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Favorite YA lit from your childhood?

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Where the Red Fern Grows

The Hobbit

Animal Farm

Ender's Game

Pawn of Prophecy series




I had read all of those in a a short amount of time, from grades 5th-6th. Those 4 books and the Pawn of Prophecy series established a lot of my preferences for years to come. I moved on to much more complicated reading very quickly. I read Moby Dick all on my own in 7th grade to prove to myself that I could. I hated every second of it. Looking back, I was obviously too young to understand it. It is forever soured for me though. I don't think I'll ever try to read it again. I knocked out Dracula and Frankenstein after that, then went on to lots of pulp sci fi, fantasy, horror, and historical war accounts. I knew so much about WW2 that I could have taught it!

I was early in my freshman year in high school when I read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. It was given to me by my father, who had it passed to him from his brothers. It originated from my grandfather. Everyone signed it and stated who they were passing it on to. I still have it and will pass it along to my daughters when they are ready. I loved the book. It was the first truly complex books I ever read and understood fully. I had to read and re read entire sections of the book to understand it, but unlike Moby Dick, I loved every second of it.

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This is not young adult reading at all btw. It is very complicated. I just wanted to tell the whole story of my reading during that time!
 
As an avid reader of the Hardy Boys, I was pretty weirded out when I discovered the relaunch where everything went insane. They went from "Let's solve the mystery of the abandoned lighthouse!" to "They just killed my girlfriend, and now they're making us dig our own grave!"
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Fuuuuck yesss Casefiles! It was actually my first exposure to the Hardy Boys. To a little kid this was some Tom Clancy type shit. That explosion on the cover is like the first thing that happens in the series.

It's Joe's girlfriend Iola getting MURDERED BY A FUCKING CAR BOMB. Casefiles did not fuck around.

Also, REDWALL.
 
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Phil Pullman's "His Dark Materials" series gets a lot of love, here, and for good reason. The series' common description as the "antithesis to Narnia" holds true - series likely created a lot of young critical thinkers, which is always nice (at least after they grow out of their insufferably pretentious phase). What's not to love about armored bears, airships, and Daemons?

I'd personally restrict this to the first book. The second and third just didn't have it.

Also:

Artemis Fowl series
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Ender's Game series
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Dune
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Wheel of Time series
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It's kinda sad that I did so much more reading when I was younger. :(
 
No Chronicles of Narnia? I read the entirety of the series in my second semester of grade 7, in chronological order.

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I also read Harry Potter and A Series of Unfortunate Events. To be fair though, YA Fantasy is still my favourite genre. A few years ago I read Kai Meyer's Dark Reflections and Wave Walkers trilogies as well as Un Lun Dun and the Percy Jackson books.

I've been meaning to start His Dark Materials but, alas, college has taken away much of my free time.
 
Among Goosebumps, Animorphs, Hardy Boys, Huckleberry Finn/Tom Sawyer, I got hooked on Beezus and Ramona books, spinning off into Henry Huggins and Ribsy, etc.

I barely remember them now.

After that the library became a Calvin & Hobbes repository

Fuck yes, but you have it wrong. Henry Huggins was Cleary's first series. Beezus was the girl next door that flirted with her and had an annoying sister. Kids liked Ramona so much she became the star of the next series and in fact, Cleary basically retired Henry because Ramona outsold Henry.

I was the only boy I knew (tons of girls though) that read them all. My grandmother even bought me this huge box set of each series. Glad I wasn't the only male to read them. ha

Let me see if I can find the collection I had:

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I still remember quite a few events from them.


The fuck? Goosebumps? Animorphs? Those aren't YA novels. Those are fucking KIDS novels. Lawl.

I think we're assuming YA is basically any book from our childhood that wasn't all pictures. Which I approve of, because this isn't really the thread to argue the literary merits of Are You There God? It's Me Margaret vs. Ender's Game vs. V.C. Andrews. haha
 
Yes, yes... which reminds me I have to post these as well:

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If I had to go back, there's so much I would do differently. I would definitely read these.

I was such a "judge a book by the cover" guy. If it didn't have a nice cover, even if I heard people talking about how great it was, I didn't touch it.

Yeah, I sucked.
 
I was early in my freshman year in high school when I read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. It was given to me by my father, who had it passed to him from his brothers. It originated from my grandfather. Everyone signed it and stated who they were passing it on to. I still have it and will pass it along to my daughters when they are ready. I loved the book. It was the first truly complex books I ever read and understood fully. I had to read and re read entire sections of the book to understand it, but unlike Moby Dick, I loved every second of it.

114363.jpg


This is not young adult reading at all btw. It is very complicated. I just wanted to tell the whole story of my reading during that time!

My dad did the same thing. He was way into the book, taking me out on motorcycle rides (just like the book).
It's the prototypical introductory to philosophy for the young mind. His next book, "Lila", was a disaster though.
 
mac said:
The Chronicles of Prydain series. Pretty much the only fantasy I've read.

High-five.

Another YA fantasy book that I read many times is The Maze in the Heart of the Castle. It's not very well known, but it is well loved by those who have read it, as you can see from the Amazon reviews.

And I don't think anyone so far has mentioned John Christopher. As I've , I'm shocked that so many of his books are out of print given the current fad for dystopian YA novels. I'd like to especially bring attention to him because he died a few months ago to little notice. In particular, my favorite books of his, the sword of the spirits trilogy, are out of print, though easy to find used.

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The fuck? Goosebumps? Animorphs? Those aren't YA novels. Those are fucking KIDS novels. Lawl.

Animorphs had some pretty mature themes to be considered kids novels. Genocide, suicide, murder in the name of saving the planet.

I kinda wish that franchise would have taken off similar to harry potter. The material is really good and a modern take on kids that can change into animals fighting a global/galactic war would sell millions.
 
A memory of this book hit me two weeks ago.

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It was probably the deepest book I read to that point and to think it came from Beverly Cleary. I recall her Henry Huggins and Ramona books being fun little adventures but this was maybe the first book where I realized that other people have self-doubt and internal conflict.
 
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