Also, it's terrible. (YMMV of course. I love Willis generally, but that book....ugh...)
Oh, shoot, I was going to ask if it was better written than
Doomsday Book
because the ideas sounds fascinating but I just loathed
Doomsday Book
. I can't even remember why exactly now. I wanted it to be so much better because the plot (at least in the beginning) was so intriguing to me. I do remember seriously wanting to throw it across the room by the end.
And I adore Doomsday Book!
Passages just draaaaaaaaaaaaaaged for me. By the time I got to the last page I was still waiting for the book to start.
We're in the Houston airport. our flight's been delayed for two hours. Mysteriously, it's been delayed to the same time as the later flight. Hmmmmmm.
::Waiting for Nilly to see the Willis talk::
Freakin' New Yorker's gone to town on YA literature. Their Book Bench Reads is full of some of the most asinine commentary I've seen in a long time with respect to young adult books.
I tend to think of young-adult fiction as sort of facile—a straightforward style, uncomplicated themes and morals—but this had a complexity, an ambiguity, that surprised me
It fit my expectations in terms of length and enjoyableness, though: I assume that anything branded “young adult” needs to have a plotline that captures a teen’s attention, and also needs to be not too long or challenging.
That was just within the first few paragraphs.
[link]
I tried to register to post, but the site hates me, so I had to rant in my blog. Bah.
What an aggravating article, Barb. Heaven forbid a book be challenging and complex. We couldn't let our kids read anything like that.
t rolls eyes
It wasn't even the "we couldn't let our kids read anything like that" that made me nuts, sj, it was more the "we're shocked, SHOCKED, we tell you, that not only are these books good and complex and that kids would be interested. but also that they'd be able to ingest and appreciate such works."
When I was a teen-ager, I assumed that the label was synonymous with preachy and boring, a companion to sex-ed classes. I still can’t imagine kids Lily’s age actually reaching for this book over “Tropic of Cancer.”
Apparently this person has read neither young adult fiction nor
The Tropic of Cancer,
which is, at best, a difficult book. These people appear to be from another planet, one without teenagers or books. Who the hell reads
Tropic of Cancer,
anyway?
It's certainly a contrast with this week's article [link] about whether the Newbery-winning books are too complicated and depressing for teens.
A good book is a good book for every age. Young adult is just a label, one that generally indicates that there are young people in the book and it has a plot. Are the moral stakes low in
The Giver?
I have run out of words on the subject and am now just making rude noises and yelling.
Good grief, Barb. What utter pillocks.
Did you all see this response? I did rather love it, I have to say.
Barb, to build on your point, it also makes me mad because implies that the YA crowd cannot enjoy any of the books they read and discuss in school. To Kill A Mockingbird and Of Mice and Men, for example, are two books commonly read in middle school that students tend to love, but clearly any book they read in their free time has to be insipid and simple. Grr. Believe it or not, stupid article-writer, some of us English teachers don't just force literature down students' throats like bad medecine. Some of us try to help our students gain the skills to read complex and meaningful books and enjoy them.