Wild Things: YA Grown-Up discussion
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What Are You Reading Now?
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Roshini
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Sep 05, 2010 07:56AM

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If you weren't International I would mail you some of mine. LOL! But postage would be just as expensive. *sigh*


Would that work for Kellee's September pirate challenge?

Would that work for Kellee's September ..."
Yep! That's why I picked it up this week.



http://sciencestage.com/v/24636/phili...




Yay! I haven't met anyone who didn't like it. Such a great story.

Heather, I was thinking the same thing. It is nice that I won't have to wait. I'm so tempted to order the next two from Amazon right now!

Is it more hopeful and less anxiety producing? I nearly had a panic attack reading the first one.


I think it is safe to say that Pratchett is one of those rare authors that deserve all of the hype they receive.
Roll on 2011 for his next book!


If not, then go for one of the stand alone discworld books. Good choices would be Going Postal, Small Gods or Monstrous Regiment for you first proper Pratchett, though none of them demand you to have read previous books.
I should warn you though, Good Omens is more of a Neil Gaimen novel than Pratchett.
Sorry I haven't linked to the books, I'm new to Good Reads and I'm using my phone, so haven't a clue how!


Meh, Pratchett's great whatever you read!


Recommendations (my son is 14) welcome! :)


I am trying to read my books in verse since they tend not to be what I am most comfortable in reading. However, once I fell into the rhythm of this book it has been very good. Almost done.

Alyson, I like books in verse if they're done well - that is, if the poems are poetic, and not just stylistic prose arranged in the shape of a poem. Matt's story looks interesting but I can't decide whether to mark it "to-read someday maybe" or "wishlist." I'm looking forward to your review. :)



You're welcome. For some reason I thought you were a teacher. No worries...




I have had it on my shelf for a year for the same reason. Usually her covers draw you in, but this one is blah. (I am very jealous of the signing!)


I agree, Aly. I can read werewolves and vampires over and over, but whenever I get a fairy book I think, "Ugh, again?" But I thought Wicked Lovely was pretty decent, as far as fey goes.


The Fey are typically mischievous and more mean in nature. Vampires can struggle with being good or evil and their is something more sexy about them. They were also human once. We tend to prefer the tortured souls such as Angel in the Buffy series and dare I say Edward in Twilight.
And well with wolves there is something ferral/wild/animalistic. Plus they are also basically humans who face a struggle between being one thing vs. another. Most of us relate to that on some level.
This isn't the case with the Fey or at least not in any of the stories I have yet to read. How do you relate with an eretheral being who doesn't seem to have a true capacity to love which the other paranormal creatures seem to be able to do??? and never was or will be human.
Just my take on it...

Books mentioned in this topic
The Storyteller (other topics)Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (other topics)
The Fault in Our Stars (other topics)
A Path Begins (other topics)
Gone Bitch: A Parody of Gone Girl (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
J.K. Rowling (other topics)E.E. Richardson (other topics)
Joseph Delaney (other topics)
John Green (other topics)
Marissa Meyer (other topics)
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