rereading fever
So it's (almost) December, which means there's more than usual stress, which, for me, means rereads. Last December it was a complete Discworld rereaed.
This December, apparently it's middle-grade books from my childhood. Who knew?
It started with Harriet the Spy and The Long Secret. (Harriet is more famous but actually, upon a reread, I think The Long Secret is the better book.) Then I bought all the Anastasia Krupnik books that were available on the Kindle, and chafed that that's less than half. (I may break down and buy physical copies.)
Now it's the discovery that the Ramona books are available on the Kindle. I'm also thinking of rustling up my extremely battered copies of Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher and The Farthest-Away Mountain.
I'm a little embarrassed by this but, to be honest, not much. I think I have become, blissfully, old enough to do kid stuff.
(Someone is going to read this, scratch their head, and ask, "But don't you review YA fantasy all the time?" And oh, yes, I do; most of my favorite books of the past three years have been YA fantasy. But modern YA fantasy is an utterly different beast than the middle-grade books of my own childhood; it's not the same thing at all.)
This December, apparently it's middle-grade books from my childhood. Who knew?
It started with Harriet the Spy and The Long Secret. (Harriet is more famous but actually, upon a reread, I think The Long Secret is the better book.) Then I bought all the Anastasia Krupnik books that were available on the Kindle, and chafed that that's less than half. (I may break down and buy physical copies.)
Now it's the discovery that the Ramona books are available on the Kindle. I'm also thinking of rustling up my extremely battered copies of Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher and The Farthest-Away Mountain.
I'm a little embarrassed by this but, to be honest, not much. I think I have become, blissfully, old enough to do kid stuff.
(Someone is going to read this, scratch their head, and ask, "But don't you review YA fantasy all the time?" And oh, yes, I do; most of my favorite books of the past three years have been YA fantasy. But modern YA fantasy is an utterly different beast than the middle-grade books of my own childhood; it's not the same thing at all.)
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Also, have you read Sport? I like it nearly as much as Harriet and The Long Secret and am surprised to see that it's out of print.
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Speaking of Bruce Coville's books, were you a Unicorn Chronicles fan? Because the third book in that series came out last year, and the final book is due out in 2010, and these things make me very happy. :-)
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I read the first Unicorn Chronicles book, but then lost track of them. I'd like to pick them up again, though.
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I adored all of them, and I adored them in I think different ways. There's a progression going on here.
Book 3 (Dark Whispers) was one of my favorites last year. I'm very curious where Book 4 (The Last Hunt) is going to take all the threads from the first three.
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My favorite fantasy books from when I was a preteen though have to be The Dark is Rising Sequence, anything by Patricia Wrede, and those books by Robin McKinley.
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There's another bit in one of the books where Sam says that he hates a kid in his class, and his mom says, "We don't use that word, Sam. You can say that you don't care for them." And Sam thinks about it, and says, "I don't care for Nicky so much I wish he would get run over by a big truck."
I sometimes think of that when I, ah, don't care for somebody. ;)
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Part of it is that I just don't care anymore, but part of it is that the librarian has no idea whether I'm taking them home to read myself, or for a child I know. Heck, I'm old enough now that I could theoretically be the parent to the kid reading some of these.
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Ah well. I was getting tired of the funny looks.
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