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You are here: Home / Archives for YA

YA

Monday Amusements 10

3rd June 2013 By Julianne 1 Comment

My first video post, from the Top Ten Tuesday of the week before last. I’ll be posting my second video this week!

Wow, I’m up to ten of these already! I felt ill yesterday evening after a busy day eating cyclindrical sandwiches, scones, and cakes, and drinking tea, so had to do all the work today, but hopefully this is still a readable and enjoyable list!

Once Upon a Bookcase will be having yet another (excellent, I’m sure) theme month! July will be LGBTQ YA Month, and I’m looking forward to reading the posts.

Malinda Lo, who wrote the wonderful fairy tale retelling Ash, posted this thoughtful and inspiring piece about Sex and YA Fiction. It’s full of Very Good Points.

I don’t think that I will ever choose to get a tattoo but nevertheless, I enjoyed this list of 50 Incredible Tattoos Inspired By Books. Also on Buzzfeed, 25 Signs You’re Addicted to Books.

Ink, by Amanda Sun, is currently on my TBR and has one of the most gorgeous covers I’ve ever seen. Right now you can download the eBook prequel for free!

I’ve wanted to read Zoe Marriott’s books for ages, but her post for SisterSpooky‘s Geek Week, How Do I Love Geeks, Let me Count the Ways, made me want to run to the library, right now. Too bad it’s closed…

I loved Quinn’s choice of Top Ten Tuesday topic last week – Top Ten Ridiculous Character Names. I don’t mind Echo, as it’s a name from mythology and I love those, but the rest are pretty silly. Especially Patch. I know the Hush, Hush series is really popular (though I don’t think it’s my thing) but Patch? Like Quinn said, it’s a dog’s name! The allure is lost on me, but then I also couldn’t imagine Edward Cullen as attractive when he wore pale blue sweaters and beige leather jackets. I do love giving characters unusual names though!

Mur Lafferty wrote a quick, important post about Helping Authors. And not helping them. I’m pretty sure that most book bloggers do all of the good and none of the bad!

I absolutely adored the latest in Michelle at Fluttering Butterflies‘ Bookshelf Requirements series, in which Hannah (@AitchLove) shares her love of Arthurian literature. I definitely need to investigate her recommendations, when I was a kid I was obsessed with the King Arthur legend.

Liesel Hill’s post about the origins of the Pied Piper story was really interesting, and quite sad too.

Why is it so bad to judge a book by its cover? wonders Natassia at Literary Escapism. I have to admit, I find myself judging books by their covers more and more. Covers indicate what kind of book is likely to be inside, and there are some genres and topics that I have no interest in and want to avoid. A well-chosen, attractive cover also indicates to me that the publisher had high enough hopes for the book to spend time and money making sure that it was properly presented.

I’d been planning to read The Great Gatsby soon anyway, but if I hadn’t been convinced that it was time to give this classic a go, this post at So Many Books, So Little Time would have done the job.

Onto my favourite reviews this fortnight! You Look Different in Real Life by Jennifer Castle went straight onto my wishlist, thanks to Magan at Rather Be Reading – “one of the happiest surprises of 2013”? Yes please!

Raimy at Readaraptor‘s review of Melvin Burgess’ The Hit was honest and interesting, as was Cicely’s review of The Moon and More by Sarah Dessen, which compared it to her other books. I also enjoyed seeing Michelle at Fabbity Fab Book Reviews‘ review of How My Summer Went Up in Flames by Jennifer Salvato Doktorski and Sophie at So Many Books, So Little Time‘s review of The Humans, by Matt Haig.

Finally, tooting my own horn (again) here – last week on this fleeting dream was Diary of a Crush week! Please do check out my posts, I’d love to know what you think.

Filed Under: Monday Amusements Tagged With: book chat, books, extract, links, Monday Amusements, teen fiction, teenage, teenage fiction, YA, young adult

J-17, Diary of a Crush and my teenage pursuit of cool, or: Edie Wheeler, the world’s coolest girl…definitely

30th May 2013 By Julianne Leave a Comment

It’s the final day of Diary of a Crush week. The books are out in shiny new print editions today, and you can also get the trilogy plus the Diary of a Grace novella in e-book form, should you prefer. Yay!

Today I shall be mostly talking about myself, and using the word ‘cool’ a ridiculous number of times. I hope you enjoy it!

Warning: this post contains massive spoilers for the Diary of a Crush trilogy. I read the ending before the beginning, you don’t have to. Stop right now and go read the books, if you want to and haven’t already!

 
Diary of a Crush and my J-17 mags, radiating cool. A beautiful image I’m sure you’ll agree.

I’ve always been a magazine fiend. I’ve still got my hoards of Girl Talk and Art Attack from childhood, though I’ll be sorting through them soon. Last year I threw out several editions of Safeway (yes, the freebie from the supermarket that got taken over by Morrisons), and tore out the pages that I wanted to keep from countless other store magazines – though it took me until this year to tackle my piles of Spirit, the Superdrug magazine, because I could hardly bear to dismantle all those beautiful make-up photos. In my teens I read Mizz, and then Sugar, and then Sugar and J-17, and then finally just J-17.

To explain my love, we must rewind to Guide camp in the early Noughties. One of the girls in my tent had a copy of J-17 that we flicked through, and it seemed so much cooler than any other magazine I’d read. It seemed to be aimed at a slightly older audience than Sugar, but without being completely boy-obsessed like Bliss, which I never could stand. The photoshoots were edgier and the articles meatier and I wanted it.
One essential fact about my teenage self: I desperately wanted to be cool. I was lanky and bony, with glasses and flat hair, and one proper friend. All I wanted to do all day was read books, write stories, sing along to music, and occasionally play my keyboard. I liked Guide camp because I didn’t go to school with anyone there, so nobody knew that they had to ignore me if they wanted to be cool, and most of them would happily chat to me and even invite me to games.

To be honest, I wasn’t even sure what cool was. I caught a whiff of it every now and then, when an interesting song was played on the radio, or a woman walked past with a quirkier outfit than I usually got to see. I muddled my way through popular culture, listening to whatever everybody else was playing, and wearing pedal pushers and karma beads that year everybody else did. But J-17 was cool. I just knew it.

A month or two or three later, after I’d finally plucked up the courage to buy a magazine that I was sure was for girls that were much cooler than me (ie. any degree of cool at all), I was delighted. I’ve also always loved make-up. And there, in the first copy of J-17 that I bought, was an article about how to do punk-style make-up, with actual intructions and impressive photos. Other magazines’ beauty editorials were vague and uninspiring compared with this riot of colour. There was also an article about kissing, and reviews of music by bands that I had never heard of, and fashion pages that were actually interesting, and it was all so incredibly cool.

Finally, on the back page, I read the Diary of a Crush column for the first time. It didn’t make much sense, being one entry in an ongoing series, but as the months passed I fell in love, because Edie Wheeler was the coolest of all cool girls. Let’s summon my teenage self from the depths of my mind and look at the evidence:

1. She was 18. I was only 13, which meant that Edie was basically the same as God to me.
2. She was named after Edie Sedgwick and Tim Wheeler, of Ash fame
3. She was a WAITRESS (seriously, height of cool)
4. She was in a band (NO WAIT THIS IS THE HEIGHT OF COOL)
5. She was dating an artboy (I only discovered what an artboy was because of J-17, and thank God, I mean Edie, for that)
6. Who was two years older than her! (*swoons from all the cool*)
7. And she didn’t live with her parents, in my first issue she’d just moved out! (WARNING: COOL OVERLOAD)

Sadly, after 22 months of excitingly looking forward to J-17 release day each month, the Diary of a Crush column was cancelled without prior warning and J-17 got a new look and editorial direction and started featuring articles about Gareth Gates, so I stopped buying it.

Eventually, I realised that all those things I thought were ‘cool’ are just things that I really liked, and that’s what I missed, still miss, about J-17. The catalogue of discoveries. Finding new things to like each month. Even with the internet, I miss having a reliable guide, and I think that J-17 would have been even better if the internet had been around. I was terrified of record shops, obviously, because they’re full of cool people. If I’d been able to Google the bands on their lists of new artists to check out, I might have managed to actually listen to some of them!

But back to the world’s coolest girl. Edie. I only started reading J-17 at the tail end of her story, so you can only dream of imagining how thrilled I was when two years later, I was wandering in Waterstone’s, and spotted the books on a shelf. I bought them immediately and took them home, where I fell upon my bed and read and read and read, blissfully happy to find out how it all happened at last.

It was comforting to discover that Edie wasn’t always as cool as she ended up becoming. At the start of the story, she was 16, which by 2004 was slightly younger than me (and not so cool), and in her first year of college. I was in sixth form myself at the time, and was making new friends, so I could relate to the excitement and anxiety of meeting new people. Edie wasn’t a waitress or in a band, she lived with her parents, and of course the artboy was just a crush. She still wore cool clothes and attracted cool friends, but her beginners-cool seemed a lot more attainable.

So I could be cool too, if I was brave enough. It took a few more years, but eventually I started actually speaking to people, going to events that I thought sounded interesting, and buying clothes that I actively enjoyed wearing and then putting them on regularly, even just to go to uni or the shops. I’m not sure if anyone would consider me cool, but I’m happy, and have been for several years now. I hope that would impress my teenage self, but honestly? She’d probably be more impressed with the fact that I own copies of all the Diary of a Crush columns in book form, to refer to for knowledge of ‘cool’ at any time. 

Comments will be much appreciated. I can’t have been the only one that was in love with the idea of being cool…

Previously: I reviewed the final book in the trilogy, Sealed with a Kiss.

Filed Under: Book Chat Tagged With: Diary of a Crush, Diary of a Crush week, Sarra Manning, teen fiction, teenage fiction, UKYA, YA, young adult

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