Wow, I'd totally forgotten that tidbit.
Olaf the Troll ,'Showtime'
Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I spent a lot of time reading Marauders-era fic.
If I had millions of dollars, I'd pay for those girls to finish The Shoebox Project.
Which in turn is why Snape's patronus is so important.
Reason # 45923 why I wish they had waited until canon was completed before making the movies.
I got through four paragraphs of this Wall Street Journal article on YA books and am so enraged I'm not going to finish it right now. I did glance at the sidebar of books they *can* recommend for young readers, and noticed how helpfully they split the list into books for boys and girls.
Did we go back to 1950 today and I missed it?
The article's pretty annoying, but I don't generally think that breaking YA books into separate lists for boys and girls is necessarily bad, though I certainly think there should be a third (larger) list for the crossovers. It's the rare boy who likes "The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants" (though we are a generally cool bunch).
I thought the big deal with Snape's patronus was that it's the same as Lily's...i.e that he loved Harry's mom SO MUCH that his patronus matched hers. Did i even read the same books as everyone else??
No, that's right.
What an odd assortment of books they do recommend for "boys" and "girls."
Fahrenheit 451? Hardly young adult. Also, not just for fucking boys. (Oh, that's right. Exposing young people to language likes that coarsens them. Oops.)
Old School? A Tree Grows in Brooklyn? Also not young adult.
The world of Ship Breaker values human life less than the Hunger Games world and has an abusive, homicidal parent. The main protagonist is a boy rather than a girl, though, so maybe that makes it different.
Z for Zachariah just isn't a very good book and very dated.
Maybe those are the only books with teen characters and/or dystopias they've actually read.