I don't have kids, so I don't know for real how I'd be - probably much like my mother, which was basically chill to uobbservant (at least the appearance of) . Though I do remember her forbidding Harold Robbins in her house when she found one my sister was reading, ha! Seems fair.
But she didn't mind my reading Tuned Out. Pretty sure I kept Forever to myself, though. Not sure what she would've thought.
My mom was so strict about movies and tv, but when I started stealing her romance novels off the shelf she just sort of raised and eyebrow and moved on. ltc has very little interest in romantic content at this point. So I don’t want her to accidentally stumble onto something that will be way too much for her.
I don't know that Deerskin would be controversial, since the rape is a part of the story it's retelling. It is unusual for McKinley, though. (I skip it on reread.)
So I don’t want her to accidentally stumble onto something that will be way too much for her.
Totally get that. Honestly, I'm sort of back there for myself now. There's some content I just avoid because it's become too much anymore. Like, I get why it's there, but... nope. Totally different vibe than why you watch out on a kid's behalf, of course, but often the same end restult!
There's some content I just avoid because it's become too much anymore.
My list of topics to avoid keeps getting longer! There is enough awful in the world that I would prefer to not have it in my literature. For example, sick violence doesn't seem to bother me in Science Fiction, but in "real" world settings it is more difficult. It's a random line in my brain, but so much to read and so little time, so I try and stick with reading that brings joy, distraction, and even wonder from time to time.
I used to tease my mother that she created a monster by reading the Valachi Papers(Testimony about the Mafia) while she was pregnant with me.
Sometimes we do what people expect, you know, "Not the holidays without "The Holiday", etc.but we've had a few girlie movie nights over, like, Serpico.(Time-machine oosting, seriously)
sj, this is my usual recommendation for the Wayward Children series by Seanan McGuire. And depending on how cotton-candy fluff she likes her books, the Vampire Kisses series is
adorable.
I have already given her my copies of Vampire Kisses. She is not interested in anything cotton candy or fluffy or really any romance. Although she will make an exception for a really adorable lgbtq couple. Straight couples give her watch from the hall feelings. The girl wants violence and dragons.
She finished the original Hunger Games trilogy yesterday and cried her eyes out. She was a little distressed by the other books in the series but no tears. The end of Mockingjay finally got to her though. I have not read the Wayward Children series, is it okay for a soon to be fifth grader? I thought the series was more for high school kids.
I finished the second Dungeon Crawler Carl book today and it was so so so much better than the first one.