This is the start of my #angrybookthread. A sort of continuation from this post.

https://autistics.life/@SilverArrows/114869238840168236

While looking up the quote for the above post, I noticed there were still a few #JacquelineWilson #books in my e-reader that I hadn't read yet.

So I picked one: Dustbin Baby, about a girl who was dumped in a bin shortly after birth. And within two chapters, the 14 year old protagonist was fantasising about her school age birth mother being raped, or at the very least, something very close to that. It's not based on anything she's heard about her birth mother, because her birth mother has never been identified. She's just concocted this story behind it herself. So far, there's not even any indication that the mother was a teenager. Yet here she is, imagining in great detail, the story of her teenage mother being raped.

What the actual frick is wrong with this woman?!

And the fact that the one-trick pony #NickSharratt illustrates the covers with childish art that appeals to under 10s. What the hell, man.

I told you this woman has a creepy obsession with the sexuality of school girls.

#fckjacquelinewilson #yafiction #teenfiction #problematicauthors

That thread made me nostalgic for the Point Horrors. I really do want to read more books, but the allure of YouTube is too strong. So I looked up Point Horror ebooks, I thought they'd be an easy read, and amazingly, the first to come up was the one I was planning to read first: The Perfume, which I remember being the first ever #PointHorror I read, back in Year 7. I felt so mature! Lovely coincidence! I like that!

Anyway, reading this, my gosh, are Caroline B Cooney's protags always this darn dramatic? I remember Christina from the Fog trilogy thinking a lot like this, all dramatic flowery prose, but I thought that was her character quirk.

Caroline, honey, teenagers don't think like this! Do you human? 😆

Take up poetry or something, gosh.

#yafiction #teenfiction #nostalgia #90s #90sbooks #books #carolinebcooney

I finished the book. It dragged on a bit in the beginning, so I skipped on to chapter 8.

I can see how an 11 year old might be impressed, and there were a couple of tense moments, but overall it was just weird and incohesive. It doesn't really make much sense. I think it would have been much better if it did go down the mental health path rather than whatever that was. It leaves you with more questions than answers.

I'm now reading The Guardians, by John Christopher.

It's a YA story set in the UK, about a sort of dystopian future, where the working class (Conurbans) and the gentry (the County) live completely segregated lives. We follow the life of Rob, a Conurban schoolboy. I'm enjoying it so far.

I read an extract of it from an old English Lit study book decades ago, and now I finally have a chance to read the whole story!

#yafiction #teenfiction #books #JohnChristopher

Wow, that was a crap ending. I was enjoying the book a lot, but the ending just left so many loose ends. It was so unsatisfactory. I can only excuse it if there's a sequel, otherwise that was the crappest ending I think I've ever read. Wow.

#books #johnchristopher #theguardians

It's so frustrating! Nothing was resolved. It's like the book just ended halfway through. And I can't see any mention of a sequel. This book won an award.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Guardians_(Christopher_novel)

The titular Guardians are only revealed in the last chapter and you're kind of expecting something to happen with it, but... Gah! There's no resolution! Everything is left hanging in the air! I guess you're just expected to imagine your own ending. But how, when everything is so complicated?

At least this book stayed in line with my #angrybookthread tag 🤷🏽‍♀️

What should I read next?

#books #bookreview #yafiction #scifi

The Guardians (Christopher novel) - Wikipedia

I've decided to re-read #Janey by #BernardAshley. Another book that I read an excerpt of in an English textbook and wanted to know the whole story! I've read this twice before already. There was a part that I thought was going to get darker than it did, but luckily it didn't. But it does get pretty dark.

It's about a girl from an abusive home who befriends an old lady. I enjoyed this book and I'm looking forward to reading it again. I need a break from all the insult-to-intelligence YA I've read lately!

#yafiction #teenfiction #80sfiction #books

Janey is a good book!

Anyway, I'm having a bit of a clear out of my screenshots folder, and came across one about our old friend #JacquelineWilson. She was very much against age recommendations on her books.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7650238.stm

I wonder why, JACQUELINE? Worried parents won't let their 9 year olds read about your protagonist fantasising about her imaginary teenage mother being raped? Or your 10 year old protag actually fantasising about being molested by a child predator?

Edit: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/entertainment/7273777.stm

F*** YOU, WILSON!

This woman makes me so irrationally angry!

#freakinwilson #JacquelineWilsonIsCreepy #fckjacquelinewilson #books #kidslit #childrensbooks

BBC NEWS | Entertainment | Age guidance on new Wilson book

Dame Jacqueline Wilson's new book is given a 9+ age rating, despite the author's objections to the age banding practice.

I finished reading Rachel on the Run. There was an excerpt of it in my Year 6 SATs and I wanted to know how it ends. It's been out of print a while and second hand copies were too expensive, but I found a copy somewhere.

It was kinda nothingy and it was very obvious what was going on. Rachel seemed a bit thick to not figure it out earlier, but then she did have amnesia and probably concussion, so I can give her a pass.

It wasn't bad, it just left me feeling very underwhelmed. But it's probably aimed more at age 10 and under.

Some of Maggie Prince's other books have good reviews, so I might check out more of her stuff later.

#MaggiePrince #RachelontheRun #bookreviews #books

Back to reading more of the Point Horrors I found.

I finished #RLStine's The Babysitter yesterday. What an absolute pile of tripe. This is just insulting.

1. 80% of the book is the protag ruminating over her anxious thoughts:

"Sometimes he takes advantage of his sitters and stays up really late. He looks like an angel, but he can be a real devil."

Did he really mean that? Was Donny really capable of being evil?

Of course not. Have you lost your mind entirely, Jenny? Just calm down. Take a deep breath and calm yourself down.

That's like 80% of the book.

2. The love interest is a walking red flag. He has no respect for her boundaries. Even when told outright that he's violating them, he pushes on:

He cupped his ear with one hand. "What? I can't hear. You said yes?"
"No. I said no," she shouted, even though she knew he could hear perfectly well.
"What time should I come by?"
"I said no. I don't want you to do that."
"Please — don't beg. I'll come. Nine o'clock too late?"
"Chuck — " She hated the peevish tone in her voice, but she couldn't help it. He was really being annoying. "Don't you know when to stop?"
"No. When? That's what I'm asking. When should I stop by?"
She got up angrily. "You're not funny."
"Who's being funny? I'm serious."
---
Did someone say "harassment"?

Next example. He'd just turned up during her babysitting job when she'd clearly said no. He deliberately pretended to be a prowler then scared her in a creepy mask. He'd got the details by phoning Jenny's mum and lying that Jenny had given him the name and address of her clients, but he'd lost them. So, creepy stalker behaviour.

"Go away, you dork!" Jenny screamed. "Get lost! I mean it!"
He didn't seem to hear her. Or maybe he didn't realize she was completely serious. "I gotcha. I really gotcha. Whoa! That was incredible!"
"You're not funny. You're sick! You scared me to death." She started to slam the door, but he shoved his foot into the opening.
She felt a stab of renewed fear. He had moved so quickly, so deftly to block the door, as if he had done it before. She had the sudden realization that maybe he had come to harm her. Maybe he was the whispered voice on the phone. Maybe he truly was dangerous.
She didn't really know him, after all.
No one did.
"Move away, Chuck. I don't want to see you."
"You look cute when you're scared."
Was he trying to make her more scared?
"Go away! I really mean it. I'm furious at you. You're not funny. Stop smiling at me like that!"
The smile faded slowly. "Come on, Jenny — "
"No."
"It's cold out here. Just let me come in for a few minutes."
"No. Go away."
He gave her a pleading, little-boy look. "Please? I'll let you try on the mask!" More high-pitched laughing. He really thought he was a riot.
"I'm serious, Chuck. Move your foot. I don't want to see you. You had no right to scare me like that."
He finally began to realize that she meant what she said. He let the mask fall to the porch floor and shrugged. "Sorry."
"Apology not accepted," she said, pushing on the door. "Good night."
"You're right, Jenny. It was stupid. I don't know what I was thinking of. I just wanted to surprise you, I guess."
"Surprise me?! Well, you did a great job, Ace!"
A cold burst of wind caught them both by surprise. They heard a crash somewhere down the street, a garbage can being knocked over, the lid rattling down the street.
A cold burst of wind caught them both by surprise. They heard a crash somewhere down the street, a garbage can being knocked over, the lid rattling down the street.
"I'm really freezing, Jenny," he wrapped his arms around himself. She saw for the first time
that he had no coat, only a gray sweatshirt. He looked really cold, and really apologetic. And really cute, hugging himself like that, his eyes pleading with her like a little boy begging for a cookie. "Can't I come in?"
"I guess. Just for a second. Hurry." She backed away, and he eagerly stepped into the narrow hallway, shivering, still hugging himself.
---

What an absolute garbage human being. And in the end, they get together and his abusive behaviour is okay, cos he was just shy and insecure.

Eff you, RL Stine.

@theateam

#books #angrybookthread #PointHorror #yafiction #teenfiction #nostalgia #90s

Ugh, my worst author #JacquelineWilson is on the radio. I wonder if she's taking questions. I'd ask her why she has a thing for sexualising under 14s.

I'm reading The Babysitter II now and already the love interest is giving rapey vibes again. Although at the same time, it's kind of hard to tell if that scene was real or the whole first chapter was part of her nightmare.

When I said I was starting an angry book thread, it didn't mean I wanted every book I read from now on to make me angry!

So far, Janey has been the only one I've read since starting this thread that was a good book.

#angrybookthread #rage #RLStine #PointHorror #yafiction #teenlit #books #nostalgia #90s

I really just don't want to read any more of this series.

Maybe I'll just dip into my physical book collection.

I'm reading The #Moomins and the Great Flood. I didn't realise it was such a short book. I read about half on my lunch break today. I just love the Moomins! Whoever did the translation did a good job in capturing the enchanting feelings. They're just such magical books.

#Moomintroll #Muumipeikko #books

I've finished Comet in Moominland. This is the second book, where we meet Snufkin, Snork and Snorkmaiden, and the hemulens.

I enjoyed this one. The thing that Moominmamma was doing as the kids got home was a bit... yanno... like why?

But they've always been a bit weird. I guess Moominmamma is just unshakeable.

#Moomins #books

I'm on Finn Family Moomintroll now. Moominmamma is kind of annoying in this one so far, but I'm hoping she'll improve.

I don't remember her being annoying, but this book wasn't included in my box set, so the last time I read this was in the early 90s at school. I think this and The Exploits of Moominpapa were the only ones I read at school.

Sniff is so silly and cute! I can relate to him: easily excited and easily scared!

#books #moomins