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You are here: Home / Archives for Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten Books With A School Setting

13th August 2013 By Julianne 16 Comments

This is my twenty-fifth Top Ten Tuesday. As always, Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by its creators at The Broke and the Bookish.

When I was choosing a setting for this week’s topic, I looked back at my Top Ten Settings I’d Like To See More Of (Or At All) list for inspiration. The one word that pops up over and over again in that list is school. Most YA protagonists go to school, but many books are set outside the school year, during the holidays. As much as I enjoy reading about teenage roadtrips and summertime adventures, I really love books where school plays an important role.

I really did not like school. I’m pretty sure that at least 75% of the time I spent in school could have been better used had I been left to my own devices, preferably in a well-stocked library. However, schools are fantastic plot devices. Even if the school itself is just your standard suburbian comprehensive, the mere fact that the characters are forced to go there five or more days per week and spend time with each other can lead to all sorts of fictional trouble. And if it’s a secret training ground for spies? Well…

Top Ten Books With A School Setting

1. The Boyfriend List, by E. Lockhart – Ruby Oliver is a scholarship student at Tate Prep, the odd one out who can’t afford to spend all afternoon eating cake in the trendy cafe or choose the most glamourous school trip option. Although the teachers are fantastic, the Tate Universe is small and gossip is rife, and it’s all too easy for Ruby to become a ‘social leper’.

2. Girl Meets Cake, by Susie Day – Heidi is another outsider, the only day girl at a boarding school. Again, it’s quirky and funny, and the intense school setting provides a lot of the drama.

3. Night School, by C. J. Daugherty – A thrilling mystery set in a luxurious boarding school – definitely the kind of school that I’d have loved to attend, if it wasn’t for all the murder.

4. The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, by E. Lockhart – Another E. Lockhart book, I hear you cry. Keep reading, this is only number two of the three on this list, and E. Lockhart is brilliant at school settings, so there. Alabaster is an exclusive boarding school, and the home of the Basset Hounds, an all-boy secret society that Frankie plots to infiltrate.

5. A Great and Terrible Beauty, by Libba Bray – This is another boarding-school book, this time set in the Victorian era, with plenty of atmosphere. The school is really, really, creepy during the night-time scenes!

6. Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac, by Gabrielle Zevin – School is the place where Naomi, the teenage amnesiac of the title, figures out who she is and who she wants to be.

7. Fly on the Wall, by E Lockhart – This time, E Lockhart sets the story in an arts school, but again the protagonist is an outsider, Gretchen Yee, who can’t get on with her teachers and is struggling to find a place amongst her peers. Then she gets turned into a fly on the wall of the boys’ locker room.

8. Spellbound, by Cara Lynn Shultz – The school itself is just another private day school, but it makes a great setting for the action scenes, and it is where all of Emma’s new relationships are forged.

9. I’d Tell You I Love You, But Then I’d Have To Kill You, by Ally Carter – The Gallagher Academy is a training school for the spies of the future, and is full of secret passageways and gadgetry.

10. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, by J. K. Rowling – How could I not include one of the most famous boarding school books of all time? Hogwarts is a character in its own right.

Do you like books in which school plays a major role? Are you a fan of any of the books on my list?

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: boarding school, book chat, books, school, Top Ten Tuesday

Top Ten Books I Wish Had Sequels

6th August 2013 By Julianne 4 Comments

Wow! It feels like it’s been absolutely ages since the last time I wrote a Top Ten Tuesday post. I took a little break because I was busy and the topics didn’t really appeal to me that strongly, but there’s a whole load coming up now that are right up my street! My last Top Ten Tuesday was in May, and I’ve done 24 Top Ten Tuesdays in total. As always, Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by its creators at The Broke and the Bookish.

This topic was a tricky one. Lots of the books I love have sequels, and many of my favourite standalones have neat, tied-up endings and don’t provide any material for a potential sequel. That’s why I could only manage a Top Eight!

 

Top Eight Books I Wish Could Have Had Sequels

1. Dramarama, by E. Lockhart – I would love to know what Sadye did next! There are hints about the path she might take but I’d love to read about it in full.

2. The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, also by E. Lockhart – It’s a brilliant standalone but I think it’s impossible to love it without wanting, even just a little bit, to find out what Frankie does next. Even if only at university. Or in senior year of high school!

3. Journey to the River Sea, by Eva Ibbotson – Need more Miss Minton. That is all.

4. Janes in Love, by Cecil Castellucci and Jim Rugg – This is itself a sequel to The Plain Janes, and there was supposed to be a third in the series, Janes Go Summer, but it was cancelled when the imprint was closed. Oh, comics industry.

5. Everything Beautiful, by Simmone Howell – I just want to spend more time with all the characters! I wonder how things work out between Riley and Dylan, and Riley and her stepmother.

6. Notes from the Teenage Underground, also by Simmone Howell – What does Gem do next? Don’t get me wrong, both these books are wonderful as they are, great standalones! I am just really curious.

7. Matilda, by Roald Dahl – wouldn’t you just love to know what she’s like when she’s a bit older?

8. Diary of a Grace, by Sarra Manning – I know why this has no sequel, but the little bit of me that is still fifteen desperately wants to know whether she stays with Toph or gets back with Jack!

Do you share any of my choices? Isn’t it completely annoying when sequels are cancelled? I know that happens fairly regularly with paranormal romance/urban fantasy series that don’t do as well as the publisher and author hoped. Has it ever happened to a series you loved?

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: book chat, books, sequels, Top Ten Tuesday

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