[identity profile] micheinnz.livejournal.com 2014-06-27 03:57 am (UTC)(link)
Reading that people actually do rather than reading that the educated elite think they should do: threat or menace?
(deleted comment) (Show 1 comment)

[identity profile] dragoness-e.livejournal.com 2014-06-27 04:54 am (UTC)(link)
Let's see, some would-be intellectual is portentously deploring how the hoi polloi are reading something besides tedious, navel-gazing "literary" fiction. They pop up and opine the usual nonsense whenever something is wildly popular that isn't mainstream or literary fiction. If it isn't YA they are complaining about, it's romance or sci-fi or fantasy or westerns or thrillers or any other genre fiction.

*Yawn*

Obviously, someone has column inches to pad out and nothing important to write about, so they ran this.

[identity profile] raycun.livejournal.com 2014-06-27 08:01 am (UTC)(link)
Its amusing that they lead the story by talking about how 'Fault in Our Stars' was more successful at the box office than the grown-up Tom Cruise movie. That movie being 'Edge of Tomorrow'.

[identity profile] supergee.livejournal.com 2014-06-27 09:30 am (UTC)(link)
"When I became a man, I put away childish things, including the fear of childishness and the desire to be very grown-up."--C.S. Lewis

[identity profile] thunderflyer.livejournal.com 2014-06-27 10:05 am (UTC)(link)
The critics, instead of celebrating that reading is done for pleasure to the point that technology was invented to facilitate the passtime, are bemoaning what is being read?

I don't give a flying monkey chuckle what genre is hot right now. I am just tickled pink that reading and writing is no longer an elite occupation.

[identity profile] nathan helfinstine (from livejournal.com) 2014-06-27 11:10 am (UTC)(link)
"...let's consider The Book Thief, a YA title at first glance but also a story that deals with typically non-YA themes of mortality and the imminence of death."

Maybe I read the wrong books, but I think a preoccupation with death and mortality as the quintessential themes of a YA novel. Adult novels are about failure and self-knowledge, children's books are about adventure or achievement, novels for all ages are about interpersonal relationships. But teen novels confront births and deaths so very frequently.

[identity profile] dionysus1999.livejournal.com 2014-06-27 02:33 pm (UTC)(link)
The accusation that YA novels are more black and white than "adult" fiction is BS. Plenty of black and white morality tales aren't YA, either.