June 14, 2011
Love has always been a difficult concept for writers to put into words. It’s an abstract feeling that can’t be trapped inside the box of language. The challenge becomes even more apparent when you’re trying to describe romantic love to youth. In The Amber Spyglass, the last book in the Dark Materials trilogy, Philip Pullman ...
Tags: Aristphanes,
books,
children's books,
daemons,
Dark Materials Trilogy,
falling in love,
freedom,
love,
Lyra,
metaphysical,
Philip Pullman,
philosophy,
purgatory,
relationships,
sex,
soul touching,
soulmates,
The Amber Spyglass,
Tuesday book club,
violence,
Will,
young adult fiction
May 12, 2011
I don’t know about you, but I read books for the story. The protagonist’s gender doesn’t matter so much as the central message and the general feeling you get when you’re reading. I like to feel inspired, enlightened or mystified, among other grand sentiments. Thankfully, the National Post seems to be with me on this. ...
Tags: academics,
book series,
Cher,
children's books,
Clueless,
equality,
female character,
feminism,
gender,
Gender and Society,
gender bias,
gender imbalance,
hero,
identity,
inequality,
Katniss Everdeen,
Lainey Gossip,
love,
Lyra Silvertongue,
male character,
Peeta,
Philip Pullman,
Popping Culture,
pretty,
protagonist,
readers,
reading,
sacrifice,
scholar,
Tally Youngblood,
The Golden Compass,
The Hunger Games,
The Paper Bag Princess,
Uglies,
ugly,
Westerfeld,
women in books