I suppose I could have a little look when she has finished with it.
I'm reading Madeleine Albright's 'Prague Winter' A story of remembrance from her childhood in Prague during WWII.It is good so far.
(I read really fast, and need to read for at least an hour if I expect to be able to sleep, so I chew through them quickly.)
Well in Nottingham UK 50 shades of Grey is flying off the shelves. Every man and his dog are reading it. My daughter managed to get two of the books, apparently it is a trilogy. She says you can not put it down. I suppose I could have a little look when she has finished with it.
I'll admit it. I'm reading the first 50 Shades of Grey book. I'm 36% through it (can you tell I'm reading it on my Kindle?) and I'm still undecided if I like it or not. It is VERY poorly written, cliche after cliche among other things, but... I continue to read,,,
My youngest daughter is an English teacher at an all girl's catholic high school and she has recently become aware a number of her senior students are reading " 50 Shades of Grey " . She bought herself a copy to see what all the fuss was about and found it very disturbing on a number of levels , mainly that her students would think the kind of relationship portrayed in the book is OK . It seems that in the modern teenage world , being treated badly by one's boyfriend is seen as glamorous .My daughter is concerned about the message the girls are getting from this book but is not sure what to do about it . Banning the book at school would only make reading it more desirable and anyway it seems many of the girls are being given the book by their mothers after they themselves have read it .What do those of you who have read it feel about teenage girls reading it ? Would you encourage your teenage daughter to read it ?I myself have no desire to read it as I too cannot sleep unless I have read for a while and I prefer to escape to a nicer place .
Two Christmases ago, vcarmody was my secret Santa, and she gave me "One for the Money", the first in the Stephanie Plum books. I hadn't had the chance to read it, but about a month ago, I picked it up and really enjoyed it. It reminded me a lot of the Kinsey Millhone series (I'm sure both authors often hear that comparison) which I also had liked. So, I've downloaded the entire series onto my Nook, and I'm currently on the fourth in the series, "Four for the Score". It's light, entertaining and makes me giggle. I am not in the mood for anything too cerebral at the moment.
I don't know that it's going to have any huge influence though, not compared to what the relationships the girls will see in their own lives will have. I was reading at a college level by the time I was in 6th grade, so I certainly read my share of trashy novels at much too young of an age.
I don't think I'd ever consider attempting to ban it - waste of time, and, as you said, the surest way to make certain even those who don't read for pleasure take a look. I think, if I were her, I'd get permission to have a discussion about the books - perhaps with the health and English teachers in tandem. With a Catholic school atmosphere, she would probably need to get parental permission, but I think it would be worth the effort. The English teacher portion would be a chance to talk about how badly it's written - and perhaps offering some other classic books about love affairs as a comparison. A discussion of banned books wouldn't be a bad idea either. Lady Chatterly's Lover was banned, after all - which is why everyone read it. The health discussion about relationships would be a chance to remind them that it's fiction, and get into the idea that what is appealing as a fantasy in a novel is not workable in real life.