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Kreader

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Posts posted by Kreader

  1. I don't have a problem with sex and minor swear words in YA books for the over 16s. It is possible for this to be represented responsibly. Before that age I think parents should be aware of what their children are reading by reading the books before the teens if possible. If not then they should be talking to the young people about what they have been reading and encourage then to go for books that aren't geared toward explicit casual sexual relations. I'm all for having some fantasy books but reality in all its forms need to be represented as well. I must say that the first book I read as a teen that had bullying issues was Stephen King's "Carrie", I was 14 when I read it.

  2. Hi Julie,

     

    most of the books that my nephews have read don't have pre-marital sex in it.  I know because I've read them.

     

    I agree that the books do seem to have adolescent protagonists.  There have been a few that irked me because of the blurbs.  They described the protagonists as young boys, said boys were 16-18, old enough to leave home, marry and have a child.  Young boys to me is boys under the age of 12.  If you get to the age of 21 then you're a young man.

  3. Now THAT'S a book just waiting to be written. :giggle2:

     

    Personally I love fantasy, and the only YA books I really remember reading as a 'young adult' were 'The Abhorsen Chronicles' (Sabriel, Lirael and Abhorsen) by Garth Nix (which were awesome, by the way). I think I generally avoid it because I sort of skipped that stage when I was growing up, and pretty much went straight from Roald Dahl to Stephen King and Tolkien. Since I got used to reading 'adult' fiction pretty early on - especially fantasy, which can be really deep and complex - I suppose YA just seems a bit simplistic and lacking the depth I'm used to. I have read the Hunger Games trilogy and all the Twilight books fairly recently - I WANTED to like them but didn't really enjoy either of them. Perhaps because of the love triangles. Why all the love triangles, people?!

     

    The only YA books I've always enjoyed and probably always will are the Harry Potter books. :D

     

    I agree with Julie and Devi about how YA books seem to be much darker and more serious than they used to be; they're more about the 'adult' than the 'young', and while this does reflect the fact that kids grow up very fast these days I still think there should be more books out there that are just for fun. Let's face it: if Roald Dahl were writing nowadays, Fantastic Mr Fox would have become a martyr to the animal rights movement, George would be in rehab/prison due to the illegal production of his Marvellous Medicine, Willy Wonka would be on the sex offenders register, and The Twits would probably have just gone and got a divorce.

    I'm okay with YA being darker.  Infact I think its an improvement to be able to have some books like this, the more variety the better it is to find something that many will like.  I suppose its because I grew up knowing that serious issues are part of many people's lives regardless of their ages or where they may live.  I also know from history that what many regard as an ideal childhood today didn't exist in the past.  I'd have had fun reading Roald Dahl's work as he wrote it or with Fantastic Mr Fox as a martyr etc :rolol: .  Its all about balance, sometimes I want to read about a light subject then I'll pick such a book other times when I want something darker I'll choose a book to fit :smile:  :readingtwo: .

  4. I recall seeing some girls in school reading Sweet Valley High books when I was an adolescent.  They never appealed to me so I didn't go near them. I did read some Hardy Boys and  Nancy Drew mysteries since my mother had read them when she was young.  I also read children's books and adult novels when I was 12 and over.  There is more variety of YA books these days.  I'll happily read some YA.  I'm fine with YA dealing with realistic issues or fantasy ones.

  5. Someone recently drew my attention to an article saying that there has been an increase in the numbers of false widows spotted in the south east England.  I hadn't heard of them before.  Apparently they're poisonous.  I tend to just let spiders be since I'll mostly come across them outdoors.  I'll give them a day or two grace if found in my home then I turf them out.  I don't want to play hosts to any future mini spiders if they're leaving an egg sack this time of the year. If they want to live in the  coves just outside my windows then that's fine.  They can catch anything that attempts to fly in through the windows. 

     

    I did have a nervous moment when I was at a bus stop.  I'd put my book I was going to read down on the bustop bench for a second.  I picked up the book and began to open it only to discover the largest daddy long legs I've ever seen on the book and it began putting its legs on my chest.  Its leg span was the size of my hand, each leg long as one of my fingers and fine like thread.  I calmly dropped the book which took the spider down with it.  The long legged one, scampered away with me watching it in disbelief.

  6. TG does do a bit of wandering through his Wizards series, I didn't read pillars of creation and Temple Of The Winds was a waste of time.The set made enough sense to me without these two. Not as bad a rambler as RJ

    I didn't finish those two books either.  I think the best ones for me was the first two books.

  7. Creme caramel. We made it in a school cookery class. It turned out perfectly but just before we were going to taste it a girl started hiding to avoid eating it. She'd had it before and it was not to her taste. I found out that she was right. I can't stand all those caremel/toffee/fudge desserts which rules out most icecreams as well. Strangely enough I do like brown stewed chicken/meat. The chicken is browned using a little freshly burnt sugar. I like savoury stuff better than sweet stuff.

     

    Oh and I have seen others at holiday camp eat a cheese and peanutbutter sandwich. I've tried it and it was kind of ok. I wasn't as adventurous to have a sandwich with the cheese, peanutbutter, pepperoni, jam and hot peppersauce that some ate. I have even peanut stewed chicken, you can add peanut butter rather than getting nuts and having to grind it yourself. Obviously you'll not have a nut allergy. I did go off peanut butter for over decade and began eating it again when I was 21.

     

    I won't eat popcorn, I know how to pop it perfectly but I stopped eating it when I was a child and won't touch it now. I won't eat marshmallows either so I won't be roasting them over a camp fire and I won't be eating desserts with them.

  8. I never used to like sweet potatoes until someone I know baked them the same way you'd bake a regular jacket potato. like Pontalba described. You eat it the same way as a jacket potato too. I love it like that. I have also seen it used in a salad with peas, carrots and mayonnaise.

  9. Tonight it was the wasp that strolled, yes strolled onto my keyboard then walked off. I don't know why it didn't fly away. I'm in bed by the way. What happens if I fall asleep and roll over onto a wandering wasp? That'll hurt that's what.

  10. I'm surprised it doesn't have Summary on the poll. That's how I get very easily manipulated into desperately wanting to try out a book, from reading the summary. Summary's always make novels sound great, i think they have their very own summary-designing experts who have it down to a science how to pull a reader in after viewing it.. lol. Also, in a few cases like "Girl with the Dragon Tattoo" or "The Hunger Games" it was the film that made me fall hard for it and i'd have to go get the book afterward.

    It does say blurb which is a sort of summary.

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