Posted on 04 January 2013. Tags: Book, book suggestions, dad, harry potter, Hunger, ipad, maximum ride, mortal instruments, Really, sci fi, teen fiction, thanks in advance, Warriors, wattpad
Hi!
So recently I’ve been REALLY obsessed with an online book website called www.wattpad.com. I’m always on, always reading… well… not yet published books. Problem is, my dad always gets REALLY ticked off when he sees me on my iPad/iPod touch, and doesn’t believe I’m reading. He always complains that he never sees me with a real book.
So can I have some good book suggestions for teenagers? I like romance, paranormal, teen fiction, and action. I hate sci-fi so… -_- Anyways, I’ve read most of the really famous ones (harry potter, twilight, percy jackson, matched, divergent, gone, the clique, warriors, fablehaven, the mortal instruments, maximum ride, the hunger games, etc.) so I probably read the famous ones by now…
Thanks in advance!
Posted in Affiliate Marketing 101
Posted on 25 May 2011. Tags: "self, adventure, e book, fantasy adventure, female protagonist, feminist slant, Genre, hitchhikers guide, pyjamas, reading science fiction, sci fi, Science, slant, waterstones, wizard of oz
I think it is time not only to tweak the stereotype about science fiction being a male province, but for the genre itself to have a more female slant. I myself started reading science fiction at the age of ten, and I loved HW Well, Jules Verne and Asimov. As a children’s writer I wanted to write a fantasy adventure sci fi book with a feminist slant and a female protagonist. I have recently self published an e book (Goddess in Pyjamas) about a schoolgirl being abducted to another planet to save their world. It was rejected by publishers because it did not fit into an accepted niche. I felt there was a market out there for sci fi adventure for girls so I wanted to re-invent the genre and create what I like to call ‘pink sci-fi’. It has the sensuality of a girly book and features mythical creatures as well as space travel. More Hitchhikers Guide meet Wizard of Oz, than Star Wars. I was puzzled to find that they don’t even have a section for sci fi for children at all in the flagship branch of Waterstones in Piccadilly. Isn’t it time that publishers and booksellers began to realise that children need as wide a range of reading as adults? If self published ebooks are the only way to get this kind of risk-taking, experimental stuff out there, they deserve to lose out.
Posted in Affiliate Marketing 101