T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1143.1 | A few to start with..... | PEKING::SMITHRW | The Great Pyramid of Bloke | Wed May 19 1993 09:16 | 47 |
| James Blish
Cities in Flight series
Welcome to Mars
...and a couple more I can't remember the names of
James H Schmitz
the Telzey Amberdon stories
Anything by Poul Anderson, Asimov, Clarke - but preferably early stuff
Edgar Rice Burroughs
Anything "of" Mars, Venus
Pellucidar & At the Earth's Core
Anything by Jack Vance
Keith Laumer
A Trace of Memory
Van Vogt
Null-A, Isher, The Silkie, Planets for Sale
George O Smith
Venus Equilateral (Ace (I think) collected all the stories into one
book, but this was a lot of years ago. Might be hard to get hold of)
Doc Smith, Heinlein
Ol' Planetbuster (sorry, Edmund Hamilton)
Doomstar
The Starwolf Trilogy
Anything by Leigh Brackett
Er, I'll stop now and let someone else have a go....
Richard
|
1143.2 | some suggestions | BSS::C_OUIMETTE | Don't just do something, sit there! | Wed May 19 1993 12:40 | 23 |
| Hi Ruth,
In trying to imagine what I would have most enjoyed myself as a 10 year
old... My votes would be (in order of preference):
David Brin - Practice Effect, Startide Rising, Sundiver
Pohl's Gateway & sequels
Niven's Ringworld & Ringworld engineers
The Integral Trees, by (I think) Larry Niven, or Niven & Pournell.
Possibly Zelazny's Amber series; at least the first few, if fantasy is
enjoyed (unicorns, castles, etc)
I think all of the above are *wonderful* imagination-stimulators;
if they contain overly racy or violent scenes, my memory has purged
them.
Heinlein's fun, but perhaps a bit of a dirty old man for a 10 year
old.... I think I read Stranger in a Strange Land at about 12 or 13,
and that & my parents playing of Tom Lehrer songs have no doubt
contributed to a perverse nature.
chuck
|
1143.3 | More recommendations | VSSCAD::SIGEL | | Wed May 19 1993 13:20 | 34 |
| Re .2
> Heinlein's fun, but perhaps a bit of a dirty old man for a 10 year
> old.... I think I read Stranger in a Strange Land at about 12 or 13,
> and that & my parents playing of Tom Lehrer songs have no doubt
> contributed to a perverse nature.
So stick with the books Heinlein wrote for the younger audience. Close
to a dozen are available. There's nothing shocking about them. Titles
include BETWEEN PLANETS, CITIZEN OF THE GALAXY, HAVE SPACESUIT WILL TRAVEL,
and THE ROLLING STONES.
Re .0
I'd recommend giving Andre Norton a try, too. Thousands of people got
started with sf by reading Heinlein and Norton science fiction when they
were young; much of it is wonderful stuff.
Try your local children's library; it should have something of a selection of
children's and young adult sf and fantasy. (If it doesn't, ask pointedly
why not.) There's a lot that's good being published these days (and, one must
admit, a lot of junk). One of the best new imprints is Jane Yolen Books from
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, which does mostly fantasy; two series I recommend
from them are the "Enchanted Forest Chronicles" by Patricia C. Wrede: DEALING
WITH DRAGONS, SEARCHING FOR DRAGONS, and (just released) CALLING ON DRAGONS; and
the Magic Shop books by Bruce Coville: JEREMY THATCHER DRAGON HATCHER, and
JENNIFER MURDLEY'S TOAD. (Coville is probably better known for his series of
children's science fiction novels that started with MY TEACHER IS AN ALIEN.)
Two other fantasy authors I highly recommend are Diana Wynne Jones (a wide
variety of novels), and Diane Duane (the series SO YOU WANT TO BE A WIZARD?,
DEEP WIZARDRY, and HIGH WIZARDRY).
-- Andrew
|
1143.4 | I read some of these at 10 | HYLNDR::TRUMPLER | Help prevent truth decay. | Wed May 19 1993 14:01 | 27 |
|
Ursula LeGuin (anything, probably, but especially the EarthSea Trilogy)
C.S. Lewis, Chronicles of Narnia
Madeleine L'Engle (quite a few books Not Just For Children)
Jane Yolen (lots)
Sheri Tepper (the King's Game(?)/Maven/Jinian books)
Robert Asprin, Myth books (the earlier, the better, mostly)
second all of these:
early Heinlein (but I liked SiaSL when I was a teenager ;-)
Asimov (especially the seminal robot stories, and Foundation)
Brin (unless my memory's been purged too)
Niven (mostly OK too)
Pohl's Gateway etc are good, but I remember some not-too-graphic sex
David Palmer, Emergence
Also possibly interesting: Elfquest (the graphic novels by Wendy and
Richard Pini) There is violence, and there is sex (visually always R),
but *none* of either is remotely gratuitous. (So if you do let her at
it, be prepared.)
I'd also like to anti-recommend Piers Anthony (because he's too rich
already, and he keeps rewriting the same book), but she might like the
Xanth books. I liked the early ones once.
All MHO, of course.
Mark
|
1143.5 | | TINCUP::XAIPE::KOLBE | The Goddess in Chains | Wed May 19 1993 16:14 | 11 |
| Hi Ruth, I loved the Darkover series. Forbidden Tower is the only one that may
be a little too explict for her. But then, I read Tropic of Cancer as a 12 year
old so my idea of acceptable may differ from yours.
As a kid I loved the anthologies. I think they still collect the best stories of
the year and publish them together. I used to get mine from the library. A fresh
stock each week. Also, try Poor Richard's for used SF. They have a large
selection.
The Asimov robot short stories are great. And my nephew absolutely loves Terry
Prachet (sp?) They are full of puns and jokes that kids love. liesl
|
1143.6 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed May 19 1993 16:49 | 8 |
| Anne McCaffrey's books might do; the Pern series, "The Ship Who Sang,"
sundry short-story collections. [The Harper Hall series of Pern books
is, I believe, aimed towards younger readers, and might be a good place
to start.] These are generally closer to fantasy than science fiction,
but if she's starting with "The Hobbit" I don't think that'll bother
her much. ;-)
-b
|
1143.7 | Witches of Karres | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Thu May 20 1993 11:02 | 5 |
| .1 mentioned Schmitz's Telzy stories. To this I would add his "Witches
of Karres," if you can find it. The heroine is a psionically trained
girl slightly older than 10; the hero is a spaceship pilot.
Earl Wajenberg
|
1143.8 | | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Thu May 20 1993 11:26 | 3 |
|
Did Patricia K. McKillip to "the riddle master of hed" series? I liked
those.
|
1143.9 | | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, Engineering Technical Office | Thu May 20 1993 11:43 | 5 |
| I recall "King David's Spaceship" as possibly being of interest to
young readers.
len.
|
1143.10 | Tom Swift jr and * | AIMT::PETERS | Be nice or be dog food | Thu May 20 1993 12:19 | 3 |
| There is a series of book "Tom Swift Jr" I will have to find the author
it is a science fiction version of Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew.
Jeff Peters
|
1143.11 | McKillip | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Thu May 20 1993 14:17 | 12 |
| Re .8:
Yes, McKillip wrote "The Riddle of the Stars" trilogy, composed of:
The Riddlemaster of Hed
Heir of Sea and Fire
A Harpist in the Wind
She also wrote "The Forgotten Beasts of Eld" and "The Changeling Sea,"
very much in the same vein of fantasy, if not in the very same world.
Also others that do not come to my mind at the moment.
Earl Wajenberg
|
1143.12 | | CHUCK::OTOOLE | I never drive faster than I can see | Thu May 20 1993 15:45 | 11 |
| I'd like to second the suggestion of Heinlein's juvenile series (RED PLANET,
TUNNEL IN THE SKY, THE ROLLING STONES, ...) over his more adult fare (STRANGER
IN A STRANGE LAND, THE NUMBER OF THE BEAST). In many of his juvenile books,
the protagonist is a young teen and the story is either told from their point
of view or they play a pivotal role.
Anne McCaffrey's DECISION AT DOONA also focuses on the youngsters showing the
way for the adults.
Wholesome (but not bland) storytelling, kind of like THE LITTLE HOUSE ON THE
(ALIEN) PRAIRIE
|
1143.13 | | KERNEL::JACKSON | Peter Jackson - UK CSC TP/IM | Thu May 20 1993 15:49 | 11 |
| The Narnia books would be my first recommendation.
I didn't start reading SF until I was about 11, but James Blish
(Welcome to Mars, Cities in Flight), Heinlein (Citizen of the Galaxy),
and Asimov (Robot and Foundation stories) where among my early
favourites. Others not prevously mentioned include John Wyndham
(anything) and the first three Dr. Who books (Daleks, Zarbi,
Crusaders).
Peter
|
1143.14 | And they're still enjoyable for adults | RAGS::GINGRAS | | Thu May 20 1993 16:47 | 7 |
| I'd like to recommend Jules Verne (20,000 Leagues, The Mysterious
Island) and H.G.Wells (Time Machine, War of the Worlds).
Those books are great stories and the content doesn't require
college degrees in sociology, political science, or physics.
I read them when I was in the 12-13 year-old range.
_Marty
|
1143.15 | Lloydd Alexander!!!! | ABACUS::PRIESTLEY | | Thu May 20 1993 17:21 | 36 |
| Has everyone forgotten about Lloyd Alexander and his remarkable books
founded in Welsh Mythology? Some of the names I recall are The Black
Cauldron, Taran Wanderer. The Chief character of the books is a
boy/man named Taran who begins as an assistant pig keeper to a
prophetic pig named Hen-Wen. He serves in the household of a crochety
old wizard, and a balding, aging senior pig-keeper and retired hero
named Col. Taran is infatuated with the young lady who serves as the
household scullery-maid but who is immensely noble both of birth and
character. Other important and highly entertaining characters are
Gurgi, a sort of aboriginal type witha heart of pure platinum,
Fflewfyddr Fflam, a wandering bard, the truth of whose tales concerning
himself is questionable to the point that his teacher made a gift to
him of a harp that breaks strings when he stretches the truth. FFlam
is also graced/cursed with the familiarity of a huge fluffy cat that
fell in love with his music and won't leave him alone. Above all is
the hero Gwydion, who bears the black sword Drynnwyn and who is
dedicated to a never ending battle with Arawn-Death-lord and his
legions of deathless warriors reborn in the Cauldron of Rebirth. These
stories are about people trying to grow and rise above their birth and
station in a world filled with perils. I have not read these books in
a very long time, but I remember them well and recommend them highly to
young people for whom they were written. These are award winning books
that should be available at the local library and are also a lovely
introduction into the world of Celtic mythology, legend and culture.
If your daughter loves these then, when she gets older, you might think
to introduce her to the books of Patricia Kenneally, although these
last have much more adult themes.
The Lord of the Rings may be a little difficult for your daughter at
this time, but could be good in the near future. I was not ready for it
until I was eleven or twelve, but after than I ate it up on a yearly
basis.
Good reading,
Andrew
|
1143.16 | be ye of noble worth | VICKI::MERRILL | Brad Merrill RTR SWE | Thu May 20 1993 18:39 | 6 |
|
First book, is "The Book of Three"
/Brad
|
1143.17 | Quality, not quantity | PEKING::SMITHRW | The Great Pyramid of Bloke | Fri May 21 1993 05:29 | 10 |
| Can I say that I would recommend *thin* books? These would usually
tend to be older and better written. An older, thinner book will have
as much story and plot and excitement without wading through so much
filler. It won't, however, keep doors open...
Needless to say, all generalizations are suspect, including this one
(especially this one).
Richard
|
1143.18 | Miss Pickerel goes to the Moon | BASEX::GEOFFREY | Don't trust Mr.Magoo | Fri May 21 1993 10:22 | 8 |
|
I seem to recall reading some books about a little old lady called
Mrs. or Miss Pickerel (sp?) does this or goes here or there. I believe
one of the books was called Miss Pickerel goes to the Moon, and another
called Miss Pickerel goes to Mars. I can't remember if I was 10 years
old or younger but I do remember I liked them.
Jim
|
1143.19 | Prydain | DRUMS::FEHSKENS | len, Engineering Technical Office | Fri May 21 1993 11:56 | 13 |
| re .15 - The series is called the Prydain Chronicles and comprises
five volumes.
I heard talk of The Black Cauldron being done as a Disney animation,
but haven't seen or heard of any actual completion. Anybody know
anything about this?
Anyway, highly recommended, though not really "science fiction". In
the same (Welsh) vein, Evangeline Walton's trilogy is also highly
recommended.
len.
|
1143.20 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Fri May 21 1993 13:24 | 17 |
| Len,
Yes, "The Black Cauldron" was done as a Disney animation; it was
faithless to the book and hence awful.
I second the comments for the Heinlein juveniles (including _Rite_of_
_Passage_ by Alexei Panshin), just-about-anything by Andre Norton
(I especially remember _Witch_World_, _The_Time_Traders_, and
_Daybreak:_2245_ [The city is Cleveland.]), Diana Wynne Jones (try
_Howl's_Moving_Castle_), Anne McCaffrey (especially the Harper Hall
books) and I'll add Robin McKinley's _The_Hero_and_the_Crown_, and
_The_Blue_Sword_.
It's very hard to find good books for young girls; so many of the
best stories have a boy as a protagonist.
Ann B.
|
1143.21 | Mrs. Pickerel & Danny Dunn | ESGWST::MIRASSOU | | Fri May 21 1993 14:45 | 17 |
| RE: Mrs. Pickerel (I'm not sure on the spelling either).
There was a whole series of books about her adventures: goes to the
Moon, goes to Mars, Mrs. Pickerel & the Geiger Counter. Some of these
books may still be at my parents, I'll see if I can find out the
name of the author.
There was also a series of books about Danny Dunn, who I think was
right around junior high school age. He also got involved with various
science related topics (DD & the homework machine, DD & the
anti-gravity paint, DD & the message from space). I'll check out the
author of that series, too. I vaguely recall there is another note
in this conference that mentions that series.
I enjoyed reading both series when I was a kid.
John
|
1143.22 | "Eva" has a female lead | TLE::JBISHOP | | Fri May 21 1993 15:02 | 6 |
| Peter Dickenson does good fantasy-with-bits-of-science for young
adults as well as creepy mysteries for adults.
"The Blue Hawk" is my favorite of his juveniles.
-John Bishop
|
1143.23 | Evangeline and Blossom | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Fri May 21 1993 17:38 | 33 |
| Re .19:
I think Evangeline Walton's series is a tetralogy, at least if it's the
one I'm thinking of, to wit:
Prince of Annwn
Children of Llyr
Rhiannon's Song (or Song of Rhiannon?)
Island of the Mighty
These are based on the Four Branches of the Mabinogion, a cycle of
Welsh mythology. Walton de-Christianizes it and extrapolates backward
to a Pictish/Celtic Wales with plenty of magic and plenty of sex, which
might be of some concern to a parent selecting reading for a child.
The sex is not very explicit, but it is also very hard to ignore.
Re .20, female child protagonists:
I dunno, I can rattle off a fair number of good fantasies with girl
protagonists. One who should not be neglected is Blossom Culp,
a 12-year-old psychic in Illinois of 1912. She is the creation of
Richard Peck and appears in:
The Ghost Belonged to Me (where she is only a supporting role)
Ghosts I Have Been
The Dreadful Future of Blossom Culp
Blossom Culp and the Mummy's Curse (I think)
Blossom is the protagonist and narrator of the last three, having
clearly taken over the series from Alexander Armsworth, the narrator of
the first book.
Earl Wajenberg
|
1143.24 | | PEKING::SMITHRW | The Great Pyramid of Bloke | Mon May 24 1993 09:27 | 27 |
| Female (young) heroines (excuse the tautology)
Chris Claremont
First Flight
Grounded
Mercedes Lackey
Arrows of the Queen
Arrows Flight
Melissa Scott (? - can't remember/something like)
Five Twelths of Heaven
Silence in Solitude
Empress of Earth
Also - if you can find them (and if I've remembered half-accurately) -
somebody Foster
The Game Players of Xan
The Children of Lir
Richard
|
1143.25 | two more suggestions | SCHOOL::BOBBITT | an insurmountable opportunity? | Mon May 24 1993 16:27 | 5 |
|
Madeleine L'Engle's "A wrinkle in time" and "a wind in the door"....
-Jody
|
1143.26 | Heinlein heroine | CAIMAN::MAY | Nick May | Tue May 25 1993 05:07 | 3 |
| What about "Podkayne of Mars", by Robert Heinlein?
Nick.
|
1143.27 | I almost forgot these... | HYLNDR::TRUMPLER | Help prevent truth decay. | Tue May 25 1993 10:40 | 1 |
| The "Mushroom Planet" books by, I think, Eleanor Cameron.
|
1143.28 | KEMLO Series? | WARNUT::BIDDULPHM | | Wed May 26 1993 08:23 | 11 |
| Does anyone remember the KEMLO (spelling?) series of books?
I read them when I was around 9 or 10 years old.
The stories were based around children born on space stations.
Each child had a name that started with the registration letter
of the space station they lived on, e.g. "K"
regards,
Mike B.
|
1143.29 | | PEKING::SMITHRW | The Great Pyramid of Bloke | Fri May 28 1993 07:15 | 11 |
| Correction to .24:
M A Foster
The Game Players of Zan
The Warriors of Dawn
These are both terrific books. I can't recommend them too highly.
Richard
|
1143.30 | I have a ten year old too.. | STIKNY::GUENTHER | | Fri May 28 1993 07:33 | 26 |
|
re: .0
My ten year old daughter is a Star Wars fanatic, so she chose and read
the Timothy Zahn Star Wars series "heir to the Empire" etc.
She alos enjoyed Terry Pratchett's Equal Rites. I'm noth sure about
the rest though. I may let her read others after review.
She also loves the ElfQuest series, but that's more pictures than
reading.
I thought she might like Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper and Piers
Anthony's Xanth series, but she hasn't tried them yet.
I would not recommend the Tom Swift series though. And I'd use some
caution on the Mars series by Burroughs. ne of the later books in the
series is a bit weird as I recall, and Master Mind is questionable too.
On more book, though not SF, that see like was the Thinking Machine,
but I don't have the author handy.
Please let us know what you find, as I certainly share your interest.
thanks, /alan
|
1143.31 | | PEKING::SMITHRW | The Great Pyramid of Bloke | Thu Jun 03 1993 09:03 | 12 |
| Not strictly sci-fi, but worth reading:
Mary Stewart's retelling of the Arthurian legend
The Crystal Cave
The Hollow Hills
The Last Enchantment
...a lot better written than most mainstream fantasy as well.
Richard
|
1143.32 | I really liked the first three -- haven't read the fourth | VMSMKT::KENAH | Escapes,Lies,Truth,Passion,Miracles | Thu Jun 03 1993 17:09 | 7 |
| The first three books of Stewart's retelling follow the Arthurian
Legend from the point of view of Merlin, rather than Arthur.
There is a fourth volume that focuses (I believe) on Mordred.
Naturally, I've forgotten its title.
andrew
|
1143.33 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Jun 03 1993 23:36 | 4 |
| For someone who's still exploring, short story collections are good.
Of course, they tend to be collected by author, but most authors have a
fair bit of range. Asimov, Zelazny, Clarke, Herbert -- I've got them
all on my bookshelves.
|
1143.34 | "The Wicked Day" | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jun 04 1993 10:33 | 5 |
| Re .32:
The name of Stewart's Mordred book is "The Wicked Day."
Earl Wajenberg
|
1143.35 | collections a good bet... | XLSIOR::OTTE | | Fri Jun 04 1993 10:58 | 6 |
| Re Chelsea's idea of short story collections, I remember running though
tons of these as a pre-teen--especially the Analog collections.
This way if they find a short story they really like, they can then go
zero in on the author and try one of their novels...
-randy
|
1143.36 | ERB's Mars books... | STIKNY::GUENTHER | | Sun Jun 06 1993 10:35 | 22 |
| re: .0
Someone earlier recommended the Mars series by Burroughs, and I've
looked over "A Princess of Mars" again. So far so good, or better.
The use of English in it is fantastic. The vocabulary is much more
extensive than most of the current books I've read lately ( books by
Brin excepted ). For example -
Very early in the book, John Carter is being persued by Apaches,
who are shooting and shouting at him... " The fact that it is
difficult to aim anything but imprications acccurately by moonlight ...
saved me ... ."
Other, randomly chosen words - phenomena, pilloried, privations,
unshod, fetich, debouched ( came out upon ), promontory, resusciation,
reconnoiter, pungent, faculties,wraith, cariatures, intermediary,
accouterments.
So far, I'd recommend "A Princess of Mars" from bot the aspect of a
good story and great use of english.
/alan
|
1143.37 | | PEKING::SMITHRW | The Great Pyramid of Bloke | Mon Jun 07 1993 04:52 | 6 |
| Uhh, if the spelling is *that* bad..... 8*)
Must have a quick re-read - it's been years.....
Richard
|
1143.38 | wonderful stuff | DDIF::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:10 | 17 |
|
Not sure they can be classed as SF, but there are several historical
fiction books by L. Sprague de Camp I'd like to recommend. Most of the
are about various Mediterranean civilizations in the first millenium
BC.
The one that sticks in my mind is "An Elephant for Aristotle."
Leonidas is an NCO in Alexander's army in India (at about the
high-water mark of Alexander's conquest). He is given the task of
taking an elephant to Alexander's former tutor back in Greece (some
2000 miles over very rough/uncivilized country).
There were several others whose titles escape me and I don't think I
ever saw an exhaustive list. I'd sure love to get the complete set.
JP
|
1143.39 | | DDIF::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:11 | 5 |
|
I meant to add that these books were written for about the same
audience as Heinlein juveniles.
JP
|
1143.40 | Two more historical titles by de Camp | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Wed Jun 09 1993 10:30 | 7 |
| Re .38:
Besides "An Elephant for Aristotle," de Camp's historical fiction
includes "The Arrows of Hercules" and "The Golden Wind." There's at
least one more but I can't recall its title.
Earl Wajenberg
|
1143.41 | Not just for kids | TLE::JBISHOP | | Wed Jun 09 1993 12:38 | 5 |
| There's also one about building the Colossus at Rhodes, which
I have but don't remember the title of.
Highly recommended!
-John Bishop
|
1143.42 | Norton's books are action-filled, young-adult fantasies | RAGS::GINGRAS | | Wed Jun 09 1993 14:17 | 10 |
| Someone already mentioned Andre Norton's books, but I remember
two of the titles I read at 11-12 years old:
Galactic Derelict
Cats Eye
The things I liked best back then about Norton's books were that
the protagonists often had animals with whom they could communicate.
This mysterious ability fascinated me.
I read more of her books (The Time Traders, Year of the Unicorn)
as a freshman in high school.
|
1143.43 | The Bronze God of Rhodes | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Jun 09 1993 14:17 | 0 |
1143.44 | lucky starr and the...... | OBSESS::GRIFFITH | no matter where you go, there you are | Thu Jun 10 1993 13:22 | 6 |
| jeez, i must be getting old, but for great old fashioned star wars pulp, how
can you leave out asimov's lucky star novels? lot's of action, mystery, and
great science with a hunky hero. written under pseudonym of paul french. first
sf i ever read, and to my pre-teenage memory, the best.
kirby
|
1143.45 | Lucky Starr reissues | VSSCAD::SIGEL | | Thu Jun 17 1993 13:23 | 9 |
| Re .44
The Lucky Starr novels by Asimov have just been rereleased in three paperback
volumes, each volume containing two novels, by Bantam Spectra. They can be
found in the sf section. These reissues are credited to Asimov, not to the
Paul French pseudonym he originally used. (The pseudonym may be acknowledged
in small print on the front covers, but the books will be filed under Asimov.)
-- Andrew
|
1143.46 | ONE MORE TO THE LIST OR MAYBE TWO | JUPITR::TVALCOURT | Thats YOUR wife?!?!?! | Thu Jun 17 1993 23:13 | 16 |
| well hello!!
it seems you recieved a large resonse well here's my 2 cents:
Piers Anthony Xanth series(alto someone commented on this about the
author having to much money. well just let
that show you that his work is enjoyed by
lots and is good reading!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)
Ann Mcaferty(spelling is probailty incorrect as my spelling leaves much
to be desired.)
well any way the Dragon Rides of Pern series (VERY GOOD!)
ENJOY TRAVIS
|
1143.47 | Beastmaster by Norton | WR1FOR::SHORT_NI | | Fri Jun 18 1993 16:47 | 22 |
| >>I'd like to collect some recommendations for science fiction books
>>for a very bright ten-year old girl. She has already read _The_Hobbit_
>>and reads at a high school level.
I would certainly recommend Andre Norton's early works. They were a
favorite of mine in my early teens. She has a flowing style and
incorporates children as main characters, some of her stuff borders on
Fantasy while other stories are pure SF.
BTW, Beastmaster (yes, the movie was "based" [however lightly] on this
story) is a good read. The story is fun and the animal interaction with
the main character will keep a young readers interest.
I'm 33 and I still pick up a few of her books now and again even though
I don't consider her stories "adult", I like the way she keeps a reader
interested in the story line.
There were a couple of books whos storyline I remeber very well, but
I cannot remember the titles. I would suggest looking in used
bookstores, it is unlikely that much of her work 15-20 years ago is in
reprint. Some of the more notable works were not big sellers.
|
1143.48 | The other de Camp | BIGRED::PARKER | Mike Parker in Houston | Fri Jun 18 1993 19:15 | 4 |
| Re: .40
"The Dragon of the Ishtar Gate" - good read about a search for the
source of the Nile in the time of pre-Alexander Persia.
|
1143.49 | TLOTR | RUMOR::WOOKPC::lee | Wook, like "Book" with a "W" | Fri Sep 03 1993 17:48 | 5 |
| My goodness, if she's read _The Hobbit_, then she's got to read _The Lord of
the Rings_ trilogy! Get her a boxed paperback set. Get her a copy of _The
Silmarillion_ while you're at it.
Wook
|
1143.50 | a few more you should pass up... | MKOTS1::STEVENSON_T | | Wed Oct 20 1993 12:32 | 18 |
| If you're still looking (and who isn't on a never-ending quest for good
books, sf or otherwise!) I would HIGHLY recommend the 5-book series
"The Dark is Rising" by Susan Cooper. I still go back and read
these!!!
1) Over Sea, Under Stone
2) The Dark is Rising
3) Greenwitch
4) The Grey King
5) Silver on the Tree
An excellent story of the earthly battle of supernatural forces, the
LIght and the Dark. Ties in with ancient English myth, Welsh myth, and
King Arthur. I can almost guarantee she will love these books!
Regards,
Tricia
|
1143.51 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Wed Oct 20 1993 13:02 | 1 |
| The Grey King won either a Newberry or a Caldecott. I liked them all.
|
1143.52 | | OKFINE::KENAH | I���-) (���) {��^} {^�^} {���} /��\ | Wed Oct 20 1993 13:58 | 3 |
| Would a 42-year-old (with the heart of a 10-year-old) like 'em too?
andrew
|
1143.53 | re .52 | MKOTS1::STEVENSON_T | | Wed Oct 20 1993 16:19 | 11 |
| I would place my bets on a sure "yes"! The characters are vivid and
very realistic. As a child, I would often imagine "what if this were
real and I was a part of it..." I'm 27 and and love them as much,
(more?) than ever.
Regards,
Tricia
p.s. Book 2 and Book 4 both wn Newbury Awards.
|
1143.54 | Newbery Awards | VSSCAD::SIGEL | | Wed Oct 20 1993 18:17 | 13 |
| Re .53
> p.s. Book 2 and Book 4 both wn Newbury Awards.
THE DARK IS RISING was a Newbery Honor Book.
THE GREY KING won the Newbery Medal.
I thought this was an excellent series, up to but not including
the last few pages of the fifth book. At that point, I had to
suppress a desire to hurl SILVER ON THE TREE against a wall.
Your mileage may vary.
-- Andrew
|
1143.55 | Rather emphatically stated, .54... | MKOTS1::STEVENSON_T | | Thu Oct 21 1993 15:45 | 10 |
| Andrew-
Wherefore comes your displeasure with the final pages? The whole
ending in general? Sorry it ended? Bran's decision? The "amnesia" of
those from the Track?
Please elucidate, I'm curious.
Tricia
|
1143.56 | | OKFINE::KENAH | I���-) (���) {��^} {^�^} {���} /��\ | Thu Oct 21 1993 16:47 | 4 |
| And please, try not to spoil the entire five books for those of us who
haven't yet read them!
andrew
|
1143.57 | "Amnesia" is a poor decision | VSSCAD::SIGEL | | Fri Nov 05 1993 12:37 | 19 |
| Tricia,
The "amnesia" is the primary source of my displeasure. It vitiates
Bran's decision and the reasons he made it, and effectively destroys
a great deal of growth on the part of the children over the course of
the books. (I didn't mind at all Merriman's eventual fate or that
of his companions.)
Unfortunately, the Light is shown to be ultimately as manipulative
and uncaring as its counterparts, which is effectively saying that
the ends justify the means. I don't like the message, and I don't
like the "amnesia" -- the latter even more because it's so damn
unnecessary, and both are so wrong. (Although it is a potent warning
that "good" isn't always so.)
Sorry for the delay in posting; I haven't been in this notesfile
for a couple of weeks.
-- Andrew
|
1143.58 | | CUPMK::WAJENBERG | | Fri Nov 05 1993 13:05 | 6 |
| Re .57:
Seconded, and thank you for putting into words what I had only
obscurely felt before. It gives the whole series a very poor ending.
Earl Wajenberg
|