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Gregor and the Code of the Claw comes out May 1st, and I hope I'm not the only excited to read the climax of Suzanne Collins' excellent fantasy series, The Underland Chronicles.
(In fact, if it weren't for this message board, I wouldn't even have known the series existed!)
Posts: 6689 | Registered: Jan 2005
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Stop trying to redirect our gaze towards your pretty flashlights and glow sticks, when the majestic luminous sun that is the Harry Potter series is setting at this very moment!
I'm with you, can't wait for book 5. I've spent the last couple of weeks reading these books by the dim illumination of a pen-light as my 3 year old falls asleep next to me - I guess YA is all a state of mind, right?
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Hey, lots of books originally listed as Childrens/YA have developed an enormous crossover audience.
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Another lurker comes out of the closet! Yay! Welcome, Sean!
quote:I guess YA is all a state of mind, right?
This, I can heartily agree with. I didn't discover Madeline L'Engle or Philip Pullman or others until I was in my late 20s to mid-30s. What, I'm supposed to not read them just cuz I'm old?
Posts: 8355 | Registered: Apr 2003
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I hang out in the YA section a lot. Robin McKinley's stuff is all there, as is L.M. Montgomery's, some of OSC's, and all the new stuff I'm discovering. I have yet to read anything by Pullman. I know. I'm a loser.
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Ooh, I'm so glad that you posted this. My 14 year old just finished the first book as part of a school assignment. I didn't know it was a series. I think I'll go get it for him. He really enjoyed the first one.
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Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane Gregor and the Curse of the Warmbloods Gregor and the Marks of Secret
...and the still forthcoming series conclusion.
Be warned that Collins is almost as bad as George R.R. Martin when it comes to major character deaths.
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Sean, Robin McKinley is fabulous. I was actually rather stunned when I saw that she was in the YA section. Her fantasy is delightful.
I would also check out the Terry Pratchett in the YA section. I've seen a lot more of his stuff cropping up in the high school library and I see kids reading it!! Exciting.
Posts: 6415 | Registered: Jul 2000
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I really liked Rose Daughter too, despite everyone telling me that they liked Beauty better. My current favorite is the ever popular The Hero and the Crown, but I also really loved Sunshine. Have you read that one? It's evidently her newest book, though it's already in paperback.
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This reminds me that I haven't read any of the newest Young Wizards books. I like those. I'll have to buy them.
Posts: 6026 | Registered: Dec 2004
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Deerskin isn't a YA book - it shouldn't be on the YA shelves at all (it's listed as an adult novel in the author blurbs and on the "Also by Robin McKinley" page of her books). I think it ends up there because people tend to lump fantasy and YA together.
I love Robin McKinley. I decided to name my daughter Aerin Amelia after reading it in the books. Not exactly after the character, but sort of inspired by. I did make sure there were real-world people named Aerin, though.
Another one of my favorites is Tamora Pierce. I didn't discover her until a few years ago and now she's one of my favorites.
Would I like the Suzanne Collins series? I also haven't read any Pullman.
Posts: 3037 | Registered: Jan 2002
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I think you -would- like it, but I'm a fan so I'm biased.
The series has many fantastical elements (giant, sentient talking animals and numerous subterranean civilizations, eerily accurate prophecies) but balances this with realistic characterization and a markedly unromanticized approach to violence. There's an uneven mixture of good and bad in all the leads, and the pulp thrills and fun are often joined by the bite of more down-to-earth concerns.
I love rereading them. That's the highest praise I can give.
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Mrs. M, I just read The Blue Sword for the first time and I thought of you and your Aerin at the end of the book. It made me grin.
Posts: 6415 | Registered: Jul 2000
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Great- thanks for the heads up on McKinley - I've only read Door in the Hedge, some short stories and, I think, an excellent version of Robin Hood.
I feel I should give something back - Diana Wynne Jones consistently and constantly delivers fine fiction - i would suggest starting with her Crestomanci stories, but anything with her name on it will do. And it's a special treat if you're also a Miyazaki fan.
(Of course, being new here, maybe pulling her name out is like mentioning OSC, CS Lewis or Shakespeare, unnecessary at best)