I also read ALL of Jackie Collins (and Judith Krantz) books in middle school. My mom was strict about movies- no PG13 until we were 13 and no R-rated movies until 16. However, she let us buy and read anything. I was never promiscuous, although I was well educated in sexuality! |
I’m sorry you got detention but this made me laugh! |
I’m a PP and will admit to rereading them when I saw that Lifetime was making all the books into miniseries. /ashamed voice |
| I remember being a bit baffled by Judy Blume. |
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I read my first V.C. Andrews novel in middle school & it never messed w/me emotionally or on a social level.
Yes I knew that Cathy + Christopher were siblings who were committing incest (sorry for the spoiler!) but the story was a fictitious story and I knew that how they interacted was not normal. But V.C. Andrew’s books always had a very creepy air about them and that is what made them so mysterious and good reading. |
I have loved reading all of VC Andrew’s books since adolescence. I am now in my fifties! Her unique stories are always fun to read…..though I must admit, I liked her original stories best such as those from the Heaven series. There was a Male ghostwriter who took over her work when she passed away from breast cancer. His books are good but in my humble opinion not as great as the great Virginia Andrews herself. 👵🏼 |
Danielle Steel’s best books were in the past… Her newer books are no fun to read since they have become so predictable as well as too perfect to ever be real. |
What do you mean? |
This. These books are not responsible for messing (otherwise 'normalish' kids up). They are a cornerstone of our tweens, and I think kids are better adults when they are not censored as kids. We learned to censor ourselves. I still do it. No horror movies for me! |
I mean I was 11 or 12 and reading about a teenage girl "moving around on top" of her BF when they were having sex in her parents house. And I didn't understand it. I do now, obviously. |
AUTGT? It’s me, Margaret in third grade (I was 8) quickly led to Deenie then Wifey & Forever. Joy of Sex - everyone else’s parents had this book except for my own. Read at sleepovers in elementary school. Teen brothers had Jaws, VC Andrews, Lolita (that book by Nabakov referenced in Don’t Stand So Close to Me). Super creepy now to admit but a single next door neighbor kept a stack of playboy magazines fanned out on his cocktail table. I know because I was asked to bring in his mail, feed his fish anytime he traveled. I read every issue. I was 11. |
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A couple posters mention Stephen King's The Stand. I'm no fan of King these days, but I remember reading The Stand in the summer between 7th and 8th grades. It was the first "big" novel I read, with lots of characters and interconnected plot lines. I loved it.
My older sister had passed it along to me, and I passed it along to a classmate, whose mother flipped her lid when she found her daughter reading it. She returned it to my mother and gave my mom an earful about it. My mom, to her credit, just told me to stop lending books to people. |
oh you sweet summer child. I learned a lot by reading the dictionary. And VC Andrews and Clan of the Cavebear, and that one Judy Blume book. |
one of the few books I would actually ban my kid from reading. |
| I read a lot of Stephen King in middle school and high school. Most of it didn't bother me, but the group sex scene at the end of It was very disturbing to my 12 year old brain. |