Wild Things: YA Grown-Up discussion

228 views
YA Reading Challenge > YA Reading Challenge #4: Tasks and Discussion

Comments Showing 101-150 of 190 (190 new)    post a comment »

message 101: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (micnandec) Kellee wrote: "Mic wrote: "Does someone want to be so kind as to "push" a book to me for task 1.10? Most books that have been pushed to me are in my typical reading genre (Fantasy) or in the adult realm. I'm al..."

I've read Walk Two Moons: excellent read! I would recommend that one as well. Hope was Here was also a great read. Might try a different Joan Bauer.
The Devil's Arithmatic also sounds really good. Thanks for the suggestions!


message 102: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Hi Misty- My points and page numbers are incorrect on the last scoreboard. I have 50 points and read 1461 pages.


message 103: by Misty (last edited Apr 10, 2010 09:23PM) (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Oops. You're right, I somehow missed your post. But you have 1467 pages -- the first listing for Ties that Bind is 160 pages, not 154.
It's fixed now.


message 104: by Kellee (last edited Apr 10, 2010 09:25PM) (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Misty wrote: "Oops. You're right, I somehow missed your post. But you have 1467 pages -- the first listing for Ties that Bind is 160 pages, not 154.
It's fixed now."


No problem :) Thanks for fixing it.
I am just putting the number of pages in the actual book I read.


message 105: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments That's fine, I always check the books for the first listing to keep it fair.


message 106: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Misty wrote: "That's fine, I always check the books for the first listing to keep it fair."

Okay :)


message 107: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (micnandec) 1.25 Read 2 books from a series or by the same author. I just finished Runaway by Wendelin Van Draanen and it was a companion to Sammy Keyes and the Sisters of Mercy. These books fall into the early YA range of about 6 to 7th grade, a bit younger for the Sammy Keyes book. I'm treating them as YA due to the subject matter of Runaway and that those who are interested in Sammy Keyes will probably pick it up as well.


message 108: by Misty (last edited Apr 14, 2010 11:51AM) (new)

Misty | 1505 comments I think Middle Grade books are often treated as YA, especially as there is a range of reading skills throughout middle/high school.
So what did you think of them?
And make sure you report your points! :D


message 109: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Just as a real quick question:
How are you guys enjoying the slant so far? I know it's early, but for those of you playing along, you seem to have read a fair amount of books so far -- have you come across anything that really made you think, or that you didn't expect to like the way you did?
At any point, any time this happens, let us know!
^_^


message 110: by Michelle (new)

Michelle (micnandec) Misty wrote: "I think Middle Grade books are often treated as YA, especially as there is a range of reading skills throughout middle/high school.
So what did you think of them?
And make sure you report your po..."


Middle School books are in that fuzzy crossover area. A good example of this is the Diary of a Wimpy Kid series. It's marketed to 6-8th graders but I have plenty of HS students who like them too. It's also really difficult to classify some of these books so they tend to get shelved in multiple areas. A good example of that is the Harry Potter series, in my library they are shelved in Juvenile (children's room), YA section and in some cases the Adult Fiction section.

I just read the Runaway book, and I gave it 3 stars (I think). The voice seemed a bit too old for the main character, but it had a lot of adventure and action in it with a nice, warm, fuzzy ending. Very appropriate for the age group (6-8 graders) particularly for those who want some grit but happy ending. Sammy Keyes is more marketed for 4-6 graders but I do see a lot of 7-8 graders reading them, too.


message 111: by Angela Sunshine (new)

Angela Sunshine (angelasunshine) Mic wrote: "Kellee wrote: "Mic wrote: "Does someone want to be so kind as to "push" a book to me for task 1.10? Most books that have been pushed to me are in my typical reading genre (Fantasy) or in the adult..."

Mic, I have a copy of The Devil's Arithmetic on the GR swap right now. (I mistakenly ordered two copies!) Just in case you wanted to get it!


message 112: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Misty wrote: "Just as a real quick question:
How are you guys enjoying the slant so far? I know it's early, but for those of you playing along, you seem to have read a fair amount of books so far -- have you co..."


I am really enjoying the challenge right now.
I haven't been reading as much this week (baseball season started), but I have loved being forced to read books I was putting off or have never heard of.


message 113: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Misty,
How'd you like How I Live Now?


message 114: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments It was really interesting. I was slightly let down by the end, but for the most part, I really liked the choices Rosoff made in the writing. It's stream-of-consciousness, and it gets more and more normal as the situation gets crazier and crazier. I think some of the things that happen will put some people off, but I liked it and think the characters and story will stick with me for awhile.


message 115: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Oh, I see you've read it. Well, I guess you didn't really need my explanation, just: Yes, I quite liked it. :D


message 116: by Mandy (new)

Mandy (mldavisreads) | 210 comments I just finished This World We Live In, the third book in the series that started with Life As We Knew It. The diary format worked very well, especially because Miranda keeping a diary was part of the storyline-- she was often the only one who knew what day it was, she was worried about someone finding them, etc. This book tied up the loose ends from the first two, which I was happy to see.


message 117: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments I have the first one, but I haven't read it yet. Wanted to work it into this challenge somehow, but I don't think that's going to happen, so maybe sometime this summer...


message 118: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Misty,
I really loved the audio of The Looking Glass Wars. It gave the book a whole different personality than just reading it. The narrator, Gerard Doyle, was fabulous and brings the characters to life. It does help, though, that the story is FANTASTIC in the first place :)


message 119: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments See, I was a bit indifferent to the book -- I wanted more and felt it lacked polish. But it was so action filled that I think if it's read right, I might like it more.


message 120: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Misty wrote: "See, I was a bit indifferent to the book -- I wanted more and felt it lacked polish. But it was so action filled that I think if it's read right, I might like it more."

If you want to try it- it is a fabulous audiobook. I think sometimes audiobooks can get addictive and you forget about some of the flaws because you just want to know what happens next.


message 121: by Mandy (last edited Apr 30, 2010 05:43AM) (new)

Mandy (mldavisreads) | 210 comments Kellee wrote: I think sometimes audiobooks can get addictive and you forget about some of the flaws because you just want to know what happens next.


Kellee, I agree, I used to make fun of my mom for listening to books on tape, but I'm a total convert. Now that I actually drive to work, it's a great way to pass the time.


message 122: by Misty (last edited May 27, 2010 08:02AM) (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Alright, made a few more changes and shuffles, and got all of my empty spots sussed out, so I think this is the final edit (fingers crossed).
I still likely won't make it all the way through, though...
Guess I just love me a list.
^_^

1.5 A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly
1.10 The Iron King by Julie Kagawa (pushed by many GR and blogger friends)
1.15 Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler (on the DCPL Teen Faith and Spirituality list)
1.20 Princess Ben by Catherine Gilbert Murdoch (on JOSIE's shelves)
1.25 Zan-Gah: A Prehistoric Adventure & Zan-Gah and the Beautiful Country (series by author I don't know + in genre I don't read)
Buddy Bonus: tbd

2.5 tbd (debating Brave Story, Eidi: The Children of Crow Cove or The Thief Lord, all translated Batchelder winners) <-- ok, this one I'm still undecided on
2.10 Across the Nightingale Floor by Lian Hearn (set in JAPAN)
2.15 The Beguilers (IRELAND'S BISTO AWARD) + A Little Wanting Song (AUSTRALIA'S CBC AWARD)
2.20 Fever 1793 by Laurie Halse Anderson + An American Plague: The True and Terrifying Story of the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793 by Jim Murphy (disclosure: Fever is a reread)
2.25 How I Live Now by Meg Rosoff (set in ENGLAND) + The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm BY Nancy Farmer (set in ZIMBABWEI) [I chose world dystopias as my theme)
Buddy Bonus: [book:Wildwood Dancing|13929] by Juliet Marillier + the tale of The 12 Dancing Princesses (disclosure: Wildwood Dancing is a reread for me, not for Lydia)

3.5 Linda Grace challenge pick: June Summerland by Michael Chabon
3.10 Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher (book and audio)
3.15 genre #17: LGBT - The Bermudez Triangle
3.20 The Last Exit to Normal by Michael Harmon (LGBT) + All Over But the Shoutin' by Rick Bragg (NONFICTION)
3.25 I Heart You, You Haunt Me by Lisa Schroeder (POETRY) + Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic by Alison Bechdel (MEMOIR/GRAPHIC NOVEL/LGBT) + Sorcery and Cecelia or The Enchanted Chocolate Pot (EPISTOLARY)
Buddy Bonus: Gather Together in My Name by Maya Angelou

4.5 Magic Under Glass by Jaclyn Dolamore -- reviewed here
4.10 Demons of the Ocean (Vampirates - series recommended to me quite enthusiastically by friend's son)
4.15 If I Stay by Gayle Foreman (one of my librarians' picks)
4.20 Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver
4.25Eyes Like Stars by Lisa Mantchev
-- still need to do tasks
Buddy Bonus: Foxfire by Joyce Carol Oates (Lydia's task 4.20 pick. Need to check the YAness of it, though, as I didn't know Oates ever wrote YA)


message 123: by Kellee (last edited May 10, 2010 03:49PM) (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) My two books for 2.20 were about the Hitler Youth and they were FABULOUS! Here are links to my reviews:

Historical Fiction: The Boy who Dared

Nonfiction: The Hitler Youth


message 124: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments I bought the book Hitler Youth awhile back for my mom (it was 25¢!), but I don't think she's read it yet. I might have to nab it back at some point.


message 125: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) Misty wrote: "I bought the book Hitler Youth awhile back for my mom (it was 25¢!), but I don't think she's read it yet. I might have to nab it back at some point."

It is one of my favorite nonfiction books that I've read. It taught me so much and was so easy to read! I really recommend it and it is an easy (and disturbing, but interesting) read.


message 126: by Jennifer W, WT Moderator (new)

Jennifer W | 1289 comments Mod
I'd recommend it, too. I read it a while ago and was very impressed, both with the writing and the amazing stories of the youth. The pictures were what got me (those little girls saluting Hitler! Chills!).


message 127: by Mandy (last edited May 17, 2010 12:10PM) (new)

Mandy (mldavisreads) | 210 comments Task 3.25 Audiobook--I listened to Born Confused. It was 12 discs, so it was long, but it did worked on audiobook. The Indian words were easier to understand when they were pronounced correctly, and the characters were distinct entities. (Apparently in the print version the dialogue does not always clearly distinguish who is speaking.)


message 128: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Hmm, good to note. Thanks, Mandy!


message 129: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) For the challenge I have been reading a TON of multicultural books and most have been from Asia/The Middle East. If anyone else has read or is interested in reading multicultural books that fall under that region, I started a thread: http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/3...


message 130: by Mandy (new)

Mandy (mldavisreads) | 210 comments Here's my playlist for One Wish to complete task 4.25:

-what makes you different makes you beautiful by the Backstreet Boys
-look at me, I'm Sandra Dee from Grease
-miss popularity by jordan pruitt
-mean girls by sugarland
-help by the Beatles
-courage by superchick
-it's gonna be me by N SYNC


message 131: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Great!
How did you choose your songs? Were they all ones you knew, or did you do a little research?
=)


message 132: by Mandy (new)

Mandy (mldavisreads) | 210 comments I wanted to make the songs plot-related. So I went through the songs I had and did a little research for the others. I didn't know any songs about eating disorders, but I really liked the song "courage" that I found, I think it described the mood near the end of the book pretty well. I also wanted to incorporate the main character's fascination with the popular crowd, which is where "Miss popularity" and "Mean girls" came in. It was an interesting experience making a playlist for a book, I've never done something like that before.


message 133: by Angela Sunshine (new)

Angela Sunshine (angelasunshine) Misty, would a bookmark work for 4.25 by any chance??


message 134: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Sure, why not? It's creating something based on the book, after all.


message 135: by Angela Sunshine (new)

Angela Sunshine (angelasunshine) Ok, good. Since I'm in bookmark mode anyhow. Hmm, how to portray a Spackle.. haha


message 136: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Ooh...intrigued!


message 137: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments A bookmark might actually work pretty nicely for mine, too (Eyes Like Stars). I think I might make a few things for it, actually (rather than just 2), because I sort of wanted to do a playlist, and I am in the process right now of making cinnamon rolls, and I'm going to make a couple of fairy-sized ones. :)


message 138: by Angela Sunshine (new)

Angela Sunshine (angelasunshine) I really liked doing the playlist. I hadn't intended to choose that task, but Never Let You Down by the Verve Pipe is one of my favorite songs and when I heard it last it said Todd to me.


message 139: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments A steampunk/zombie playlist. That has the makings of greatness...


message 140: by Misty (last edited May 25, 2010 02:35PM) (new)

Misty | 1505 comments It's the Kellee Challenge now (she took it over).
I suppose we could expand to the monthly group reads. I mean, there's only a handful of us, so if none of the rest of you mind, I don't.
I'd been wanting to read it, too, and couldn't fit it in. I have it, and it's just sitting there, waiting patiently for me.
(Same with Boneshaker)


message 141: by Kellee (new)

Kellee Moye (kelleemoye) I don't mind although we need more monthly challenge participants too :)


message 142: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments I will say this: do which ever makes you happy. If you want to make it more challenging, stick with the task as written. If one of the monthly picks looks too good to pass up, might as well get points, so count it.
I'm easy.


;p


message 143: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments Hey, this is about having fun. And you guys are troopers, so bonus points for you.


message 144: by Angela Sunshine (new)

Angela Sunshine (angelasunshine) Oh just hold hands and sing Kumbaya already! ;)


message 145: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments *holds hand out*


message 146: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments ^_^


message 147: by Misty (new)

Misty | 1505 comments I have a question for you guys. I have decided I am going to put off being productive a little longer (or at least squeeze another challenge book or two in), and I have decided to go with the fairy tale Buddy Bonus because I'm in the mood for it.
Since we have to read the fairy tale it was based on, and those are of varying lengths that are hard to get a page count on, as most of us will be reading them online so that the versions match up between buddies, does anyone mind if we count the fairy tale itself as 20 pages? I figure it's a nice round number, probably higher than most people's fairy tale will be, but it make allowance for those longer ones, or annotated ones like on Sur La Lune.
If there are objections, let me know, but this just seemed like it'd be easier to start everyone at a base of 20.

Also, Angela (and Lydia, if you ever read this), this means that I will be available for the discussing of our tale if/when you read it.)

:)


message 148: by Angela Sunshine (new)

Angela Sunshine (angelasunshine) Misty wrote: "I have a question for you guys. I have decided I am going to put off being productive a little longer (or at least squeeze another challenge book or two in), and I have decided to go with the fair..."

Works for me!


message 149: by Mandy (new)

Mandy (mldavisreads) | 210 comments Last book of task 3.25-- short story collection Geektastic: Stories from the Nerd Herd. I don't read very many short stories, but I liked this one because I knew some of the authors and the subject was fun. A full length story would not have been able to encompass the full range of geekdom that this book did-- from Star Wars to Star Trek to comics to online role playing games to Buffy and all sorts of associated conventions and get-togethers.


message 150: by Angela Sunshine (new)

Angela Sunshine (angelasunshine) 4.20 Such a Pretty Girl by Laura Wiess

This is a horrifyingly realistic story about a 15 yr old girl trying to deal with her father who was released from jail after only 3 yrs for molesting her and others, and her mother who's determined to stay with him.

Discussion questions:

1. Why does Sharon seem so indifferent to Meredith's feelings about her father?

2. How does Meredith's OCD manifest itself, and what are the reasons she feels certain numbers are "safe"?

3. How does Mrs. Mues's obsession with Charles both help and hinder her relationship with others?


back to top