The covers of most of my old "Sweet Valley High" books have been torn off. Not because they were stripped and resold, but because this 31-year-old grown woman was ashamed to be seen reading them on the subway. But no more! The hotly anticipated release of "Mockingjay," the third installment in the "Hunger Games" trilogy, proved once again that it's more than just teenagers lining up to scarf down Young Adult lit, so why are women so ashamed to read it in public? And why are we drawn to it in the first place?
I threw myself whole hog into Hogwarts, reading every J.K. Rowling book voraciously and going so far as to become a fan of the band Harry and the Potters. I even have one of their T-shirts, emblazoned with "Voldemort can't stop the rock!" and I wear it often. I loved Harry Potter because when it came out in 1997, my life was just starting to get complicated, and over that period of 10 years, I went through several huge cross-country moves, relationships (failed and successful), job changes, family struggles, car insurance snafus, etc. Somehow, grown-up challenges are both complex and boring at the same time, but Harry's mission remained clear: Stop the bad guy.
To be a woman is to be a relentless analyzer, Terminator-like in our ability to size up any situation in the blink of an eye. We can admire another woman's dress from the treadmill before figuring out which congressman we're voting for and after coming to a decision that we should be spending more time with the dog and less with the random guy we're dating. We think deeply, we feel deeply, we live deeply, and those qualities are often draining.
Young Adult lit is escapist, but beyond that, for women who constantly evaluate every situation from all angles and lament that none of their choices seem clear-cut, a good old-fashioned black-and-white struggle is soothing. Our lives are adult literature, so why on Earth would we want to entertain ourselves with adult literature? The language in Y.A. lit is clear and unfussy, the relationships are teenager-complicated (how I wish I could return to that level of messiness), and the dilemmas are epic and yet totally something an empowered woman such as yourself could handle. Doesn't that sound awesome?
Men have been doing this for years by way of graphic novels, which are as escapist as they come, and they feel free to read them pretty much everywhere. The man-child geek-pride movement, while adorable, has given the go-ahead for men to stay boys forever, and yet we're supposed to feel even slightly ashamed for reading an actual novel without pictures? I don't think so.
I've never read the "Hunger Games" trilogy or the "Twilight" series, but I will defend to the death your right to read them in public without shame. I understand that it's the one time a day that you stop thinking about your career / activism / relationships / hem length, so whip those books out, ladies! We have enough on our minds without also giving a second thought that our intelligence is being judged by the literature we read.
I might still hide my "Sweet Valley" books though. Those are embarrassing on too many levels.
Emily Gordon is a Lemondrop contributor, blogger and journalist who lives in Los Angeles.













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Monday 30 August
By red
I think the only manga that I read that was geared toward teens and adults was Yugioh. Believe it or not, the original entire manga series was very good compared to the cartoon. It was darker, more violent, more down to Earth, and it was more about the characters than the card game. I also love comic books and have read them for years. I think DC's Lobo was the best. Also Ambush Bug which was more of a comedy. I was an avid collector of the original Teen Titans series, not the crap that they are pushing now.
The adult books are not the best written sometimes. I have read the V.C. Andrews original novels like Flowers in the Attic and the prequel to it which was very good and very intriguing, but the subsequent novels that were never finished and were ghost written were awful. They read like bad fanfiction.
Ann Rice is good though! I would take the time out to read her vampire novels. God knows they are better than Twilight!
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Monday 30 August
By Sally
I'm a 60-year-old grandmother who started reading YA lit 5 years ago when I became my grandkids' homeschool reading/literature teacher. I have discovered some of the most wonderful authors and intriguing stories. I particularly enjoy the ones with strong moral dilemmas which lead to fascinating book discussions with my grandkids. The two I've read lately I LOVE are The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer and Unwind by Neil Schusterman! Both are very unique stories very well told!
I'm not into Nancy Drew or Sweet Valley High...and my grandkids aren't into quite that much "fluff" either.
As for hiding the covers of books I'm reading...@@...I couldn't care less what other people think when they notice what I'm reading. Perhaps one of the joys of being 60 is being beyond worrying about other people's judgments.
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Monday 30 August
By Barbara
I read any sort of literature that will tell me a wonderful story. The last book I read was a time travel story for grammar school children. I am currently re-reading Anna Karinina. Who know what will be on my list after that? I do sometimes feel guilty about taking the children's literature out of the library since there maybe some youngster who wants to read the story. So I will try to read them quickly and get them back within an afternoon.
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Monday 30 August
By Nancy
I'm 55 and my sister is less than that. Every now and then we go back to read an old Trixie Belden book. I am slowly buying them all from ebay. When all is just too crazy and I am starting to lose it, I just pick one of these up. They were written intelligently and simply. Before I know it, I'm calm and enjoying myself.
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Monday 30 August
By retired and lovin' it
I am a 59 y.o. retired first grade teacher. Be sure to read the "Twilight" series. I promise you won't be disappointed. I have also read the "Harry Potter," the "Pendragon," the "Immortal Nicholas Flamel," the "Charlie Bone," and "The Last Apprentice" series, among others and find they are stress-relivers. I gladly share my books with my grandson's teenage friends who show an interest in them. I proudly read them wherever I am and if anyone has a problem with it, I tell them to try it sometime. They might get a more tolerant attitude.
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Monday 30 August
By Tinker
I confess I sometimes feel a little odd when I'm perusing new books in the YA section of the Library, but I will read anything that looks good, even in the kids section. J.K. Rowling freed a lot adults to read as they choose, so I've read both the Twilight and the Hunger Games series. I've also read the Artemis Fowl series, Maggie Stiefvater, Melissa Marr, Holly Black and on an on.
I would, however, gratefully trade them all for one more Harry Potter . . .
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Monday 30 August
By lil
i'm in my 60's and I do not fear the book police. i read what i want and what my kids and grandkids like. We have a book club and read, initial, and pass books back and forth. i cannot help but notice a writer whose story will be there a century from now due to the way words play with one another. Clive Barker conjures great dreams with his reads, and Funke is an adept at description and taking the reader from viewing the pages and having us fall into the story. My favorite reading spot is in the bath and i find that the kids get all their class reading assignments done with enjoyment -in the bath. i've read practically everything the grandkids have so that we can discuss them. personally, i missed when they grew out of Ramona.
I think we've purchased in the night kitchen and Where the Wild Things Are at least 10 times. We have our own library at the house. in the winter it keeps out the cold and insulates the walls, and in the summer it keeps the house cooler. Childrren's books, tween and teen books dominate my walls because i enjoy them and these kids of ours do as well. The point is, a good story is ageless. just because it is written about a child, does not mean that it will not be enjoyed by any other age. The point is reading and discussing and sharing likes with others.Look at Carrol, Dickens, does anyone care that it is written about kids? I think not.
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Monday 30 August
By Beej
I'm so glad I came across this article! I used to read RL Stine books as a teenager and recently began dusting off my collection & reading them again at age 28. I felt weird about it but it's nice to know I have company!
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Monday 30 August
By Lil
i started thinking about this. it isn't just women that read these things. men do as well. A good book, is a good book is a good book. My husband is reading one of CS lewis's books currently and my son in law has his copies of Dragon books and Potter series as well do we. Words well written invoke such vivid imagry that we all fall in to a good read.
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Monday 30 August
By susan
Isaac Asimov said "children" novels should not be written down to kids, they should be accessible to ALL audiences! C.S. Lewis understood this, J.K. Rowling understands this, Judy Blume gets it. Asimov himself writing as Paul French got it. The problem is, so many writers of childrens and YA books don't get it!
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Monday 30 August
By C
Tami, Actually, I have 16 twin daughters that love Harry Potter. You obviously have NO sense of fun or adventure. I pray YOU do not have children.
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Monday 30 August
By Lisa Gibson
I have a whole blog dedicated to YA lit. I write in that genre, so I read extensively in it as well. I think the YA market today has wonderful writers and the books provide a wonderful escape as well.
Lisa ~ YA Literature Lover
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Monday 30 August
By Kari
I just finished the 3rd book in the Hunger Games trilogy today! My 13 year old was assigned book 1 as summer reading and couldn't stop talking about it. So I picked it up and polished it off in 2 days (another benefit of YA - quick reads). We were hooked so we picked up the second two. They were good reads, a little mature in theme for 8th graders I think, but I'm glad I know what she's reading & it gives us something to talk about.
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Tuesday 31 August
By FeistyGeisty
This is too true! I work in a library as a clerk and I love the YA books. Ellen Hopkins' verse poetry books are fantastic, as well as the Uglies series by Scott Westerfeld. I also enjoy the occasional children's book, because they are so sweet and pure. I'm only 21, but still. I don't mean to knock any adult authors, but I sometimes feel like adult novels try too hard to prove they're adult. They try to cram too many complex storylines into one book, or they insist on using obscure language.
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Thursday 02 September
By Lauren
I have a theory that the writing is actually BETTER in Y.A. literature (aside from the classics). Writers who get started writing because "I wanna write something famous" or "It's easier than office work" often lack the originality of someone who writes because they have an idea. Someone with an idea that has to do with young adults has the drive to take the extra step of making it appealing to a group outside their own demographic - putting themselves in teenagers' shoes.
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Sunday 05 September
By Katie
Well said and I agree with everything you said in your article!! I get asked a lot about why I read YA and run a YA book blog. You summed it up perfectly. It's not that I don't read a variety of other genres from History to fiction, fiction, parenting etc. YA is an escape from real life for a bit and I'm not ashamed to admit that I read YA and enjoy it.
As a parent, I also feel it's VERY important for me to read what my kids are reading. Not all YA books are clean cut, as they often reflect what's really going on in the world. Reading what my kids are reading allows me to discuss certain topics with them and also allows for another avenue of communication with them.
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