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message 1: by Krystle (new)

Krystle Jones (krystlejoneswrites) Hello, everyone!

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!


message 2: by Phoenixfalls (new)

Phoenixfalls | 195 comments If you've been reading Matched, then have you read The Giver? Very similar style dystopia (so much so that some people have accused Condie of plagiarizing, either consciously or unconsciously) and absolutely beautiful.

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.


Snail in Danger (Sid) Nicolaides (upsight) | 540 comments The Starry Rift has some good short stories. (Though like most anthologies, it's a mixed bag.)

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.


message 4: by Samantha (last edited Feb 21, 2011 12:57PM) (new)

Samantha | 69 comments What, no mention of The Hunger Games yet? :) Really excellent, first of a much-hyped trilogy. Also check out anything by Scott Westerfeld, Peeps is a good place to start. (Edit: Peeps might technically be urban fantasy, I don't remember. It's been a while. But it's got a lot of science in it!).


message 5: by Julia (last edited Feb 22, 2011 04:43PM) (new)

Julia | 957 comments Scott Westerfeld's series Leviathan and Behemoth are YA steampunk taking place during a World War I-ish time and place...

I heartily recommend Cory Doctorow's Little Brother.


message 6: by Margaret (new)

Margaret | 428 comments Heinlein juveniles, let's see ... I can also recall Have Space Suit-Will Travel, Red Planet,The Star Beast ... come on, help me out here, folks... :)


message 7: by Gewbook (new)

Gewbook | 18 comments I would highly recommend Sylvia Engdahl's Enchantress from the Stars. Great coming of age story mixed in with first contact and how myths come to be.


message 8: by Jeff (last edited Feb 22, 2011 11:39AM) (new)

Jeff (jkeene) | 95 comments You might try Charles Sheffield. I read Godspeed awhile ago, and a couple others, whose titles escape me at the moment.


message 9: by Sue (new)

Sue Bowling (sueannbowling) | 26 comments Some of Heinlein's shorter works from early years would probably qualify, like The Menace from Earth. There was a series of juvenile SF issued as a series with various authors but the same publisher back around the 50's--anyone else remember them? I can think of Trouble on Titan, but no idea if it's even available now. My mental image is of a shelf in the bookmobile that used to park in front of my elementary school, so they made it into libraries.


message 10: by Jim (new)

Jim (jimmaclachlan) I think the Heinlein juveniles were published by Schribners (sp?). They were some of my favorites as a kid. Some were:
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.


message 11: by Kevin (new)

Kevin Xu (kxu65) Jim wrote: "I think the Heinlein juveniles were published by Schribners (sp?). They were some of my favorites as a kid. Some were:
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.


message 12: by Silvio (new)

Silvio Curtis | 245 comments I agree with Phoenixfalls about The Giver, and Gathering Blue which is in the same universe. They also have a mutual sequel which I didn't like as well.

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.


message 13: by Mary JL (new)

Mary JL (maryjl) | 181 comments Andre Norton wrote a great many YA books--both SF and fantasy.


message 14: by Silvio (new)

Silvio Curtis | 245 comments I will say I haven't seen much YA science fiction around, in contrast to fantasy where I usually like it better than what's marketed to adults.


Snail in Danger (Sid) Nicolaides (upsight) | 540 comments Zoe's Tale has a distinctly YA flavor, now that I think about it.


message 16: by Bill (last edited Jul 15, 2011 08:18AM) (new)

Bill (kernos) | 426 comments Julia wrote: "Scott Westerfeld's series Leviathan and Behemoth are YA steampunk taking place during a World War I-ish time and place...

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


message 17: by Krystle (new)

Krystle Jones (krystlejoneswrites) Thanks, everyone. I will definitely be checking these out!


message 18: by Chris (new)

Chris  Haught (haughtc) | 889 comments Hi Krystle. One book I liked that I don't see mentioned is The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer.


message 19: by Margaret (new)

Margaret | 428 comments It also occurs to me that Isaac Asimov wrote a YA science fiction series back in the day. Look for a series of titles starting with Lucky Starr and the...


message 20: by Jim (new)

Jim (jimmaclachlan) Margaret wrote: "It also occurs to me that Isaac Asimov wrote a YA science fiction series back in the day. Look for a series of titles starting with Lucky Starr and the..."

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


message 21: by Julie (new)

Julie S. Uglies (Uglies, #1) by Scott Westerfeld by Scott Westefield. It starts a trilogy that continues with Pretties (Uglies, #2) by Scott Westerfeld and Specials (Uglies, #3) by Scott Westerfeld . Then, the trilogy has a companion book Extras (Uglies, #4) by Scott Westerfeld .

William Sleator wrote a lot of YA science fiction. I suggest trying House of Stairs by William Sleator and Interstellar Pig by William Sleator .

Margaret Peterson Haddix has a lot for younger YA, such as Double Identity by Margaret Peterson Haddix and Turnabout by Margaret Peterson Haddix . She also has a series that starts with Among the Hidden (Shadow Children, #1) by Margaret Peterson Haddix .

I also want to mention the Gone series, which starts with Gone (Gone, #1) by Michael Grant .


message 22: by Julia (new)

Julia | 957 comments It's not specifically YA, but one of the primary characters is a young man, and I've taught it in HS...

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.


message 23: by Valerie (new)

Valerie (versusthesiren) I quite liked Feed by M.T. Anderson, which is a a dystopia sci-fi revolving around advancing technology.


message 24: by Jim (new)

Jim (jimmaclachlan) Did anyone mention John Christopher? The Guardians & his Tripods trilogy were YA SF that I liked as a kid.


message 25: by [deleted user] (new)

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.


message 26: by Frances (new)

Frances (mothindarkness) The Tripod trilogy is fantastic. Not sure if it's YA or Mid-grade, but a teacher read it to us (a million years ago) and it was one of my first introductions to sci-fi. Yolen and LeGuin do some great YA as well, if we're talking classics. ;-)


message 27: by Terri (new)

Terri (terrilovescrows) | 79 comments I really loved the Tripod books


message 28: by Silvio (new)

Silvio Curtis | 245 comments I've read all Le Guin's novels, and I can't remember any science fiction - as opposed to fantasy - that I would have thought was YA. If she has any I'd be curious about it, as I would for Yolen. I read an excerpt from a Tripod book once, I really should read them sometime.

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


Stacia (the 2010 club) (stacia_r) | 20 comments Another author I'd add is Neal Shusterman. Unwind was a good one.

Unwind (Unwind, #1) by Neal Shusterman


message 30: by Bill (new)

Bill Maybe more juvenile SF than YA.. but as a kid I did read some of the Tom Swift and His Giant Robot books by Victor Appleton.


message 31: by [deleted user] (new)

I recommend Patrick Ness. His Chaos Walking trilogy is pretty good.


message 32: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn (seeford) | 203 comments Classic science fiction that is appropriate for YA:

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).


message 33: by Bill (new)

Bill (kernos) | 426 comments Frances wrote: "The Tripod trilogy is fantastic. Not sure if it's YA or Mid-grade, but a teacher read it to us (a million years ago) and it was one of my first introductions to sci-fi. Yolen and LeGuin do some gre..."

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.


message 34: by Jensownzoo (new)

Jensownzoo | 200 comments A Wrinkle in Time may be a bit younger than what you are looking for, but I think the series holds up well.

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.


message 35: by Julia (new)

Julia | 957 comments There's a MG (middle grade)version of Fahrenheit 451 called The Last Book in the Universe.

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.


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