Oh, Barb, somehow I just put it together that you wrote
Adiós [rest of title redacted]
! And to think, I bought it for my library without even knowing the author was a Buffista. I haven't read it yet, but it definitely looked good, and I know it's circulated a bunch. Anyway, cool!
Edit:
Sorry, it occurred to me this morning that you might not want your board name associated with the titles of your books.
I liked it a lot, Kate. I'd recommend it.
Edit: Sorry, it occurred to me this morning that you might not want your board name associated with the titles of your books.
S'okay, Kate, I don't mind. And yay on the circulating a bunch!
I haven't read it yet, but it definitely looked good
It's really good, as is It's Not About the Accent. You should definitely read them both.
Thanks for all the other book recs for my Twilight readers. Fay, are all the books you recommended YA? Longer and chewier is fine, but if any of the books has anything too explicit, I definitely can't recommend them to 9th graders. Just want to make sure.
Well, they're all from the kids' section of the bookshop, and I suggested them because I think they are pitched at the same age/reading skill level as
Twilight
- do you consider 'YA' to imply particular parametres beyond that?
Valiant
includes sex and drugs (I gather that in the
Twilight
books the protagonist does eventually get laid too - personally, I preferred Holly Black's take on the protagonist's sexual choices and empowerment to what I've seen of the sparkly mormon vampire saga, but YMMV), but
Tithe
and
Ironside
don't have shagging, iirc. Or at least - there's the implication that the protagonist's friend gets some Big gay sexin', but we don't get to see it.
Offhand, I can't remember whether the protagonists of the others eventually get some between-the-sheets action. They do have love interests, and plenty of sexual tension, and retain their own identities, their own choices & their own destinies.
but Tithe and Ironside don't have shagging, iirc.
Tithe does have a very intense, S&M relationship implied between the young gay boy (Corny) and the evil elf lord dude.
I think, though, Pix would be safe recommending anything that's marketed as YA, and shelved there, since the kids could certainly find it themselves.
That relationship in
Tithe
startled me, simply because whoa has YA changed since my day. I mean, back then
Forever
was a big deal.
I think, though, Pix would be safe recommending anything that's marketed as YA, and shelved there, since the kids could certainly find it themselves.
Well, yes and no. There's a big difference between the girls finding books themselves in a YA section and me actively recommending them as their teacher. I think I'll stay away from
Tithe
as a rec, but the rest sound like they'd be fine. (My guess is that they will find
Tithe
anyway, but I don't like taking chances with parents with students that age.) Thanks!!
Hivemind help: Does anyone remember a YA author with a last name that started with a Z? I thought it was Paul Zimmer and then Paul Zendle but I'm getting no love.