Horror Aficionados discussion
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I've enjoyed a number of contemporary YA novels, but I've also read some that seem dumbed down and that bothers me. They're not like the ones I remember reading when I was a teen. Books should be there to help readers grow, and tailoring the books so that they are written down to the young readers seems backwards and even detrimental to me.



I would NOT want my young teen to read Cows or The Bighead or watch a movie like Header (can't remember if there's a book that deals with skull sex). But once Luke is 18, well, I guess there's not much I can do about it.
Scott, how are YA books these days dumbed down?
I remember reading Sybil when I was 12. I think at 13 I would have been upset to read anything like The Summer I Died or The Bighead. I was a very sensitive kid and remember getting sick to my stomach when I watched an Afterschool Special about a bully who bloodies a boy's nose. I still remember to this day how sick it made me to know that people did such violence against others.

If I'm on the counter and a kid wants to buy, I dunno, something as extreme as Keene's Urban Gothic, or Ketchum's Weed Species, can I sell it to them knowing the content?
Turns out I can, but may wish to recommend something more suitable. There are no laws/ratings on books, and like a colleague who teaches English says to her students, there's stuff in books that will never appear on film. Ever. They wouldn't allow it. (Serbian makes me wonder though).
My gripe with YA is the language. Fifteen year olds don't go around saying 'darn it' and things like that, at least the teenagers I know don't (I'm a teacher too). But how can you get around that?
I was surprised by the level of gore and violence allowed in YA now a days. I thought back in the day that Point Horror could get pretty close to the bone, but these are tame in comparison to some of the latest YA horrors.
Would I let my kids (when they're older, my eldest is 7) read some of this stuff with the sex and the rape and the blood? Certainly. I grew up on Laymon and it never did me any harm (hehehe, perhaps. Some of my scenes beg to differ). The thing I would NOT allow my kids to read are the magazines that cater for the teenage market that have more sex in them than a bloody Mills and Boon. I would not want my 13 year old daughter to be reading about position of the week or any of that awfully trashy stuff, as I feel it encourages without consequence.
If she wanted to read my copy of Ed Lee's Brides of the Impaler, which is full of sex and hallucinogenic masturbation, it would still be a no. It's signed and therefore closely guarded. She could get her own and that's fine ><. Horror can have sex in it, often with nasty repercussions, but doesn't actively promote it. So it's fine with me.
And I too giggled over naughty scenes when I was younger, particularly with Koontz for some reason...


Sometimes they seem overly simplified. I read Wake and I felt like I was reading a grade school reader (if it wasn't for the teen content). Short sentences (often just fragments), one-line paragraphs. I wondered who the author thought she was writing for. Bad book but it spawned two sequels (Everything has to be a trilogy nowadays. They should have put this one all in one book; it might have felt a little bit more substantial.)
I don't think anyone would advocate 13 year-olds reading extreme novels, but I don't think it's something anyone needs to worry too much about. They are pretty obscure, often expensive, and a young teen wouldn't normally have the means to acquire them.

You're right about extreme novels being expensive and not readily available. But the ones I have at home I might have to put away until I think my son is old enough to handle them.


Books mentioned in this topic
Wake (other topics)Jaws (other topics)
The Exorcist (other topics)
I get so lost with all these threads. I don't have much time left either (I'm not dying or anything. I just have an early bedtime). At least I can come back here daily...if I can find it again.
As threads tend to digress and spin off...here's a thread where exactly that can happen! So...let's get things rolling.
Considering the current generation, what would you find inappropriate to be in a YA novel? As in, if I knew my 13 year old was reading this, we'd need a talk...