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YA Science Fiction?
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Depending on what age-range YA you like, maybe The Silver Metal Lover, by Tanith Lee? Romantic SF, and therefore suitable for the older teen audience (there's some sex), but I thought it really captured the appropriate angst level.
Moon-Flash is quite beautiful science fiction that starts out looking like fantasy. . .
And of course, the classic Ender's Game was originally marketed for the adult audience but is eminently suitable for YA.

Cory Doctorow has written some YA books. The only one I've personally read is Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. (Actually, it is not YA but I remember it as being suitable for older teens.)
Robert A. Heinlein wrote some books that were intended for non-adult readers. The only one I can think of is Space Cadet my elementary school library had a copy of it.


I heartily recommend Cory Doctorow's Little Brother.





Have Space Suit-Will Travel
Citizen of the Galaxy
Tunnel in the Sky
Podkayne of Mars
Red Planet
Farmer in the Sky
Space Cadet
Starman Jones
Rocket Ship Galileo
The Star Beast
The Rolling Stones
Between Planets
Each of the above featured kids as heroes & heroines, usually the former.
The Green Hills of Earth, The Man Who Sold the Moon, & The Menace From Earth were all about the same reading level, but short stories. Most had adults as heroes, though.
I don't think Double Star, The Puppet Masters, The Door into Summer, & Glory Road were part of the juveniles, but I read them about the same time. All were written well before he got weird circa 1970.

Have Space Suit-Will Travel
Citizen of the Galaxy
[..."
Don't forget, that when [book:Starship Troopers|5259125] first came out it was a YA novel, it even stated on the front flap of the dust jacket, along with the same publisher, Charles S. Scriber, the last of his YA novel, but as time went on it changed into something for adults, especially with the three movies that came out.

And of the Heinlein juveniles, I read Tunnel in the Sky and liked it fairly well. It's a frontier adventure kind of situation and though the attitude puts me off a little it's well-written as far as I can remember.


I heartily recommend Cory Doctorow's Little Brother"
I will second Little Brother one of my favorite books of the noughties. It is compelling for adults too, esp as the sequel to 1984



I tried re-reading one of those a couple of years ago. I couldn't do it & I like a lot of his writing.





William Sleator wrote a lot of YA science fiction. I suggest trying


Margaret Peterson Haddix has a lot for younger YA, such as



I also want to mention the Gone series, which starts with


The Warrior's Apprentice or the series could start with Shards of Honor or The Mountains of Mourning a space opera/ military science fiction/ mystery/ humor/ romance no capital "R" and lots of other 'slashes.' It's by Lois McMaster Bujold.


Wow, that's a nostalgia bomb. I second John Christopher's Tripod trilogy, I really enjoyed those as a kid.
One of my favourite authors growing up was Caroline MacDonald. She wrote a few future dystopias like The Lake at End of the World and The Eye Witness.
One of my favourite authors growing up was Caroline MacDonald. She wrote a few future dystopias like The Lake at End of the World and The Eye Witness.


Since I last posted I read Iron Cage by Norton and liked it.


Anne McCaffrey's Pern series, beginning with either Dragonsong or Dragonflight
Anything by Andre Norton, but especially the The Beast Master series, the Time Traders series (beginning with Galactic Derelict), the Solar Queen series (beginning with Sargasso of Space) and the Moon Magic series (beginning with Moon of Three Rings).

I had saw the BBC series which did not include book 3, so got the books to see what happened and loved them. I have heard a new miniseries of the books is in development.

I know that I also read Fahrenheit 451 around high school as a summer reading choice (we discussed it when classes were back in session).
Honestly, I can't think of many scifi novels that were specifically designated as YA, but a lot of scifi that would be appropriate for YA audiences exists.

Flowers for Algernon exists as a novel, but was first a short story. A similar story is The Speed of Dark.
Silvio, I am always on the lookout for Yolen YA. Here are a few:
Briar Rose, The Devil's Arithmetic, Queen's Own Fool, Prince Across the WaterSister Light, Sister Dark.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Devil's Arithmetic (other topics)The Last Book in the Universe (other topics)
Fahrenheit 451 (other topics)
The Speed of Dark (other topics)
Briar Rose (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Andre Norton (other topics)Patrick Ness (other topics)
Victor Appleton (other topics)
Neal Shusterman (other topics)
Caroline MacDonald (other topics)
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I read mostly YA since that's the genre I wish to write for, but most of what I've read is fantasy. Can anyone recommend some good YA science fiction?
I've been reading "Matched," and it's a cool concept.
This avid reader would appreciate any direction! =)
Thanks!