Miles Vorkosigan series by Lois McMaster Bujold. Hugo award for best series a few years ago.
Anonymous wrote:
Again, it's not about a 12-year-old HANDLING it. As you know, there have been many societal changes since 1976, when the first book was published. A book that spoke to you when you were 10, when there were almost no similar books with main characters who were competent girls, so it was this or Asimov/Heinlein/Piers Anthony, would not necessarily speak to a 12-year-old now.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of "classic sci fi" like Heinlein is pretty dated and unpleasant to read, especially for a 12 year old. You want to find something either funny or recently written (or both). Alan Dean Foster's Glory Lane is funny. Elizabeth Moon's Serrano series is good. The Expanse is good but a little creepy. The Martian is good. Hitchhiker's Guide is dated but still great. Packing for Mars by Mary Roach is not fiction but it's fun.
For fantasy:
Robert Jordan's Wheel of Time series. As someone else mentioned, Brandon Sanderson finished the series after Jordan died.
Ursula LeGuin's Earthsea series.
Guy Gavriel Kays's Finovar series.
Robin McKinley's books; Outlaws of Sherwood is a good intro, or Sunshine.
T. Kingfisher's books; Clockwork Boys is a good intro.
Terry Pratchett's books (all).
Garth Nix's Abhorsen series.
Naomi Novik's Termeraire series or the standalone book Uprooted.
Jane Lindskold's Firekeeper books.
Anonymous wrote:How about the Shipbreaker series by Paulo Baciagulpi? I may have misspelled his last name. I read the series out loud to my son when he was 12 and we all enjoyed it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anne McCaffrey’s Pern series. She could start with the more YA sequence - Dragonsong, Dragonsinger, Dragondrums (aka the Harper Hall trilogy) - which are fully connected into the main series.
Yeah, those are problematic. Even the YA ones. Though not as problematic as Heinlein, Asimov, Herbert, etc. A lot of the books I read as a 12-year-old, I would never recommend now. Plus there's no need, because there are other (better) books.
I think I read Dragonsong when I was 10?
A 12 year old can handle that.
The question isn't whether a 12-year-old can handle it.
The book came out in 1976. Read it again now, see what you think.
If it could be handled in 1976, what’s the reason a 12yr old can’t handle it now?
Anonymous wrote:I just finished The Ones We're Meant to Find and couldn't put it down. Takes place in the future during a time of environmental catastrophes and follows the relationship of two sisters who are teens at the beginning of the book.