Fifty Shades of Grey
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Should there be an age limit to reading explict books?
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Cassie P
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Jul 30, 2012 06:35AM

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At 15 do you truely think you will understand why people may do some of the thing discussed in this book, there are many adults that do not understand it.
its not about chronological age and your rights to read what you want - its about making sure you undersatnd and feel confortable with what you may read in this book.
If you had the support of a trusted person - I would say ok...but your statement leads me to believe you may not be ready to read this book, sounds like you want to just because you have been told you should NOT read it!
Grow up and wait awhile - it will still be around when you are truely ready to read it

I agree with Paris. This makes me sad. I'm afraid teens will get the wrong idea about what is safe and healthy and what is messed up and damagaing from this book. Why? Because the protagonist doesn't realize that Christian Grey is a sick man with issues that need to be resolved regarding sexual behavior. I'm no prude by any means whatsoever, but as an adult, I know the difference between a healthy, fun sexual relationship and one that is abusive. You can say you are "mature enough," but that will just reinforce that you probably are not. Teens tend to view books through the lens of the female protagonist, and that protagonist is unable to recognize her relationship for what it is. There are tens of thousands of better books to read anyway - why read this one? It is horrendously written anyway - the repetive phrases and sentence structure is awful.

I note this as a parent myself. HOWEVER...when I was a kid...I snuck into my parents bedroom and found my Dad's Playboys and, even though I was too young to really know what sex was...I instinctively knew it to be something of profound curiosity and mystery and i wanted to know about it. And libraries are packed with book with expilcit content that any smart kid can access and read at their leisure.
So we can do whatever we can to "protect" our kids from the world, but the world is there, nevertheless, and they will experience it eventually. May as well let them get as much knowledge and experience as possible so that they will be capable of making smart and successful decisions concerning their future.
But, personally, i have a hard time seeing my daughters grow up so fast, being so precocious...they know so much more than i ever did when i was their age. The idea of letting them go eventually scares the hell out of me. But I have to remind myself that I was their age once, and I discovered things on my own and used to LOVE discovering knew things, good and bad. I don't want to deny them to joy of learning new stuff. ever. It's so much fun, such a wonderful thing. It's a beautiful and exciting world and i want them to be excited about living in it.

what a warm, honest, and open response...


glad there are some sensible people out there, those that believe parents do have a responsibility and a duty to be involved in their childs life and don't want to delegate this to "our" government to legislate parenting.

I get this, I do, but if I don't think my child is in a position to handle the books content, it doesn't mean a thing if he/she can walk into any store and buy it on their own anyway and ignore my wishes. If it's age restricted, and I think they can handle it, I can choose to buy it and give it to them letting them know that I'm here to answer any questions they might have.


Don't you think it would be better to prepare them, support them, and guide them on how to make better decisions, provide alternatives, compromises, solid and open reasons that they can understand, Vs shuting it down because "we" the parents are embarrased, ashamed,or can not comprehend alternative sexual practices or do not want to discuss such subject matter.
It is a parents right to make the decision they feel are best for their children, and it is the childs game to do what they want, and igore their parents wishes. so lets give them the tools to make the correct decisions, and know when they are in over their heads and that they can come to use for help and explainations without the fear of getting in trouble.
And yes I was a parent, my daughter is now a parent herself at the age of 28, and i hope that she will have the tools to help her make the correct decisions

It's like saying there going to do drugs anyway so lets just make it legal. Which is not the way to go.
They should know there are consequences to their actions. Restrictions let them know this!



My parents know that I've read books that aren't appropriate to some people, but they said they rather I read whatever I want then to limit me, which might lead to me not telling them in the future of things I might do. And warnings, yes. I think there should be a warning just in case some teen picks up the book not knowing anything about the book, but I don't there should be restrictions.
& for heaven's sake, we're teens. This is NOT the most sexual thing I've read. & I know adults think it might be wrong to be exposed to sex so "early" through books but just listening to the radio exposes us to sex. Watching movies and tv shows exposes us. Everything is full of sexual innuendos. Music. Ads. TV shows. & Books. & even if there are restrictions on some things (movies for example), it's not like teens aren't seeing them anyways. Sneaking it, watching online, etc.
Overall, I just think that age limitations shouldn't be placed on things like books.
Why don't we just keep focusing on enforcing the restrictions on alcohol, drugs, etc.



Okay fifty shades is too intense for our youth but I have found worse in the public library. We push our youth to grow up too fast these days. We need to allow our youth to be youth and to protect them as much as possible. Unfortunately by the time they reach middle school many have already had sexual relations. I cant help but think that in our effort to protect our youth by teaching them about sex in school we opened them up to experimenting with sex way before they would have to begin with. It all starts in the home and how parents raise their children.
Deborah ~Mrs. Kellan Kyle~ wrote: "Because Hunger Games and Lord of The Flies are scenarios that our children will most like never experience. Since sex is one that they will experience, they should be exposed to healthy, loving rel..."
Why do you have to chose between the two? They both are too intense and we should guard against both. It isnt the youth who have parents involved that we need to worry about but the youth who have parents who dont care or are too busy trying to survive.
Why do you have to chose between the two? They both are too intense and we should guard against both. It isnt the youth who have parents involved that we need to worry about but the youth who have parents who dont care or are too busy trying to survive.

Of course they do. That doesn't mean that we should just let go of age restrictions on things. Kids that really want to will find a way, but we shouldn't make it easier for them. Heck, why have any age restrictions or rules on anything at all if that's the theory we're going to use? People will find a way to do what they want anyway, so why bother. Smoking, drinking, driving a car, are all things kids sometimes do even when they aren't old enough, so should we just give up on age laws there too?
Not having age restrictions tells our kids we don't care and they can do what they want. That's probably the worst message we can send them. It's not about taking away the right of the parent to give it to them, just the ability of the child to obtain the material too early. Even if you think your 15 year old can handle it, what about a 9 or 10 year old? Because without some kind of age guidline, even they could buy it.
And one more thing, just because a 15 year old can handle reading it, doesn't necessarily mean they should. There's a lot to process and take in with these books. Pick up some young adult literature for young adults and let them find this book when they are older. There really shouldn't be such a rush to make our kids grow up.

Most of the all it comes down to parenting. It should the parent's choice on wheather their child should read a book like this. Honestly, it depends on the teen.


Very well said. Age restrictions will at least try to limit children's access to adult material. If a child has to get an adult to buy the book for them, maybe that adult would stop that from happening.


It all depends on the teen themselves, some are mature enough to handle it, some understand fiction from facts. I was 11 when I started to read mature ..."
Christina wrote: "No, I do not think sexually explicit books should have an age limit. I am saying this as a mother of 2 girls. Our society has a strange, and in my opinion unhealthy inclination to view sex as wro..."
While a big part of me agrees with you ladies, and because I am so very anti-sensorship, I want to completely agree with you; but I have some significant concerns about allowing this material into the hands of young, impressionable girls.
First of all, all this orgasm-ing and passion does not happen the first time any woman has sex....it gives a sense that this is what it's really supposed to be like; and we all know that it's just not. Not that sex isn't spectacular, but to give an young girl with an impressionable mind that this is what sex with someone you are in love with is supposed to be like really scares me. And while what happens behind the doors of two consenting adults is their own business; I am not sure we should be opening a viewing window of that fantsy sexual behaviour to adolescents. Children and adolescents should be given accurate, real information about sex; not learning from a fantasy book where it's not the reality....for 99% of the population that is...


I totally agree!

But i also know that at say 12ish if i had heard about the book i would of wanted to read it & i know for a fact if i was told not to read it because of my age then i would of made sure i read it. (i was a brat)
I remember when i was about 12 a friends older sister was discussing vibrators with her sister & I, I had no idea about them. She told me & my friend that you shouldn't use a vibe before you have intercourse as it will totally ruin sex for you. At the time is was like *shrug* but i remembered it for 12 years and counting & infact i am sure i told other people what she said. She also gave us other information about sex & sexual health - it was actually fantastic having a source of information that wasn't my parents or a school nurse. I wish it had been as easy to pick up book's that contained sex as it is now.
Nowadays i know there is internet & stuff for children to check out. I do think books can be a great source of information & i think to start limiting people's access to them would be awful. I do not think that FSOG is in anyway a good source of information but when you start limiting one book where do you stop?
Uhh hopefully i didn't just babble & you all got what i was trying to say.


C.S Lewis was brought up in a house literally full of books, some suitable for children and some definitely not and none of them forbidden. I had a similar experience, my dad had two books on sexual practice in anthropological terms, Love in Action and The Pretence of Love. I went through and through his bookshelves and didn't even notice them until I was about 15. Now I own them.
He also had Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin along with many other Baldwin novels. Again I very much enjoyed this book but only once I got it, before that it was boring.
In the past we didn't even write books or tell stories for children - there were just stories. Most of the fairy tales today were filled with violence in the past. Maybe we should let children be children and that means experiencing things as they come and being there to answer questions and guide them through. After all look at the quote from Tess used in Fifty Shades about learning from novels and then read it in the original context. Surely she would have been better off if she had read a racey book or two.

C.S Lewis was brought u..."
You have a great, logical response (and one that I will likely follow with my own children), and I see you grew up in a home that gave you a safe, suportive structure to read and explore literature. As a teacher, however, I see too many students that do not have the parental support at home to go to if they would be disturbed by something they read or saw in the media. It is for those students that I wish some books, this one included, had an advisory and limited the age of those who could purchase it.


While I agree with you on some level, I have to ask, just because kids sneak into those films and get the odd person to buy them beer, does that mean we remove all limitations from adolescents? Everyone seems to forget (and how can we not these days) that children are the most vulnerable population within our society. (Seniors are next, but at least, armed with some wisdom) We have a job as adults in society to protect these youth. They seem older than they are, have access to information no adult had even ten years ago, and have the ability to argue to the point of exhaustion! But the point is; they are NOT older than they look; their little adolescent brains have NOT fully developed and much of that impulsive, reckless behaviour that they engage in is simply because they do not have the ability to fully understand the consequences of their actions. And for you adoelscents who don't believe me, ask any teenage mother who thought the boyfriend would be there forever, or the kid who broke into the corner store simply in a dare....insight and judgement take time to develop; and I know plenty of adults who don't have that well into their twenties and thirties...
So for that reason, yes, sexually explicit material needs to kept out of the hands of youth. Sex is an amazing, beautiful, incredible thing. I would not want my 15 year old engaging in BDSM stuff...besides, there are more important issues for our children to read about....let them read about the Rwanda genocide, the current climate change issues, the progression of women's rights. Far more graphic and real then some novel......

Yes! Very well written indeed Kim! I agree with you. But I believe that there are some teens out there who know the difference between right and wrong, because of how they are brought up. But the problem is no matter how many times we warn they still do it :/


Don't underestimate us teens as we know what's going on and to be quite honest most people at school, college ect talk about discusting things like this everyday so for us it's not that shocking.
I am just about to start the second book and I am reading it not for the "sex" but instead to see how Ana tackels her love for this confused man and how 50 shades battles through his past to meet Ana in their future. I want to read about their feelings and problems and it has help me escape from troubles i'm having at school.
You may think this sounds perthetic, but I feel at times that I can relate to Ana as i have felt like this when I have been in a serious relationship and he wanted to go further but I didn't, however I didn't want to loose him so I faced a dilema. Luckily I made the right decision and it has worked out for the best for me, however I am intreged to find out how this story will take a twist.
My parents are unaware that I am reading the trilology and my mom did say she didn't want me reading them, however I have downloaded them on my Kindle which makes it extremely easy for any age to read it so from that point of view I think kindle and Amazon should do more about it as I wouldn't want a 12 year old reading this which I am shore is happening right now.
However much you dissagree it's not like I am going to read about this erotic and what I consider unsuitable behaviour and actually do it myself so I don't see what it matters if us teens read it or not however I think no younger than 15 should read it as I would say it is unsuitable for the younger teenagers.
Think about if you would have wanted to read it when you were my age.......you would right?
Thanks

And yeah, I probably would have tried to read it, but here's the thing; trashy romance novels with graphic sex aren't new. Neither is young adults offering each other sex advice. It can just end badly is my point. You sound like an intelligent, reasonable young woman (after all, you are spending your time on book forums!); trust me when I say that these books aren't going anywhere...they will still be there when you are in a different life space and can appreciate them more....use your intelligence and passion to improve yourself; enjoy smut later! ;)



I think it would probably done the same way as with R rated movies and M rated video games. When you check it out you have to show an ID card to prove you are the appropriate age. If you have an e-reader, I it would be a little bit easier for someone to get a hold of it, because they could easily use their parent's info to get past any blocks. I think teens who really want to read it will most likely get their hands on it. There's so much that can be done, but in the end it's really up to the parent's.

well you did take a stand in post # 83 - you felt children/teens under 16 shouldn't read them
do i see a flip flopper her

Well, I am and I don't think its normal at all XD

Very much agree with you, Kimberley :)

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