'suela, there aren't really constraints. We're just trying to start a book club and keeping a book is the draw. One of the things I'd like to do is to get books in their hands that they HAVEN'T read yet -- the kids who will most likely show up have read Hunger Games. I'd like a nice mix, but paranormal is super popular at my school. Dystopian is fun. I'd love to read Blood Red Road with them, but the dialect is too hard.
I should also work to try to draw boys too.
Is the new Jay Asher/Carolyn Meckler book any good?
The Book Thief would be an amazing book for any book club. Oh, and The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett! Because everyone should read that book. Everyone! I also loved Poison Study by Maria V. Snyder. Not so much the rest of the series though.
It's being taught in 10th grade (and again at the local community college) at my school so I don't want to step on toes. I totally agree. I'm reading Zusak's new books Under Dogs to see if that is also workable.
I may also give every kid a copy of an Ayn Rand book (We the Living, I think) because I got them for free. But that seems more cruel.
Oh, yes, the Book Thief was really good. And so was The Messenger, although not as good.
How about John Marsden's Tomorrow When the War Began? It's not SF but it is a very exciting story about young people caught up in a war when Australia is invaded by an unknown enemy.
I only read the first chapter of
The Future of Us,
Kat, but it does look good, yeah. Very different than
Thirteen Reasons Why,
of course.
Ooh, for boys, Robison Wells's
Variant
(another Harper author, full disclosure) is really good -- fast-paced, a lot of action, boy protagonist, dystopian but not as far in the future as something like
The Hunger Games.
(It's for girls, too, obviously, but the protagonist might draw boys in more easily.)
I have seen Variant on the shelves, but don't know enough.
Have any of you seen The Hunger Games trailer? It looks good.
There's been discussion of it in movies, Kat.
How about John Marsden's Tomorrow When the War Began? It's not SF but it is a very exciting story about young people caught up in a war when Australia is invaded by an unknown enemy.
Totally second this, it's an awesome book--and if they're into it, there's many sequels.
How about John Marsden's Tomorrow When the War Began? It's not SF but it is a very exciting story about young people caught up in a war when Australia is invaded by an unknown enemy.
I read this on Consuela's rec and much enjoyed it. It's
Red Dawn
meets
The Outsiders.
It would definitely appeal to boys as well as girls.