Another give-me-book-rec post!
Feb. 18th, 2022 12:39 pmI feel that I ought to know the answer to this, but it is easier to ask you because I know you will have good solutions!
E. needs to read a science-fiction book that is appropriate for her age (12/6th grade/middle grade). If she were two years older I'd give her Ender's Game or Becky Chambers, but she's not. She says she likes fantasy better than SF but I suspect this is at least partially because she hasn't really read much SF, most of the stuff I know about being aimed a little above her head (she's read Dragon Pearl and liked it but is using it for another category). I'd considered giving her a Heinlein juvenile but I think she should probably be just a little older for that too. I also gave her The Martian to look at, which she rejected on account of it being too long :) (If it's something that I think will suit her interests enough, I'll give it to her anyway even if it's long, but Martian was already pushing things a bit -- I'll give it to her in a year or two and I think it'll work better for her then.)
(If there are sentient animals or puzzles to solve that would be a plus, but not required. Another reason she likes fantasy better is because there are more sentient animals, I think.)
E. needs to read a science-fiction book that is appropriate for her age (12/6th grade/middle grade). If she were two years older I'd give her Ender's Game or Becky Chambers, but she's not. She says she likes fantasy better than SF but I suspect this is at least partially because she hasn't really read much SF, most of the stuff I know about being aimed a little above her head (she's read Dragon Pearl and liked it but is using it for another category). I'd considered giving her a Heinlein juvenile but I think she should probably be just a little older for that too. I also gave her The Martian to look at, which she rejected on account of it being too long :) (If it's something that I think will suit her interests enough, I'll give it to her anyway even if it's long, but Martian was already pushing things a bit -- I'll give it to her in a year or two and I think it'll work better for her then.)
(If there are sentient animals or puzzles to solve that would be a plus, but not required. Another reason she likes fantasy better is because there are more sentient animals, I think.)
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Date: 2022-02-18 08:58 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2022-02-18 10:25 pm (UTC)Brandon Sanderson's "Skyward" immediately comes to mind. Teenage pilot, pet slug and artificially intelligent fighter plane start out on a space colony surrounded by aliens who keep trying to bomb them. There's a lot of Top Gun-style flight-sim action, but as the plot unrolls, she also learns more about the origins of the conflict and the possibility of peace. The second book has a ship piloted by super-cute monarchist gerbils.
Scott Westerfeld's "Leviathan" trilogy is a possibility? Steampunk World War I: the British and their living airships versus the Germans and their mechanical walkers), but way fluffier than the real war. Spunky teenage couple (heterosexual, if it matters) on opposite sides fall in love as they work together to save Europe.
I am not a huge fan of Heinlein juveniles. John Scalzi does a bunch of books that are basically "Heinlein for people who wish he weren't a crusty conservative", and unsurprisingly, since the originals weren't my cup of tea, I'm not really here for the remakes either, but perhaps other people have ideas about whether they'd be appropriate?
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Date: 2022-02-18 10:40 pm (UTC)if animal companions are a draw, then The Wild Robot might appeal, it's very charming. and there's a sequel to if the first book is enjoyed.
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Date: 2022-02-18 10:45 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2022-02-19 12:24 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2022-02-19 01:34 am (UTC)Oh wait. Ray Bradbury short story collections? R Is for Rocket was assigned reading in sixth grade, and other people liked it too.
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Date: 2022-02-19 04:21 am (UTC)Re: (K)
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Date: 2022-02-19 11:09 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2022-02-19 12:31 pm (UTC)Other things that come to mind:
Diane Duane's Young Wizards series, although it's not until book 3 that it really establishes its sci-fi footing. (There are some sentient animals.)
Gillian Rubenstein's Galax-Arena, about gymnastically gifted children kidnapped to perform in an alien arena. (No puzzles or sentient animals.)
Jane Yolen's Pit Dragon series? It's been a while since I read them so would probably suggest someone else's confirming opinion on age-appropriateness. However: definite sci-fi, gives good dragon, and I think the first book stands on its own?
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Date: 2022-02-19 12:55 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2022-02-19 07:18 pm (UTC)Re: (K)
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Date: 2022-02-22 07:05 am (UTC)Re: (K)
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Date: 2022-04-09 11:59 am (UTC)(no subject)
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