My underrated list

Somehow I landed myself on a Buzzfeed list today, which would normally be a WOOHOO I HAVE ACHIEVED A POP CULTURE BROWNIE type thing, but it kind of wasn’t. I’m always turbo grateful for publicity and stuff, but this one was a bit of a head scratcher because of its title and its contents and yeah, basically everything.  It’s called 29 Underrated Book Series Every YA Lover Should Read. There are some really great series listed there and I don’t want to throw shade on any of them. But I’m perplexed about the use of the word “underrated” here since many of the listed series are NYT bestsellers and in several cases have had movies made about ’em. I mean, the Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini? Great stuff. And a great guy! But it’s sold 15 million copies according to an article in Rolling Stone a year or two ago, plus a movie and such, so that’s not really underrated. That’s holy-shit-I’m-gonna-buy-me-some-damn-yachts money for books that clearly many people enjoy. And Percy Jackson by Rick Riordan? Yep, that’s millions of copies and a couple movies too. How’s that underrated when it’s so super-duper popular? Reading through that list of “underrated” series made me think of Inigo Montoya: “You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.”


In my particular case I was more perplexed by the YA title. I don’t consider myself a YA author. It’s true that younger readers have read and enjoyed my stuff, but I wouldn’t give HEXED to an 11-year old and tell ’em to enjoy the hot scratchy sex between Atticus and the Morrigan. Younger readers can obviously read whatever the heck they want, but I’m not shelved in YA and can tell you when I’m writing I’m not thinking, “Ha ha! Those younger readers sure are going to appreciate my use of ‘monstrous fuckpuddle’ here!”


So I thought I’d provide my own unsolicited list of underrated series, albeit mostly for adult readers and much smaller than 29—I’m only throwing out five, a manageable list. And when I say underrated I mean they haven’t hit the NYT list yet, but damn it, they should because their stories are fabulous and deserve to be read. I’ll provide the series name and the first book to get you started. These are series, mind, not single books, and in no particular order.


homies


1. The Borden Dispatches by Cherie Priest. Start with MAPLECROFT. I’ve said it before and will say it again: This is genius-level work. Should be a movie. Cherie should be bathing in cash and wearing money to the gym.


2. Prospero’s War by Jaye Wells. Start with DIRTY MAGIC. What I wrote for the cover blurb remains true: Kate Prospero is my favorite heroine.


3. The Eric Carter books by Stephen Blackmoore. First one is called DEAD THINGS. Urban fantasy LA noir with a necromancer fond of using a straight razor. Fast reads, punch-in-the-gut stuff, and I would whisper sweet nothings in Stephen’s ear and nibble on it too if I could get the third book tomorrow. Or the next day.


4. The Craft Sequence by Max Gladstone. Begin with THREE PARTS DEAD. Max writes some beautifully complex shit. And when you talk with him you realize you haven’t been doing a hell of a lot with your brain. He’s wicked smart and almost illegally nice.


5. Anything by Diana Rowland. She has two different series going and they’re both great. I dig the White Trash Zombie books in particular. The main character, Angel, has to become a monster to become a better human, and it’s brilliant. Start with MY LIFE AS A WHITE TRASH ZOMBIE.


Obviously there are metric fucktons of other deserving but underrated series out there to read—this is by no means a comprehensive list, just five series off the top of my head that I think should be getting far more attention than they currently are. So give ’em a gander, try one or all of ’em, and see what you think.


Hey, regardless: Thank you for reading anybody’s work, period. I’m super grateful to everyone who’s given my work a chance.

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Published on April 06, 2015 16:01
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Gnome Claire *Wishes she was as cool as Gnome Ann* That list has some hugely inappropriate books on! I never recommend the wheel of time or the sword of truth to 11 year olds! If kids want to read stories that are a bit darker that's fine but to put it down as YA always implies no sex (and not too much violence) to me.


message 2: by Julie (new)

Julie I've read all of the White Trash Zombie series. When I hear stuff about the new TV show iZombie, I think the character is trying to be Angel just a little bit.

I've also got Dirty Magic as an audiobooks TBR.

I'm interested in Cherie's stuff. I read a different series of hers about a vampire that was really enjoyable even in the glut of vampire titles.

So... cools recs, Kevin. (Or just cool because I as a reader think similarly.)


message 3: by Wayne (new)

Wayne I got in to your books the same time as I started reading the Mercy Thompson series, the Peter Grant series, and the Monster Hunters International series. I don't consider any of these to be YA, as the subject material is not something I would let my teenage niece read.

Thanks for the new list, they look really intriguing and I'll be adding them to my To-Read shelf!


message 4: by Marianne (new)

Marianne Boutet Maybe Buzzfeed just meant "underrated by us." I wonder what sorting hat they use to determine Atticus' world as Young Adult. Thank you for your short list, and keep writing terrific reads!


message 5: by Bec (new)

Bec That is a very odd title and list, many of those books just don't qualify as YA...


message 6: by Kristina (new)

Kristina YA is more the teen set though isnt it.. I'd think 11 year olds would still be considered Middle grade... but regardless... that list is crazy...

on a side note.. my 15 year old loved iron druid.


message 7: by Douglas (new)

Douglas Vohnoutka Yea, I listen to the books at work and I have to turn them off when the kids start showing up on weekends to ride their horses, too much sex and swearing for that age group. And since when is 10-12 year olds YA? YA is like 16-18.


message 8: by Jaime (new)

Jaime Jeffrey Yeah, I think YA is considered High School age. There's a section for Middle Grade or Tweenager (I hate that word y do we feel the need to 'cutesy' everything up).


message 9: by Jaime (new)

Jaime Jeffrey Oh, forgot to deal w/ Underrated title. Just, huh?! Who approved that article? Do they know what Underrated means?


message 10: by cagedpopmachine (new)

cagedpopmachine That is baffling. The Iron Druid books are definitely shelved as Adult Fiction not only my local library, but most libraries in my state. Even in B&N I've only seen them group with other adult fiction books, definitely not YA.


message 11: by Justin (last edited Apr 14, 2015 03:50PM) (new)

Justin Price Every time I read a book Kevin has recommended, I think will be as good as an Iron Druid book, but it never is.


message 12: by Stephen (new)

Stephen Wow! So yeah I wouldn't call it YA. However, maybe they're thinking that since it's not message heavy -thank you for that- that it doesn't take a degree in comparative literature to enjoy. I LOVE the Iron Druid Chronicles, and I'll be sad to see it go. I would love to see it reimagined as tv series akin to Arrow or Flash. Hopefully you do sell the rights one day. You deserve the money. Anyway, I recommend the series to everyone I know.


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