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How times have changed.
I felt guilty reading parts of Forever by Judy Blume which was on a shelf at the center where I got tutoring in middle school. |
I'm not criticizing. I'm trying to understand, because your viewpoint has never occurred to me at all, and I can't figure out the logic of why it would. So I'm asking in an attempt to understand. |
I remember reading Forever in the library because I was afraid to check it out. Probably around 6th grade? I read Flowers in the Attic and the second book in that series in 7th grade. While I know generally what was happening, I don't think I really understood. I remember a lot of girls go into Danielle Steele in 7th grade. I've still never read any of her books. |
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I read American Psycho when I was 12 because my visiting uncle had brought it and left it in the guest room.
Oh my god, it messed me up. For those of you have only seen the movie and not read the book, the book makes the movie look like a Hallmark film. It is narrated in the first person, with detailed descriptions of rape and torture. I was horrified but could not stop reading it. My mom was FURIOUS at my uncle when she found it in my room and thumbed through it. |
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VC Andrews - I don't think I understood what was going on with the incest until I was older.
Also, The Other Side of Midnight and others by that author? First time reading depictions of the male member compared to deli meat. Clan of the Cave Bear. Seemed quite scandalous at the time. |
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I’m 50 and have multiple older sisters who left stuff laying around which I devoured.
+1 to VC Andrews - I read ALL of them - there are like five different series essentially telling the same brother-sister love story in different settings over and over. +1 to early Jackie Collins A book called Celebrity where in the first chapter three young men commit rape Historical romance novels, particularly Kathleen E. Woodiwiss The worst is Letters to the Happy Hooker, not my sisters’ fault but was at my grandparents house because my mother had multiple younger brothers |
Ah yeah! My version of that was Go Ask Alice, which I read in like 4th grade. It was one of a million things that scared me straight back then - but the book also harmed be, because I tried the tip about using mayonnaise in your hair and didn't realize you were supposed to wash it out. I had a very greasy and smelly day at school. |
Oh my gosh yes - the Happy Hooker book! My friend's mom had it and we DEVOURED it in 5th grade. |
| I read The Amityville Horror in elementary school, I think like second grade actually, and was so frightened by it that I took it outside and threw it away in the trash. I also read The Happy Hooker in early elementary school. Both of these books were in our house, and I read them, and nobody took them away from me or said anything. But I had terrible parents. I’ll add the Flowers in the Attic series—WTF with those, lol. |
In sixth grade all of my friends and I passed it around and read it. I distinctly remember sitting around on the playground at recess having a conversation about how none of us understood what on earth it meant when it said that she “came.” |
Whoa. That's intense. That's awful PP. I'm sorry. |
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I haven't thought about VC Andrews in years. I remember Flowers in the Attic from my childhood but nothing about it.
Worth re-reading? I'm sort of curious to after all this discussion. |
I recently heard it described as YA. That can't be right? But we all read it at like 12, apparently? |
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Flowers in the Attic did a number on us all.
I remember spending half the book SO CONFUSED about the siblings getting flirty. Like what? This isn't happening right? that's disgusting (I have a brother and ICK). But oh yes, it was happening. |
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I read all of Christopher Pike's books when I was in the 6th grade. Lots of teen make outs, sex, crimes and murders/deaths. I loved them.
I've considered re-reading at least one but I think I'd rather remember them as the perfect little trashy mystery books they were to me back then. |