Topic is Sleeping.
HobbesTheTiger ( member #41477) posted at 10:03 AM on Friday, October 17th, 2014
As a guy who's been reading sci-fi/fantasy in English since my early teens, I'd recommend:
- Douglas Adams' books (especially the Hitch hiker's guide to the galaxy series of 5 books - my favourite books!)
- Arthur C. Clarke's works (the first Rendezvous with Rama is very good, touches upon very interesting things in not too complicated way)
- Isaac Asimov's works (the Foundation series is great, but perhaps too tough for his age. So I'd recommend the Robot series - for example Caves of steel, Naked Sun, Robots of the Dawn)
- Discworld series (others have already suggested, and I have all the books from it!)
- I'd also recommend the Artemis Fowl series -> they're about a young (teen) boy who's a genius, has awesome inventions, fights bad guys, is friends with the pixies and other races from an underwater world etc. I liked it, and I think it's geared towards younger audiences.
- Dune might be too tough for him, but I read it in my mid-teens and it had a big influence on me, and I've loved re-reading it ever since.
- Lord of the Rings + Hobbit
I'd also suggest going to the local library and asking them which of the books in this thread are most suited for a boy of his age.
Lionne ( member #25560) posted at 2:25 PM on Saturday, October 18th, 2014
I thought of a few others...he has probably been through all the Percy Jackson series as well as the related books by the same author but if not, he'd probably love them. In addition, if he won't do classics, at least try with some of the abridged versions. While they lack the rich language (and therefore are easier to read) they maintain the excellent story lines. AND have the benefit of giving kids the background knowledge needed to interpret more modern stories. After all, reading Percy Jackson is just that much more interesting if you have knowledge of the Greek gods.
Give them a try. He'd read each one in about a minute.
Me-BS-65 in May<BR />HIM-SAFWH-68<BR />I just wanted a normal life.<BR />Normal trauma would have been appreciated.
twisted ( member #8873) posted at 8:05 PM on Monday, October 20th, 2014
Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett’s Good Omens
[This message edited by twisted at 2:05 PM, October 20th (Monday)]
"Hey, does this rag smell like chloroform to you?
Forged1 ( member #43418) posted at 7:06 AM on Tuesday, October 21st, 2014
Plenty of fantasy/sci-fi recommendations, so let me try a historical sidestep.
Look into Rosemary Sutcliff's Eagle trilogy - The Eagle of the Ninth, The Silver Branch and The Lantern Bearers. Technically children's books (well, young adult, I suppose) but better written and crafted than 80% of what passes for adult historical fiction these days. Sutcliff has plenty of other books, though many are out of print or not available as ebooks. The Eagle Trilogy is available, though - I'm certain of that.
I'd recommend her novels to anybody, not just a smart fifteen year old.
Me: Former BH
Divorced Q2 2015
==================================
At this stage, I'm pretty much bulletproof.
Do no harm. But take no shit.
Take2 ( member #23890) posted at 11:46 AM on Tuesday, October 21st, 2014
My favorites:
The wheel of time series, but it will tie him up for a year! Lol!!
2nd on the Pawn of Prophesy. (Belgariad series)
Nine Princes of Amber. Series but shorter reads....cocky sardonic lead.
Ender's series
The Sum of All Men.
In Her name ( not as racy as Martin, not anywhere near it -- but has a spot or two.) and the lead character is a boy despite the title.
Kindle sci-fi. spinward fringe was good.
[This message edited by Take2 at 5:47 AM, October 21st (Tuesday)]
"We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned, so as to have the life that is waiting for us." Joseph Campbell...So, If fear was not a factor - what would you do?
sisoon ( Moderator #31240) posted at 8:43 PM on Sunday, October 26th, 2014
I'm with Hobbes, especially Asimov and Heinlein ... though I'm not sure what a 15 year-old would do with Stranger in a Strange Land....
Anything by Jack London, but include The Scarlet Plague.
Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey-Maturin series and/or C. S. Forester's Hornblower series might be enjoyable and informative for him. Cornwell's Sharpe series are pretty easy reads and are historically accurate (except for Sharpe, that is). Van Gulik's Judge Dee series (T'ang China) might interest him.
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction used to publish annual anthologies of 'the best' stories of each year. They were great.
He might like classic mysteries - Rex Stout, Raymond Chandler, and the Brits.
If he likes history, how about Xenophon, The March Upcountry, or Suetonius The Twelve Caesars, or Gore Vidal's Julian (which really doesn't fit here, since it's fiction)?
[This message edited by sisoon at 2:45 PM, October 26th (Sunday)]
fBH (me) - on d-day: 66, Married 43, together 45, same sex ap
DDay - 12/22/2010
Recover'd and R'ed
You don't have to like your boundaries. You just have to set and enforce them.
shiftingsand ( member #43656) posted at 1:24 PM on Monday, October 27th, 2014
If he loves science why not Stephen's Hawkins. ALso get him into some more reading like 1984, Clockwork Orange, .. I goobled them up when I found out that they were "banned" when they came out!
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.
"This wasn't about you. Or your looks. Or hers. There was no contest and she did not "win." He's just insecure or an asshole or an insecure asshole." Plan C.
Compartmented ( member #29410) posted at 12:13 PM on Tuesday, October 28th, 2014
Terry Pratchett has a massive series called discworld. It's fantasy, and it's a lot of fun. I've probably read 30 of them.
I loved Terry Pratchett. The Wee Free Men! So great!
Also, the series by Brian Jacques, The Redwall Series? Wonderful vocabulary, stories and descriptions of settings and characters. From wiki:
His book Redwall was written for his "special friends",[1] the children of the Royal Wavertree School for the Blind, whom he first met while delivering milk. He began to spend time with the children, reading books to them. However, he became dissatisfied with the state of children's literature, with too much adolescent angst and not enough magic, and eventually began to write stories for them. He is known for the very descriptive style of his novels, which emphasize sound, smell, taste, gravity, balance, temperature, touch and kinesthetics, not just visual sensations.
JanaGreen ( member #29341) posted at 2:45 AM on Wednesday, October 29th, 2014
I was not any older than 15 when I read Stranger in a Strange Land, for better or for worse.
I am currently reading the Dark Tower series by Stephen King and it's great. Also, The Stand. Fantastic.
I love the Dragonriders of Pern too, good stuff.
StrongerOne ( member #36915) posted at 6:09 AM on Wednesday, October 29th, 2014
Here are some books my brainy boy has enjoyed. We often share books with each other. Some Sci fi and speculative fiction, some not.
Speed of dark
Life of Pi
Slaughterhouse five
The book thief
The things they carried
The great train robbery
The wee free men
Maurice and his educated rodents (something like that -- terry pratchett)
The fault in our stars
Great expectations
Martian chronicles
Fahrenheit 451
Holes
Strange case of the dog in the night
Absolutely true story of a part time Indian
Incredibly loud and extremely close
Heroes of the valley
Red mars
Into thin air
Hyperbole and a half
Binky the space cat
Ronald Dahl, Boy: tales of childhood (autobio)
Bartimaeus novels by Jonathan stroud
The ear, the eye, and the arm
House of the scorpion
Predictably irrational
Short story collections
He also enjoys science fact books, such as the wildlife of our bodies, and wacky science (books like, how to fossilize your hamster, mini weapons of mass destruction, that sort of thing). My dad has given him a subscription to national geographic for years -- he enjoys that too.
Have fun!
yousaid4ever ( member #32626) posted at 9:18 PM on Monday, November 10th, 2014
The "Michael Vey" series by Richard Paul Evans. He usually writes adult novels but this one is especially for young adults. Book #4 just came out and it's what I'm giving my 15 year old 'brainy' grandson for Christmas.
I took your words and I believed
In everything you said to me
Cause you said forever
And ever, who knew?......Pink
BS(me) 59...STBXSAWH 59
Married 40 yrs/4 grown children, 5 grandchildren
DD's-1st on 10/75, now too many too count.
somethingremorse ( member #42047) posted at 9:52 PM on Monday, November 10th, 2014
My son has the same reading list. He has read some of those cat books ten times. It's his comfortable familiar place. Which is fine.
He loved the Hunger Games series. Ender's Game (the second one is eh, the third one is ugh). I pushed him into Maze Runner, which he loved. He just did the Life of Pi in class, and liked it.
I'm thinking about Steven King. The Stand has some sex in it, but probably OK for a teenager who has been exposed to that kind of stuff (I tend to be looser on the language and more grown up topics that a lot of people, so YMMV). I also just forced him to get Gaiman's The Graveyard Book. I never read that one myself, but love Gaiman, and have heard good things about it.
I wonder if he'd like Good Omens? There is some really British humor in there. One of the funniest books that I ever read, but I don't know if he'll get it.
I have heard Pullman's His Dark materials (I think that's right).
I suggested things like Verne and Wells. That's where I started.
I'm on #8 in the Wheel of Time. Its a love/hate relationship with me.
Thanks for the suggestions. I got more than I gave.
Me: WH (40s)
DDay 11/03/13
In MC and IC
MailServer ( member #40502) posted at 4:23 PM on Tuesday, November 11th, 2014
A lot of these have been mentioned so I'm just going to add my vote for...
The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings Trilogy
The Dune books. The prequels were fantastic.
Ray Bradbury:
October Country (short stories)
Something Wicked this way comes
The Halloween Tree
The Dust Returned (Halloween Tree sequel)
The Martian Chronicles
Watership Down
The Haunting of Hill House (Shirley Jackson)
Michael Crichton specifically:
The Andromeda Strain
Eaters of the Dead
Congo
Jurassic Park
Timeline
Prey
Binary
Crichton's books are excellent for brainy kids. He spends whole chapters on explaining the science behind the story. Very little of it gets into the movie versions.
Something non-fiction? Richard Preston's The Hot Zone. It's about Ebola Reston. Yes - all about an outbreak in Reston, Virginia. True story.
Richard Preston also wrote The Cobra Event which is fiction. Based on smallpox and the common cold fusing into a new type of disease.
[This message edited by MailServer at 10:45 AM, November 11th (Tuesday)]
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DDay: August 26 2012
LearningToRun ( member #31353) posted at 5:17 PM on Tuesday, November 11th, 2014
The Way of Kings By Brandon Sanderson So good!
Actually anything by brandon sanderson
Me: BS 49
Him: WH 54
OW - HS GF, reconnect on FB - They are now M
M- 23 years
DD Sept 2010 - he was lying about meeting and deleting all his texts
D-12/13/2010 - 60 days after i called uncle
whiteflower99 (original poster member #13937) posted at 2:40 PM on Wednesday, November 12th, 2014
Wow, thank everybody!!!
I am going online tonight to get a bunch of these.
For the Rick Riordan fans I noticed at the end of Blood of Olpmpus that he is starting a new series due out next fall this time with the Nordic pantheon.
Personally, I like his books I think the story line is great and I can't wait to see what he does here.
What are you pretending not to know?
me FBS
him idiotic sex addicted, hormone addled, porn watching, post pubescent male with a walking hard on for anything without a penis
4 kids 15 13 12 8
Earned my *F* the hard way.
InnerLight ( member #19946) posted at 4:51 PM on Saturday, November 22nd, 2014
Snow crash was one of best scifi books I've read.
Gormenghast was amazing.
What about non fiction tragedy/adventure like:
the Perfect Storm about massive weather that sunk a fishing boat of massachusets coast.
By Sebastian Junger.
Or The thin Blue Line by Jon Krakauer about the 1996 disappearance of climbers in mt everest.
Or
Into the Wild also by Krakauer about a young man surviving on his own in Alaska until he got trapped and died from eating poisonous plants.
These two authors write so compellingly that these are page turners, but they include science, geography, botany, etc. described in a very accessible style.
BS, 63 yearsD-day 6-2-08D after 20 yearsThe journey from Armageddon to Amazing Life happens one step at a time. Don't ever give up!
StillGoing ( member #28571) posted at 2:52 AM on Sunday, November 23rd, 2014
When you say he's not mature enough for George Martin, do you mean you're not comfortable with him reading really bad sex scenes and stupid, unnecessary torture scenes? Because that series isn't exactly mature. Actually, it's pretty fucking immature and stupid. It's like, take Dragonlance and add sex and torture, and take away the dragons, but, I dunno, add entire books about dragons that don't have dragons in them, and then, there you are.
Because Snow Crash, that's a lot more of a mature concept level than Game Of Sexposition, but it's FUCKING AMAZING. Neal Stephenson is great if he can understand it.
Otherwise, Terry Pratchett fits everything.
Everything.
Yes, that too.
No, not the creepy incest sex fantasies and torture shit. So not everything.
Everything that is COOL. Terry Pratchett is cooler than Star Wars and Lord of the Rings. Combined.
Seriously.
sudra ( member #30143) posted at 12:21 PM on Tuesday, November 25th, 2014
Please include Harry Potter. They're incredibly clever and interesting.
Also, my son really enjoyed the Da Vinci Code books.
The Maze Runner series is good, way better than the movie, BTW.
Me (BW) (5\64), Him(SAWH) (68)Married 31 years, 1 son (28), 1 stepdaughter (36) DDay #1 January 2004DDay #2 7-27-2010 7 month EA/PA (became "engaged" to OW before he told me he wanted a divorce)Working on R
helpme03 ( member #46083) posted at 10:44 PM on Monday, December 29th, 2014
Depending on how brainy he is, check out Gene Wolf's The Wizard and The Knight. It's a duology. His stuff is known for being extremely dense, but that one is written to appeal to a wider and younger audience (still not all that wide compared to popular fiction). It's a little weird, but there is nothing objectionable. The storyline is just weird.
His best known stuff is the Book of the New Sun series. It's also weird, and there's nothing too objectionable except that the main character is a torturer (I don't remember it being very graphic, though). That's not really geared toward kids, though, because it's about as dense as fiction comes. Every word has a reason, he makes up some words, the narrator is unreliable despite stating early on that he has a perfect memory, etc.
The Wizard and The Knight are like New Sun light or something.
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barelygettingby ( new member #42246) posted at 7:16 PM on Tuesday, January 20th, 2015
The Martian by Andy Weir is a great book!!!
Me: BW46
DIVORCED: 3/31/15
Topic is Sleeping.