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Claudia Kishi. She makes my 12 year old self make so much more sense to me.
Side note! I always thought poorly of Sweet Valley High, 90210, etc, for the way they portrayed teenagers as overconfident, stay-out-late-on-weekdays 20-somethings, and even had my issues with SBTB and the whole dancing-under-the-moonlight-with-hottt-bf (god, Kelly was
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And I heard about the remakes! I like the BSC graphic novels, though I don't like that they wimp out on Claud's wardrobe (from what I've seen, maybe they get better. I want to see her underwater-themed outfit with handmade pottery earrings in full colour!!!), but I'll probably read them repeatedly. And I also heard about the SVH rewrites, but I don't have the same love/nostalgia for them - I just never thought to read SVH when I was younger. Blond twins, god.
I know, is there new work that is just as good? I really need to get more into young adult lit. My sister works in a library and is really involved in the young adult section and we had this debate about how, apparently, any novel in which the narrator is young (A Complicated Kindness, Curious Incident...) are being put in the young adult (12-17) section. She gave me this book called How I Live Now (Meg Rosoff) that was a recent addition to the young adult section at her work, but which is extremely violent/sexual (imo, reading from a 12 year old pov). So there's this big debate about what makes young adult lit, and what is too old, what is too young, how much can be portrayed before it becomes adult lit?
Can we just start a young adult book club? Like, really seriously? I want to talk about this forever.
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Thank you for that amazing blog link. How fantastic. And now I totally get that they're your heroes too. And soo interesting about the young adult lit question. This stuff is endlessly fascinating to me - adults writing for young adults. Adults making shows/movies for young adults. I want to read every young adult book, preferably in a book club setting. And then write zines about which books kids should read and force them into childrens' hands on the street. And get their names and numbers so I can follow up.
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Where do you work?
also, I'd like to come visit you.
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Anyways, re: teen books - what is appropriate for a 17 year old reader is often not appropriate for a 12 year old reader. It's such a broad sprectrum.
Jennifer
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