SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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Why do we see the current flood of YA scifi and fantasy?


According to Wikipedia we are both right :-)
"A ..."
Going to admit - I do not trust Wikipedia and their always changing information.
Based on the history of the novel, I will stay at YA as the author stated it was written for (and later marketed to) teens.
But if it makes you feel better, you can call it "adult" if you like.

So much temptation... "
Don't hold back, Colleen! LOL

To be honest, I think that some people could do with a very public flogging.
When I was younger, the idea would have horrified me. As an adult...the behaviors I see around me on a daily basis makes me want to flog both children AND their parents.

I keep meaning to read those. It' on Mt. TBR.
Like Becky I never "transitioned" from one marketing segment to the other. I read "adult" books as a child (when I first read Isaac Asimov and books like Morning Glory and Toy Soldiers)
While I loved the Narnia series as a child, I fell in love with it many a time as an adult. In fact, I find more things in it as an adult than a child.
I didn't run across his Space Trilogy until adulthood. Marvelous work. I wish I could have read it during the time period when it was written. That must have been amazing.

I couldn't agree with you more. Some people really need to get flogged. Not so sure I would include children in that group though :-)

That's very gracious of you :-)


That actually sounds pretty interesting!
Haha, the author even reviewed her own book :-)
Maybe I should do that too :-)


Haha, yes that is always the risk :-)

"[...]started to read it as though it was a real book."
So... it's NOT a 'real' book?

I keep meaning to r..."
I read everything in the school library, fantasy just happened to be my favorite at the time. There was a time when I always had a book in my hand.
So it was just as much an access issue as it was reading level.
I can go back and read Roald Dahl at any time, as long as it has been awhile since I last read it. I read through several of his just a couple of years ago.

Based on the history of the novel, I will stay at YA as the author stated it was written for (and later marketed to) teens.
But if it makes you feel better, you can call it "adult" if you like."
A lot of people don't trust wikipedia, but they're actually more accurate than people think with an accuracy rating of above 90%. I didn't believe that at first, but I saw it on wikipedia, so it almost has to be true because they have an accuracy rating of above 90%!

I think there was also an issue with how we define realism in terms of books as individuals(my definition varying hugely from the one Johan offered).
As for recs, I saw someone say A Monster Calls, which I second, and I add to the list the Chaos Walking trilogy by the same author. Book one is



Well, now I meet someone haha. I don't want to sound like I'm making excuses for it, so I'll start by saying I loved all 3 books, but KONLG was easily the worst book in the trilogy IMO.
But eh, different strokes for different folks. I'd still recommend checking it out for anyone who thinks it sounds interesting.

Anyway, I have heard that quite a lot - that the 2nd and 3rd books are way better. But at the time, I was just extremely disinterested and disinclined to put in the time to read 3 books for a story I was pretty 'meh' about. Many people do love it though, so yeah, I'd say it's one of those books that one has to try for themselves.
A Monster Calls is phenomenal, though. So I'm in a weird situation with Patrick Ness in that I'm not sure if I like him or not as an author. It's pretty 50/50 - one book I loved, and another book I didn't.
Have you read anything else of his? I want to try More Than This, but I'm hesitant because I don't want to dislike it.

And if it's not her it'll probably be me.


lol
True.
But I would be right so it wouldn't matter what they think.
;)

I..."
Ahh.
I read my parents books (which means I read quite a bit of Playboy, too) and had 100% free range library access.
Plus the occasional Readers Digest. :)

The nearest public library was 45 minutes away for me growing up, and impossible when it was snowing. So what the School had was what I read.

Haha :-)
You are all wise in not trusting Wikipedia, but when it comes to quotes and references they are usually very accurate. Whether the references are trustworthy or not is another issue, but that is a universal problem in academia and is not limited to Wikipedia.
The real reason you can't trust Wikipedia is because the articles are often written by people with an agenda, and those people include references that support their claim, and omit references that don't. I was just lucky that today they supported my claim that SST was not marketed as a YA story :-)
This particular quote about Starship Troopers (click to read it on the page it was lifted from) was from the book "Robert A. Heinlein: In Dialogue with His Century: Volume 2"
According to that book (and we all know books are always truthful, because authors never have an agenda...) they published SST through the publisher's children's department but designed and promoted it for their adult catalogue.
If you define YA by the audience a publisher markets a book to, that would make SST an adult book, so either the definition of YA as a simple marketing thing is either incomplete, or the publishers were simply wrong about their book :-)
Just goes to show that you will never find two persons with the same definition of a genre. Not even here in this Goodreads group :-)
I'd say YA is in the eye of the beholder, and let's leave it at that, shall we? :-)

You can replace YA with nearly anything and I'd still agree with it haha. And, just to be extremely clear, while you and I may not agree on YA from a few different angles, I still feel for you on the market not putting out the stuff you're on the look for front. It's, sadly, understandable why they chase the dollar. So it has been, so it shall always be.

Yes, that goes for everything people have opinions on :-)

:)

That's certainly true.
And it's another reason to pay little attention to labels such as YA.
Just another example, this groups BotM is The Golem and the Jinni. As I understand it, the mods here vet books as being 'for adults' before they accept nominations for BotM. However, my library labels this story YA. And, of course, I'm sure I'm getting a different perspective on it now, than I would have if I'd read it when I was a teen.

..."
Does your library label all fantasy as YA? That's the only reason why I can imagine they would think it would merit that label. It wasn't marketed as YA and doesn't have teen protagonists.

I imagine the discussion going something like this:
"Why is this book shelved in the adult section?"
"Because that's where all the other Christopher Moore books are shelved...?"
"Hmm... No, it looks cartoonish and it's about Jesus and his childhood pal. Kids should read more about Jesus. We'll put it in the kids and teens section."
"....Have you read it?"
"No, but it's about Jesus. It must be good. And probably funny, since it's Christopher Moore and he writes those funny books, which kids will like. Stick it in the kids section."
"Ohhkay... You're the boss."


Ya lost me there, Kevin. Not sure what exactly you're trying to say about women...?

That's a great question, Becky.
What are you saying about women, Kevvy?

Jokes aside, thank god for the girls/women buying books of any sort. They've been great for the publishing/literature industry. YA books in particular in the past 10 years or so.

All I gotta say is, thank goodness there are no sparkly vampires in it.

Say, a bit OT here, but I do want to broaden my reading horizons and read more 'good' 'YA.' Does anyone here want to brag on a GR Group I might like? Preferably one without too much squee or too many animated gifs?



Yes, specify the kind of stuff you like to read and I'll see if I know anything that's up your alley.

That's a fair assessment. Lots of YA is written by women for women/girls. Not exactly sure how that relates to the OP or the points that followed, though. Unless you mean to say it's written by women for women, and thus doesn't catch your interest? Which, also, fair enough.

Joe Abercrombie had this to say on the subject a couple of hours ago on Twitter:
"Arguments about classification of books tend to say more about the prejudices of those classifying than about the books themselves."
I think we can all agree on that :-)


*my opinion. Please don't blast me.

*my opinion. Please don't blast me."
*prepares laser array*
***
I would say it depends on the argument.
If it's the sort of argument that's like, "My clearly sci-fi book is not actually sci-fi because it's too literary", then yes.
But if it's a nerd-argument over semantics, then that's more just nerds being nerds. ;)

I'd like to state that I dislike being called "female." Any creature that reproduces is "female." All human females are girls/women.
Leaving that, I will agree that women seem to read more than men on average (GR members not counted) so more books are written to catch the attention (and thus money) of women.
Books mentioned in this topic
Deerskin (other topics)The Darkangel (other topics)
Magic's Pawn (other topics)
Deerskin (other topics)
Magic's Pawn (other topics)
More...
So much temptation...
***
I think I sorta read in graduated form, but I didn't read a lot for pleasure when I was in school, especially not after grade school, so a lot of what I did read was school assignments and whatnot.
My parents were hardcore about no R-rated movies when I was a kid, though, so they probably woulda kept some stuff outta my hands. I didn't have much interest in horror or anything, though, so it never really got tested.