• @dylanmorgan@slrpnk.net
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    146 days ago

    Got kids? Percy Jackson (and the other Rick Riordan written) series are great. Older kids? Get them reading chuck wendig or Margaret Killjoy.

    Introduce yourself to Kafka and Marquez and Butler and Morrison and so many other great great writers who make JK Rowling look like the utter hack she is.

    • @SpookyBogMonster@lemmy.ml
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      96 days ago

      Margaret Killjoy

      Definitely seconding this recommendation. I’ve really liked Margarets Killjoy’s more adult sci-fi/fantasy output, for a long time. The Free Orcs of Cascadia is a personal favorite.

      But she recently wrote a YA fantasy novel called The Sapling Cage which is really wonderful.

      • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        86 days ago

        THE GIRL FROM BEHIND THE BASTARDS?!

        (Actually legit the only place I’ve ever heard of her. I will have to look into her writing!)

        • @SpookyBogMonster@lemmy.ml
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          6 days ago

          She’s got a couple of different podcasts. Cool People Who Did Cool Stuff, which is a radical history podcast on the same podcast network as BTB, and Live Like The World is Dying which is a show about prepping.

          My first exposure to her was actually by listening to an interview she did for the guerilla radio station operated out of The ZAD, which is in France, and is the largest Anarchist autonomous zone in Europe.

    • That Weird Vegan
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      26 days ago

      I just finished The Staircase In The Woods by Chuck Wendig. Holy shit, what an epic book. I am going to read more Chuck because I loved it so much.

    • LuckingFurker (Any/All)
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      26 days ago

      Honestly, just pick up any other book and give it a go, if that doesn’t work drop it and pick up another one. Nothing depresses me more than those people - adults - who finish reading the last Harry Potter book and then pick up the first one and start over again. I’ve heard nothing but good things about Rick Riordan as far as getting kids into reading, that all happened a little after my time though (and I was already big into reading as a kid)