Home » 2011 » August (Page 4)

Reading Bites- It’s Alive!

Here at MonsterLibrarian.com we have been working on a new project. Our most popular part of the site is the YA vampire section, and so we are now pleased to announce that we’ve started a new blog dedicated to YA vampire fiction and the people who love it, called Reading Bites!

Sheila Shedd, one of our fantastic volunteer reviewers, is the editor for Reading Bites, and she’s taken it on with gusto. Yesterday, Reading Bites went live, and I hope you’ll head on over, check it out, and share your input with Sheila by leaving a comment. And if you know any YA vampire fiction lovers, please tell them about it!

Thanks, everyone, for your support.

William Sleator Dies

Lois Duncan (Down a Dark Hall) and Mildred Ames (Anna to the Infinite Power) terrified me first but when I think of the first truly creepy, crawled-inside-my-head, book that I read, it’s always House of Stairs by William Sleator. The viciousness of what even children will do to each other in desperate situations, the trapped claustrophobia, the idea that adults would experiment on children so cruelly… it left a permanent mark. I’ve read many of his other books- Blackbriar, Fingers, Interstellar Pig, The Green Futures of Tycho, Singularity… I remember waiting anxiously for The Boy Who Reversed Himself. My middle school book discussion group read Fingers and wrote him a letter, and he wrote us back from Thailand. And as a teen I was lucky enough to take part in a one day writing workshop with him. He’s tagged as a science fiction writer a lot of the time, but the very human darkness and, sometimes even evil, that pervades so many of his books is what left its mark on me. Whatever genre you want to assign his books to, William Sleator was a brilliant writer. A quarter century after I first read House of Stairs (which was published originally in 1974) those books are still on my bookshelves. And I still read them.

This great author of YA fiction died Tuesday at age 66. I am glad he wrote so many books. I know he touched many lives with his writing. I hope his books will stay in print, and that libraries will stay in schools, so the teens of today and tomorrow will have the chance to discover them, just as I did, in my school library.