Anonymous wrote:I just ordered The Body by Stephen King. Had no idea it was the basis for Stand by Me until yesterday!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son and I are reading The Raven Cycle books by Maggie Stiefvater, and we both really like them. There’s a quest, and magic, and excellent character development. There are 4 main characters, 3 boys and a girl. The audio versions are fantastic as well. The guy who reads them is incredibly talented.
I love those books!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I posted a similar question on here a few months ago-- books for my 12-year-old boy that weren't fantasy or science fiction. Someone recommended the historical fiction books by Alan Gratz-- many of them are about World War II. My son absolutely loved them-- he read them all this summer. Thank you to whomever made that recommendation!
NP. Good to know. My son picked one of these out in the library at school this week because he needed a book for English. It sounds like he will like it.
His books are great! Refugee was a favorite. Flips between three different stories from three different countries and time periods, all told from the perspective of a young teenager. Teens can't help but feel empathetic - it's a terrific book.
I've heard Gratz's more recent book about 9/11 is terrific, too!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve found a ton of great “middle grades” books with male protagonists. Most of the ones mentioned here fit in the “middle grades” category.
The reason you’re not finding much is the YA category is that YA is a recently invented term that refers almost exclusively to schlocky romance novels aimed at teen girls. 30 years ago, YA did not exist as a category and teens read stuff that was written for adults. Then someone wrote twilight and everyone figured out you could make a mint selling schlock to teenage girls. It’s like asking why they are not more historical romance novels aimed at men.
I would loooove for there to be more decent fiction for teens of any gender.
That is not true. I’m probably outing myself on DCUM, but in 1985-89, I served on the youth advisory board for my city’s public library system. The books we were given to read were identified as “Young Adult” and featured tweens and teens as the main protagonists. It’s when I read Ender’s Game for the first time.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve found a ton of great “middle grades” books with male protagonists. Most of the ones mentioned here fit in the “middle grades” category.
The reason you’re not finding much is the YA category is that YA is a recently invented term that refers almost exclusively to schlocky romance novels aimed at teen girls. 30 years ago, YA did not exist as a category and teens read stuff that was written for adults. Then someone wrote twilight and everyone figured out you could make a mint selling schlock to teenage girls. It’s like asking why they are not more historical romance novels aimed at men.
I would loooove for there to be more decent fiction for teens of any gender.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve found a ton of great “middle grades” books with male protagonists. Most of the ones mentioned here fit in the “middle grades” category.
The reason you’re not finding much is the YA category is that YA is a recently invented term that refers almost exclusively to schlocky romance novels aimed at teen girls. 30 years ago, YA did not exist as a category and teens read stuff that was written for adults. Then someone wrote twilight and everyone figured out you could make a mint selling schlock to teenage girls. It’s like asking why they are not more historical romance novels aimed at men.
I would loooove for there to be more decent fiction for teens of any gender.