noting that I knew where every title was located and had read anything remotely interesting to me that they had). Wandered over to the YA section for chuckles and picked up some Brian Jacques. Found it refreshingly innocent, amusing and entertaining and read my way through quite a few before they started getting some new titles in. I then got pulled back into the adult books and am now checking out the YA ones again for much the same reason. |
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| | #37 (permalink) |
| The Sun in Splendour Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 137
| Re: Young Adult Fiction personally, as a teen myself (I don't really like that term but that's the most accurate one), I don't have much appreciation for YA fics nowdays. For example, my English teacher once led us to the library for she wanted us to read at least 2 books a month. so our librarian gave us a complete account of books she would recommand people of my age (I am currently in Gr.10 and that happened this year), which is in a way all the YA books our small school library had. That took up half of the fiction section by the way. Anyway, the books she recommanded were books that does not even reach half of the size of Pride and Prejudice, and with plots like :" a sixteen years old girl ran away from home and found out she is pregenant, she then begins a journey of self-discovery." I found those books to be a disgusting cliche, with overwhelming themes like "self-discovery", "friendships are good", "bullying is bad". I mean it's not like those themes are wrong, they are just way overused they are not even enjoyable anymore. Our English class novel list are not that much better, filled with YA fics like "Where The Rivers Meet" which talks about how Natives were treated unequally in schools, and "The Children of River" which talks about how a Cambodian girl fled to US and fell in love with this American guy when her family wanted her to follow the tradition to marry her fellow countryman. I have nothing against the morally correctness of those themes, it's just that they are now becoming condescending, as if young people in my age can not mature and do not know better. I personally begin to read abridged western adult novels at the age of seven...and nothing bad came to my mind. I read Kung Fu stories which involves violence etc., but they didn't affect me much. I think the genre of YA fics must be cleaned up, those cliche themes can be preserved, but just not in this overwhelming quantity. I mean surely there can be a genre for teens, but just not that whole thing about teaching teens. Entertaining must be one of the reason we read books, and the plots must be interesting, otherwise how can we enjoy books? So let's not blindly think that teens must want to read stuff happening in highschool with the "popluar kids" and the "nerds", or fairlands with friendly unicorns and pet dragon, and make YA a better genre. |
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| | #38 (permalink) | |
| Dragon Writer Join Date: Aug 2004 Location: Northamptonshire
Posts: 1,930
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Quote:
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| | #39 (permalink) | |
| rune Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,560
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Quote:
I do read more YA books now, but prefer ones for older teens. Saying that of course there are the odd exception like the Harry Potter series (which I am pleased to see if getting more mature) and the Keys to the Kingdom series by Nix (which is very imagative and fun) Generally though I think books aimed towards young teens are quite immature and as you mentioned can be boring even for the age group they are aimed at. | |
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| | #40 (permalink) |
| Ink-stained Wretch Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: California
Posts: 4,586
| Re: Young Adult Fiction I was thinking of the Dragonrider books, Mark; I completely forgot about the Dragonsinger books, which, as you say, were and are marketed as YA. The Eddings books never did make it into the YA section around here -- perhaps because, in spite of Garion being so young, he's surrounded by much older characters rather than interacting with a group of kids his own age. If it was up to me, the Belgariad would go in the YA section, because as far as I'm concerned most of those supposedly older characters all act and sound like adolescents much of the time. |
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| | #41 (permalink) |
| Ink-stained Wretch Join Date: Nov 2004 Location: California
Posts: 4,586
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Received in the mail: Masefield's Box of Delights, which unfortunately turns out to be the same abridged version I read years ago. Grumble. Even abridged it's an excellent book, but I was hoping to finally get my hands on the original without putting out the money to buy some ghastly expensive older edition from England. The problem with ordering books on line: you can never be sure what you're getting. And why abridge a book that was written for children in the first place?!? Feeling quite put out about this. On a happier note, also received in the mail, A Dark Horn Blowing by Dahlov Ipcar, who I've suddenly remembered wrote one of my favorite YA retellings of the Tam-Lin story, The Queen of Spells. This one also looks to be inspired by old ballads. |
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| | #42 (permalink) |
| rune Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,560
| Re: Young Adult Fiction I'd like to expand this thread a little and ask for recommendations for YA's that would probably be thought of as Teens fantasy fiction So far I've found - Lian Hearn Alison Croggon Jonathan Stroud Mark Robson I feel these author fall into this category. They are mature enough for adults to find the books entertaining and interesting I'm finding I like a slightly lighter read inbetween my heavier going fantasy reads and these YA sections seems to do the trick. They are fun, interesting and engaging Trouble is I'm not widely read in this area and need some recommendations, please ![]() |
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| | #43 (permalink) |
| Magician Of Stew Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 15
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Has Princess Bride by William Goldman been mentioned? Also Watership Down by Richard Adams. I also think The Magic Of Recluse by L E Modseitt Jr would be excellent reading for teens or young adults. |
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| | #44 (permalink) |
| rune Join Date: Jun 2004 Location: Cumbria
Posts: 1,560
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Can anyone tell me anything about the following list of authors How mature are their stories?Brian Jacques Susan Cooper Diana Wynne Jones Alan Garner Catherine Fisher Debi Gliori |
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| | #45 (permalink) | |
| Creeping in shadows Join Date: Jun 2005 Location: Estonia
Posts: 450
| Re: Young Adult Fiction Quote:
For what age ? Not for children, a bit too childish for my taste. Maybe the right age group for this thread. | |
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