Mar. 11th, 2009

megwrites: Picture of books with quote from Cicero: "a room without books is like a body without a soul" (books)
Sometimes, I really wish people would label YA books on review sites or when they review them on their LJ's or what not. Especially some SF/F review sites that I'm getting fed up with.

No insult the YA genre. It's an important and vital genre of literature, and some of our greatest cultural treasures are books which are YA/children's. But sometimes? I want adult books, and I'd like to know which books are which.

Not that adult targeted books are inherently that much better. Trust me, some of the "adult" paranormal romances/urban fantasies I've thrown across the room for being lousy are proof positive of that.

I'm just a stickler for clear labeling and full disclosure. I wonder if it's a sign of shame that people on these sites won't outright denote a book as YA. It's like they believe the genre is less than adult books so they have to trick me into reading it by pretending it's an adult book.

Besides, labeling it as YA makes it easier for folks who might want to hand a good genre read to a younger reader in their life and would like to know upfront which books are appropriate and which might not be.
megwrites: Picture of books with quote from Cicero: "a room without books is like a body without a soul" (books)
Now that I have the backlog of books what need reviewing done, I can get around to reviewing each book as I finish it and do the less quick-and-dirty version of my summaries.

I borrowed this one from my father-in-law who had finished it, and I wanted to see how the things I'd read in The Curious Incident of the Dog In the Night-Time measured up against it.



Title: Born on a Blue Day: Inside the Extraordinary Mind of an Autistic Savant
Author: Daniel Tammet (Daniel Tammet Official Website)
Genre: Non-fiction
Page Count: 256 (paperback)
Publisher: Free Press

Review: Born on a Blue Day by Daniel Tammet )

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