rj_anderson: (Books - Writing)
rj_anderson ([personal profile] rj_anderson) wrote2008-06-03 12:44 pm
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Bookmania!

So I went to my local indie children's bookstore to pick up a special order, and... I may have gone a little nuts. And now I have this pile of stuff, all of which I've heard good things about and thought looked intriguing enough to take a risk on... but I don't know where to begin!

[Poll #1198659]
Endorsements for a book on the list that you particularly loved are welcomed in comments, but if you particularly hated any of these, please refrain. I like to make up my own mind about books, without being prejudiced by somebody else's dislike (even if it turns out they are right).

And speaking of shiny new books I have just read wot are fabulous -- if you have any interest in contemporary YA fantasy and particularly if you're into vampires (which I myself am not, so take that as evidence that this book is a great read), you need to check out [livejournal.com profile] claudiagray's Evernight (HarperTeen, May 2008).

I already knew that Claudia was an excellent writer from reading some of her short stories, so I wasn't surprised that I enjoyed her rich and vivid but never overblown narrative style; I also expected the plot would be complex yet readily comprehensible and her main characters believable and sympathetic with flashes of wry humor, which proved true on all counts. But I thought myself very clever for anticipating where the plot was going and what was "really" up with some of the characters -- and I was wrong, wrong, WRONG. There's a twist about halfway through the story that made me literally drop the book and scream right out loud with the delicious shock of it -- and yet it didn't come out of left field, it was perfectly set up. I love books that play (or prey) on my expectations like that, so I have to give Claudia Gray big kudos for this one.

Evernight is the first in a series of four, and I can't wait to see how the next part of the story develops!

I also need to burble excitedly about Elizabeth E. Wein's Telemakos books sometime, but I want to read The Empty Kingdom (which is on back order at my local bookstore, WOE IS ME) first.

[identity profile] shoebox2.livejournal.com 2008-06-04 04:13 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, watch none of the film adaptations of A Little Princess before you read the book. The modern version is better, but still not the same.

I don't condone Burnett's more New Age-y excesses (she was a great proponent of Theosophy and Spiritualism, her era's equivalents, and it leaked steadily into her writing) but somehow she did get a power and presence into her stories that's not quite definable as anything but magic.
Edited 2008-06-04 04:17 (UTC)

[identity profile] drmm.livejournal.com 2008-06-19 11:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I can see that in The Secret Garden but nothing in A Little Princess gave me that impression.