Can anyone recommend a book for an 11 year old tomboy?

Can anyone recommend a book for an 11 year old tomboy?

Author
Discussion

13m

26,271 posts

222 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
Hugo a Gogo said:
13m said:
Hugo a Gogo said:
My daughter is 10 and was in the same boat, loved Lemony Snicket books after HP
Is it my filthy mind, or is Lemony Snicket a reference to a lady's secret place?
it's your filthy mind

Lemony?
Is there a Mrs Hugo a Gogo?

Hugo a Gogo

23,378 posts

233 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
there is... still confused by the lemony part,

oldbanger

4,316 posts

238 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
battered said:
From memory:
Alan Garner - lots

Robert Westall. Possibly a bit boyish, but he tells a good yarn.
Alan Garner is great e.g. Elidor
Robert Westall's Cats of Seroster is a fantastic book

JohnClancy

Original Poster:

50 posts

89 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
She read this last night:


She enjoyed it on her kindle, Now for the Dark Materials.


battered

4,088 posts

147 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
Richard Adams - Watership Down and Plague Dogs

Jack London - start with "To build a fire" which is a short story you can download online and read in an hour. If that's a winner, White Fang.

13m

26,271 posts

222 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
Hugo a Gogo said:
there is... still confused by the lemony part,
A lady's foo-foo can often taste a little bit sour. An apt description would be Lemony Snicket.

Was this entirely accidental on the part of Daniel Handler (whose nom de plum is Lemony Snicket), or was he being a scamp?



Hugo a Gogo

23,378 posts

233 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
maybe I have different lemons to you...

mike80

2,248 posts

216 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
Something by Robin Jarvis?

Loved these when I was around that age. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Deptford_Mice

66mpg

651 posts

107 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
Another old fashioned suggestion but both my girls enjoyed Brendon Chase by "BB"

66mpg

651 posts

107 months

Wednesday 9th November 2016
quotequote all
Another old fashioned suggestion but both my girls enjoyed Brendon Chase by "BB"

13m

26,271 posts

222 months

Thursday 10th November 2016
quotequote all
66mpg said:
Another old fashioned suggestion but both my girls enjoyed Brendon Chase by "BB"
Wow, I read that when I was a nipper. I still have it and might give it to my children to read. Thanks for reminding me.

Nom de ploom

4,890 posts

174 months

Thursday 10th November 2016
quotequote all
the knife of never letting go by Patrick Ness

ben5575

6,254 posts

221 months

Saturday 12th November 2016
quotequote all
Alex Rider has been the only series of books that has dragged my son away from relentlessly rereading HP.

Now he's broken the habit, I'll give some of these recommendations a go.

Vocal Minority

8,582 posts

152 months

Saturday 12th November 2016
quotequote all
For non-fiction can I recommend Dangerous Book for Boys?

If she's a bit of a Tom boy I think it would be right up her street - I'll leave judgements on family politics to you!

JohnClancy

Original Poster:

50 posts

89 months

Sunday 13th November 2016
quotequote all
She is reading 'Northern Lights' at the moment and loving it, After her nagging I read 'The Troll Scrolls' by Neil Gibson and it was suprisingly good, even has my favourite aircraft in it - the mighty Chinook. Would recommend for a 6th year. I have also heard the Hunger games are good, but not sure if too violent?

laam999

538 posts

169 months

Monday 14th November 2016
quotequote all
His dark materials is a good series, much better second and third book as Will is a much better character than Lyra.

I would recomend both Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card, my personal favourite series of books, and The Dresden Files, similar vain to Harry Potter but much more grounded in the real world, even all powerful wizards realise guns are very very effective at what they do.

I wouldn't think The Hunger Games was overly violent, much worse on Tv and it's full or moral choices, the main characters never want to kill.

I hope she enjoys all these recommendations.

Laam

Perseverant

439 posts

111 months

Saturday 26th November 2016
quotequote all
Terry Pratchett would be one of my first ideas, also Philip Pullman. There's an American writer, Carl Hiassen, who does pretty funny writing for kids and adults- "Hoot" for example.

ReaderScars

6,087 posts

176 months

Tuesday 29th November 2016
quotequote all
The Diamond Age, Or The New Lady's Illustrated Primer

(same book) Sci fi, focuses on various characters and how they're drawn together by the results of a very mysterious and very powerful individual who comissions an engineer to design and make a new tech breakthrough, which has huge, planet wide consequences for a particular sector of the human species when the tech is stolen!

Very relevant and a very, very good read for a young womany-kind of thing (presumably, not being so).

4.2/5 on goodreads.com

Halb

53,012 posts

183 months

Saturday 16th December 2017
quotequote all
Nom de ploom said:
The turbulent term of tyke tyler?
Flowers for Algernon
The Hobbit
TO kill a mockingbird

latter two not original by any means but all were school class reading material at 9-13 for me
Tyke Tyler was the first one I thought of.

I'd also add the Tiff Aching books by Pratchett


Zed for Zacheriah.

mybrainhurts

90,809 posts

255 months

Saturday 16th December 2017
quotequote all
Halb said:
Nom de ploom said:
The turbulent term of tyke tyler?
Flowers for Algernon
The Hobbit
TO kill a mockingbird

latter two not original by any means but all were school class reading material at 9-13 for me
Tyke Tyler was the first one I thought of.

I'd also add the Tiff Aching books by Pratchett


Zed for Zacheriah.
Took you a year to come up with that...? rofl