Fiction
Related: About this forumHelp with books for a young 16 year old reader who says he liked Kite runner because it read like
nonfiction. Do you think he would like Beneath a Scarlet Sky?
MLAA
(18,602 posts)efhmc
(15,007 posts)I want to give him some choices. Had a discussion this evening about books and he is looking for something just right to read. I want to foster that interest.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,727 posts)First is Sarah's Key by Tatiana deRosnay. Both the book and the movie are excellent.
If he's at all a fan of science fiction or time travel, The Doomsday Book by Connie Willis is very good. The now of the book is the mid 21st century. Time travel has been invented and is in the hands of historians. A young woman is preparing for a trip to a particular village in 1328 England (the novel takes place in England). Meanwhile, a deadly flu epidemic breaks out and complicates things. The young woman arrives back in that village, not long before Christmas. Soon people around her start dying off at a scary rate. She essentially asks someone, "What the fuck year is it?" (not Willis's exact words) and is told, "It's the year of our Lord 1348, milady." She's arrived at the outset of the bubonic plague, the Black Death. Part way through reading the book I pulled out a Penguin book about the plague and I think Willis may have used that as one of her resources.
Since that particular book is a bit of a downer, a much more light-hearted look at time travel is in her next book, To Say Nothing of the Dog.
News of the World by Paulette Jiles. After the Civil War a man earns his living by travelling around Texas, reading articles for newspapers. Apparently that was an actual thing then. One day he is tasked to return a 10 year old girl to her family in San Antonio. She'd been captured by Comanches some four years earlier. Very, very good. I just looked at the trailer for the movie that should be coming out later this year, and it looks as if they made some essential changes in things like the age of the girl, and how he meets up with her. The novel is excellent.
If he's remotely interested in baseball I have several suggestions, two non-fiction two fiction. The two non fiction are Bottom of the 33rd by Dan Barry about the very longest baseball game ever played. Incredible story. The other is Where Nobody Knows Your Name: Life In the Minor Leagues of Baseball by John Feinstein. Wow. Men who play the game because the totally love it. The two fiction books are If I Never Get Back and Havana Heat, both by Darryl Brock. In the first, a sports writer finds himself back in 1869 and travelling with the Cincinnati Reds, the very first professional baseball time. In the second, Luther "Dummy" Taylor is a professional baseball player trying to revive his career in 1911 by going with a travelling team to Cuba. Back then, a fair number of players were deaf, as was Taylor, and typically nicknamed Dummy. The gymnasium at the school for the deaf in Olathe, Kansas (a suburb of Kansas City, MO) is named for him. I used to drive by it every day when I had a job at the Johnson County KS courthouse.
I hope these are helpful. And if he has zero interest in any of these, I can offer both good wishes and lots more suggestions if you'd like.
efhmc
(15,007 posts)I will pass these along to his mom or clue her iinto this group.
yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)Last edited Wed Mar 3, 2021, 03:01 AM - Edit history (1)
and yes it reads like non fiction!!
That was one of my best freebie book finds on BookBub or Robin Reads.
kite Runner is pretty intense for a 16 year old I am impressed with this young man
yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)another WW II story I can lend it also
yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)That is fiction which reads like non fiction. I love Michener because I always feel like I am sitting at the feet of a great storyteller when I read his books. The other reason I like his books: each section is like its own little novella and all these novellas are loosely connected by some sort of continuous family line or location. You can read a section, go off and read something silly or just put it away for a bit then come back to the next section, because that next section will be like a whole new story.
For someone his age, I'd recommend Centennial. The Western US setting should be appealing.
yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)I have a neat little book I would be glad to lend. It is a novel set in Mammoth Cave National Park in which a couple of cavers and a park ranger step through a passage and find themselves in 1820 when the cave was privately owned and the chief guide was a slave.
I have read cleverer time travel stories but this one is neat because it all happens in a real place (and I have spent many happy hours there)
It happens to be loanable on Kindle so if you are interested I will need an email to lend it. You will have it for 2 weeks.
efhmc
(15,007 posts)yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)The story includes a lot of Mammoth Cave history and Lance does a good job of describing the cave, and what it is like to spend hours down there. I am pretty sure he has been on more than one exploration trip in Mammoth.
I am not sure about all of the characters, but Keven Neff, Stephen Bishop (and his owner) are/were real people. I have had the pleasure of knowing Keven for years.
The Mammoth Cave System is the world's longest known cave. It has been mapped to 425 miles and the passages have all been explored by humans and are not based on dye traces.
If one becomes interested in reading about caves, I suggest 'The Caves Beyond', 'The Longest Cave', 'Trapped' and 'Beyond Mammoth' All of these were written by experienced cavers who have been an important part of the exploration projects.
efhmc
(15,007 posts)yellowdogintexas
(22,722 posts)Brainstormy
(2,428 posts)The Life of Pi, which is a great book and which Kite Runner put me in mind of. Hero, of course, is a teen boy.