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What books are you reading right now?

Discussion in 'Tilted Art, Photography, Music & Literature' started by sapiens, Aug 12, 2011.

  1. genuinemommy

    genuinemommy Moderator Staff Member

    snowy Yeah, I wish I hadn't sold back my human development textbook.
     
  2. Japchae

    Japchae Very Tilted

    I'm starting "Why Can't I Get What I Want" and "Schema Therapy" for class next Friday and Saturday. Two of my professors wrote the first one. I think it might be personally helpful, too. Based on how to change dysfunctional thought processes. It's been a rough few months.
     
  3. Walt

    Walt Vertical

    Dead Dwarves Don't Dance by DJ Canyon, on the recommendation of a fellow TFPer. It's not painfully bad so Im going to grind through it but I feel like the character and plot development isn't living up to its potential - certainly not the hype. It's kind of like getting your first beej.

    Then again it could be that I just finished up the Alastair Reynolds 'Revelation Space' trilogy and so was expecting something on that level.
     
  4. redux

    redux Very Tilted

    Location:
    Foggy Bottom
    The River of Doubt....Teddy Roosevelt's post-presidential exploration of the Amazon.
     
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  5. Bodkin van Horn

    Bodkin van Horn One of the Four Horsewomyn of the Fempocalypse

    "Sin and Syntax". As much as style advice is inherently doomed to contradiction, it helps to know what is expected.
     
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  6. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    Just finished 600 Hours of Edward by Craig Lancaster. It was a good read. I am also reading Slammed by Colleen Hoover because I am supposed to read more YA/teen lit. Recs in that vein are welcome.
     
  7. CinnamonGirl

    CinnamonGirl The Cheat is GROUNDED!

    Have you read the Artemis Fowl series? I enjoyed it much. Also: Night of the Solstice by LJ Smith, Whores on the Hill by Colleen Curran, Song of the Lioness quartet by Tamora Pierce, Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver, and the Uglies series by Scott Westerfield.


    Edit: Forgot to add, I picked up The Ultimate Harry Potter and Philosophy last night. I only got a chapter in before I had to go to bed, but I like it so far.
     
  8. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    I have Uglies sitting on my shelf but haven't gotten to it yet. Artemis Fowl looks a little young for my purposes, as does Night of the Solstice, but I will have to take a look at them in person; Amazon says 8/10 years old but that doesn't mean much. Anything with the word whore in the title is a no go since if I am buying the books they are for future classroom use. The Tamora Pierce series looks interesting but since my mentor reads and has A LOT of fantasy/sci fi I am trying to branch out. I'll have to check with one of my instructors to see if she has Before I Fall to borrow. Thanks!
     
  9. Lucifer Slightly Tilted

    Location:
    The Darkside
    Do you ever think that Tom Clancy's books are "Life imitates Art"? I remember the climax of "Debt of Honor" where the bad dude commandeers a 747 and flies it into the Capital Building, killing the President and Congress. Date of publication? 1994. Do you think Bin Laden read Tom Clancy?
     
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  10. CinnamonGirl

    CinnamonGirl The Cheat is GROUNDED!

    Now that I think about it, snowy , you have middle schoolers, right? Before I Fall is definitely a good read, but there's drinking, smoking, and references to sex, which may not go over so well in a younger classroom setting.

    I'm trying to remember the books I actually read while I was IN middle school... Maniac Magee (Jerry Spinelli), the Forbidden Game trilogy (LJ Smith), the Enchanted Forest Chronicles (Patricia C. Wrede--more fantasy, sorry), Remember Me to Harold Square (Paula Danziger), With You and Without You (Ann M. Martin), Pig City (Louis Sachar)...they're all older, but they were all particular favorites of mine.
     
  11. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    Yeah, I am looking for books appropriate for 8th and 9th graders. Most of my kids are very capable readers.
     
  12. Baraka_Guru

    Baraka_Guru Möderätor Staff Member

    Location:
    Toronto
    My SO curates reading materials for the 7th and 8th graders she teaches. Do you want to find out what's currently hot? :)
     
  13. snowy

    snowy so kawaii Staff Member

    Yes please.
     
  14. Baraka_Guru

    Baraka_Guru Möderätor Staff Member

    Location:
    Toronto
    If they're into historical/adventure stuff, she recommends Scott Westerfield's Leviathan trilogy (steampunk)

    There's Kelley Armstrong's Darkest Powers trilogy and Darkness Rising trilogy (urban fantasy)

    There's also:
    • Cassandra Clare's Mortal Instruments series (urban fantasy) and Infernal Devices series (steampunk)
    • Ellen Hopkins' Crank series (realism; for older kids, deals with drugs; written in verse)
    • M.T. Anderson's Feed (dystopian)
    • Stephanie Meyer's The Host (there's a new movie coming out; it's technically an adult book, but teens can read it; better than the Twilight series)
    There's a bunch of other stuff, but this should give you a good start. Goodreads might help you dig up more.
     
    Last edited: Jan 10, 2013
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  15. Levite

    Levite Levitical Yet Funky

    Location:
    The Windy City
    For YA, my go-to is Susan Cooper's The Dark Is Rising series, which I think it a magnificent piece of work. Madeline L'Engle's A Wrinkle In Time series, also. Ursula K. LeGuin's original Earthsea trilogy. Kids this age are usually ready for Tolkien, too. Oh, and definitely Patricia McKillip's Riddle-Master trilogy. For younger YA (Grades 4-7), Lloyd Alexander's Prydain Chronicles series, his Westmark trilogy, and his Vesper Holly books, and sundry other of his works (e.g., Time Cat, and The Iron Ring).

    For older YA (Grades 9-12), Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy-- though that one needs some discussion to contextualize and analyze, since it is complex, and Pullman is virulently, aggressively anti-religious and anti-authoritarian, which can be good material for some kids that age, but needs balancing out in discussion.

    I love the Harry Potter books, of course.They're really wonderful. So is the Hunger Games trilogy. And Cornelia Funke's Inkheart trilogy was very creative, I thought. But I cordially dislike Paolini's Inheritance books, Riordan's Percy Jackson books, and others of that sort. I feel like they're kind of pale imitations of better art. Also, I loathe the Artemis Fowl books: poorly written, heavy-handed, with flat and unlikeable characters. Why they're so popular is really beyond me.

    And of course there are other classics. Never Cry Wolf, by Farley Mowat. The Diary of Anne Frank. Huckleberry Finn. On the Road. Nearly anything by Dickens. And so forth.
     
  16. Wildandwonderfulwv

    Wildandwonderfulwv Vertical

    Location:
    West Virginia
    50 shades of gray, hoping someone will touch me down there.
     
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  17. roachboy

    roachboy Very Tilted

    brion gysin, the process.
    really fun, really smart.

    recently, journal articles on the following dorky topics:

    the legal justifications a state can adduce to wage war on a non-state entity
    the topologies of the security state
    a blah blah blah piece that tries to define fascism
     
  18. CinnamonGirl

    CinnamonGirl The Cheat is GROUNDED!


    I thought the movie looked interesting...but once I saw it was Stephanie Meyer, I was all, "nope." When you say "better," do you mean, "well, anything was better than Twilight," or, "hey, this was actually kind of good"?​
     
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  19. Baraka_Guru

    Baraka_Guru Möderätor Staff Member

    Location:
    Toronto
    It's coming from my SO. I thought it was more, "Hey, it's Stephanie Meyer, but it's not as bad as that other thing she did." I will ask her for a clarification.
     
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  20. GeneticShift

    GeneticShift Show me your everything is okay face.

    I've actually been trying to read a lot more YA fiction so I can make better recommendations at work.

    One I've really gotten into is "The Maze Runner" series by James Dashner. Thriller, action, adventure, awesome. I think there's 4 right now.
    Definitely read uglies. I read that in middle school, and loved the whole series.
    Everything John Green is amazing. I read "Looking for Alaska" when it came out awhile ago, and it's great. He has a few other ones out that are just as good, and I just picked up "The Fault in Our Stars", and it's great so far.
    "Thirteen Reasons Why" by Jay Asher is one of my recent favorite YA novels. It has some heavier themes, like suicide, but it's written amazingly for a teen book, and I stayed up all night just to read it.
    I also really recommend "Unwind" by Neil Shusterman (wrote "The Downsiders", os he's pretty well known). It's another teen book that makes you think, it's more of a dystopian society book. It's really hard to describe, but I couldn't put it down.