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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: on teen books, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. The Innocence Wars

Last weekend the Independent reported on Jacqueline Wilson's comments on a Random House survey of British youngsters and their habits. The survey found the following: " Seventy-one per cent of parents said they allowed their children to drink alcohol at home and fifty-three per cent admitted they let their children stay out past 11pm. A third of parents allowed pre-teen children to pierce their ears, and 57 per cent allowed them to watch 18-certificate films." According to the article in the Independent, Wilson responded to the survey stating, "With television and the internet playing a bigger and bigger role in their lives, children are being introduced to ideas and issues which used to be kept away from them. Rather than having fun for the sake of it, and going out to play, they're receiving the adult world in a largely unfiltered form."

Well, not so fast, says Winifred Robinson in today's Telegraph. Robinson states, "Call me cynical but might Random House be offering a platform to its most popular children's author - always guaranteed to generate column inches - because she has a new book out?" And then Robinson questions the content of Wilson's own books, writing, "In the past, though, the adults who were humiliated and destroyed were evil caricatures, whereas in many of today's children's books they tend to be ordinary, flawed mortals simply trying to do their best."

It's an interesting argument, but one I believe has nothing to do with books at all. What say you?

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2. Fanged and Fabulous by Michelle Rowen


If I had known this was the second book in the series, I would never have picked it up first, but, alas, I did not.  Luckily it was easy to catch onto what had happened previously.   Meet Sarah Dearly, a recently turned vampire who is dating a master named Thierry.  Do to an unfortunate incident with a gun in which she kills a vampire hunter, Sarah is now known as the Slayer of Slayers.  Unfortunately, she has no special abilities and no way to defend herself against hunters that now want to prove they can take down the Slayer of Slayers (did I mention that her killing the other hunter was just pure dumb luck?)  So Thierry gives her a couple of bodyguards to watch over her.  But that is not the worst of Sarah’s problems.  Her apartment is bombed, Thierry is pulling away from her, and her friend Quinn keeps hitting on her.  Surely Sarah has it all under control, right?  Well if not she can act with the best of them.  This is a fun beach read type book (unless you are a vampire of course) and was cute if not wholly engrossing.  I may pick up the others in the series to see what happens, but it is not a series that I think I will become obsessed with.

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3. Favorites: Part Seven Bethany Heitman

To celebrate the holidays we asked some of our favorite people in publishing what their favorite book was. Let us know in the comments what your favorite book is and be sure to check back throughout the week for more “favorites”.

Bethany Heitman is an Associate Editor at Cosmopolitan Magazine.

I first read Truman Capote’s In Cold Blood about ten years ago. I’ve since reread it about a half dozen times. The true story of Dick Hickock and Perry Smith and how they brutally murdered a family in Kansas is chilling enough on its own. But it’s the brilliant and revolutionary way in which Capote pens this tale that makes it my favorite. (more…)

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4. Herman Brood cd cover


CD cover design for a non-existing tribute to the non-conformist Dutch singer Herman Brood, who killed himself by jumping from a building. The title is a wink to the text "I'll grow up to be just like you" from the song I would stay by the Dutch band Krezip.

1 Comments on Herman Brood cd cover, last added: 6/10/2007
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