Whoo, I should not have typed "The Night Circus" into eBay on a whim. No way I can afford it, but a tempting, tempting auction: [link]
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."
Any suggestions for a 12-year-old girl who has liked The Hunger Games, The Mysterious Benedict Society, Incarceron, and Miss Peregrine's Home among others? She especially likes things with puzzles and/or math. Her parents are conservative but fairly tolerant about what she reads, but I wouldn't want to recommend anything on the sexy end of things.
The Secret Series, by Pseudonymous Bosch! I heart those books so much. Lots of codes and puzzles and such.
The Westing Game?
Huh. I didn't realize what The Westing Game was about. Now I want to read it.
The Secret Series sounds good, but maybe a bit young? (I mean, I would read it, but she may be at that age where there is a cool factor involved.)
Man, I just put Harriet the Spy on hold at the library, and now I think I should do The Westing Game as well.
For twelve-year-olds, I always recommend Agatha Christie, especially the Tommy and Tuppence ones, because Tuppence is the BEST.
Definitely The Westing Game. Also, since I seem to be recommending it to everyone today, True Grit, as long as her parents are OK with some violence and some swear words.
Ooh, Agatha Christie is good. She's in a British school (here in NC, not the UK) so that might work well. She's reading Jane Eyre now for school and does not like it, which made me want to cry.
I'm trying to think of things she might not be inclined to know about or pick up/seek out. When we were talking about The Hunger Games and I mentioned the Matched trilogy, she had heard of it, but was more inclined to look at it now that she had a recommendation.
Also, since I seem to be recommending it to everyone today, True Grit, as long as her parents are OK with some violence and some swear words.
Given that I spent Sunday watching her handle a shotgun on their private shooting range, I think they are okay with that.
Oh, a girl that age would probably like The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie and its sequels.