Whilst I found Vampire Kisses cute like woah (because it is essentially a book about Teenage!Jilli, and thus slayed me)
Hee! Yeah, kinda. I'll admit I'm very grateful that Ellen Schreiber is writing them, because if *I* had written something similar, the Mary Sue -ness would be a mite terrifying.
(Edited to add: which is why I sometimes want to shake Raven about her dislike of school. No, honey! School is good! Yes, your classmates are twits, but school! Yay school! Ahem, I may have character over-identification issues, what?)
I also enjoyed Blue Bloods and Masquerade, by ...er, Melissa De La Cruz, iirc?
Really? I read Blue Bloods, and was not taken with it.
I'm partway through re-reading Vamps by Nancy A. Collins, trying to figure out if I just had a cranky day when I read it, or if I really am that meh on it. I don't want to be meh on it, because she's written some really good non YA books in the past. But ... like I said upthread, non-stop high-end fashion brand names, and the plot is kind of predictable.
REALLY? Nancy Collins?! Color me surpised. That seems a weird...turnaround. I mean, usually an author goes from the frothier stuff to the edgier stuff later.
We're talking "Sunglasses After Dark" Collins, right?
Fay mentioned a whole bunch of the books I was going to recommend for your teens, Kristin, but I'll add just a couple more: The
House of Night
series by P.C. & Kristin Cast (starting with
Marked
) has been very popular at my library among the
Twilight
crowd, as have Richelle Mead's
Vampire Academy
and
Frostbite
(first two books in a series, IIRC). I haven't read anything from either series yet, but they both look darker & edgier than the
Twilight
books. Both series are published as YA.
My sister's stepdaughter really liked Blue Blood. She's currently reading the Twilight series and agrees with my niece that, while it's not well-written, it is unputdownable.
When I go out there to visit next month, I'm going to bring out some Marjorie Liu vampire romances for her to read. I've gotten some good recs on her books from customers at the bookstore.
Kelley Armstrong has started a YA series in the same universe as her Women of the Otherworld series. The first book, The Summoning is out, and I really liked it. There weren't any vampires (the main character sees ghosts), but they do exist in the universe (although judging by Armstrong's other books, we'll probably see a lot more werewolves than vampires in future books).
I had bought World War Z for my students last year. It's worth a look, then?
I'd say so. The conceit is neat (and adds to the creepy).
And it's by the same guy who wrote "The Zombie Survival Handbook". So you know he knows what he's talking about. I guess.
Well he hasn't been murdered by zombies yet, so there you are.
Also, Claudia Grey's Evernight will hopefully be good - she's a TERRIFIC fanfic writer (under another name, natch). The premise is rather too familiar, but I've adored her fanfic for years, so I'll certainly be buying the book as soon as it's available in my bookshop.
REALLY? Nancy Collins?! Color me surpised. That seems a weird...turnaround. I mean, usually an author goes from the frothier stuff to the edgier stuff later.
We're talking "Sunglasses After Dark" Collins, right?
Yep, same author. It's really strange.
Vamps
reads like a Nancy A. Collins book, just with the edges wrapped in fluff and a thick coating of Vogue magazine on top.