Angel: Eve. So, I guess we should, I don't know, talk? Eve: About what? Angel: About what happened back there with us. Eve: Angel, it's not like this is the first time I've had sex under a mystical influence. I went to U.C. Santa Cruz.

'Life of the Party'


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."


Typo Boy - Sep 22, 2012 9:10:37 pm PDT #19790 of 28344
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

Pornoy is OK I guess, as long as I don't have to shake hands with him.


flea - Sep 23, 2012 2:47:19 am PDT #19791 of 28344
information libertarian

I read Goodbye Columbus in 10th grade and it put me off Philip Roth for life. So sexist, and too recent to get a "historical" pass for same.


erikaj - Sep 23, 2012 8:41:26 am PDT #19792 of 28344
Always Anti-fascist!

Yeah, TB. Nowadays, I bet he'd be all about hand sanitizer, but point taken. I don't know...maybe 1958 seemed long enough to be pass-worthy when I was fourteen, or maybe, like with Ian Fleming, I found myself identifying with the males? I haven't read it in some time.


§ ita § - Sep 23, 2012 10:15:41 am PDT #19793 of 28344
Well not canonically, no, but this is transformative fiction.

Wouldn't shaking his hand be...well, like shaking the hand like tons of guys (and girls...), but eating organ meats he cooked be a bit dodgier? My memory of the book is severely patchy.

I have a categorisation question that I figure goes here, since it's not my writing.

I have a friend who writes YA (I know, who doesn't?) Her first book is 16 and over, she'd recommend, and her second she says is appropriate for a ten year old to read (even though the characters are older). Does YA formally span that wide an age range? And if so, is it still more helpful than confusing?


le nubian - Sep 23, 2012 10:32:25 am PDT #19794 of 28344
"And to be clear, I am the hell. And the high water."

Harry Potter. The first 3 books I could easily recommend for age 8 to adult. Right around book 4, I think the books started gearing older with the 5th and 6th books a bit hard to take for younger children.


Jesse - Sep 23, 2012 10:39:48 am PDT #19795 of 28344
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

10 year olds are "middle grades" for books now, I think.


Strix - Sep 23, 2012 10:49:32 am PDT #19796 of 28344
A dress should be tight enough to show you're a woman but loose enough to flee from zombies. — Ginger

And ita !, kids have such a wide range of maturity levels when it comes to books, the recommendations are a guideline, not a hard-and-fast rule. At 7, I was reading about 60% very adult books, and 40% YA.

So those recs...parents and teachers take them with a grain of salt.


Amy - Sep 23, 2012 11:13:44 am PDT #19797 of 28344
Because books.

YA books that are considered, for lack of a better word, "clean," might get a "ten and up" recommendation. For instance, Kiersten White writes books with a sixteen- or seventeen-year-old protagonist, but there's no swearing, nothing more than kissing, and nothing really gritty (or real, to be perfectly honest) about the books. So those might get a "ten and up" label.

Otherwise, like Jesse said, anything from eight to twelve is considered "middle grade," but like Strix pointed out the recs are really loose, and vary by publisher, and era, etc.

When I wrote the first Big Empty book, it was post-apocalyptic, with teens orphaned and alone all over the place, and one of them (she was fifteen, I think) pregnant, and Penguin called that "ten and up". So you never know.


Consuela - Sep 25, 2012 7:07:54 am PDT #19798 of 28344
We are Buffistas. This isn't our first apocalypse. -- Pix

John Scalzi's blog today asks for recommendations for new books. There's a lot of books recommended; nice to see Code Name: Verity is one of them.

[link]


DavidS - Sep 25, 2012 12:31:51 pm PDT #19799 of 28344
"Look, son, if it's good enough for Shirley Bassey, it's good enough for you."

Did everybody see Tiger Beatdown's take on George R.R. Martin? (Hint: the "R" stands for Rape!)

Spoilery galore for the books.