Mission: To give science fiction book recommendations to parents who want to get their teenagers to read more on their own.
The Problem: Most parents want their children to read more books and to impart a love of reading, but often don’t know to what to get their kids to read that is both high quality and that they will actually enjoy reading.
I read a lot of books as a teen on my own and still read about one book a week, but most of my classmates did not read books voluntarily for pleasure. And the titles we read in school were either what the teacher wanted to read or what the district assigned. They were usually not that interesting to my fellow students and even if they were fun to read, the lesson plans often managed to drain the pleasure out of reading. Sometimes they were books more appropriate for adults or were high quality, but not of much interest to teens. So by the end of high school the majority of my peers had almost no interest in reading good books on their own despite being force fed a steady diet of what educated adults considered good “classics”.
One of the genres that I, and many of my male friends in particular, liked was science fiction. Those books often had tie ins with movies or other media; they had plenty of action and complex plots; they had themes and characters we could identify with; and most important they had interesting new ideas, settings, and science to immerse us into their worlds and stories. Many of the well educated adult men I am friends with now still stick with science fiction, and its cousin fantasy, for most of their pleasure reading.
Unfortunately, there is more chaff than wheat when it comes to books and a much of the science fiction out there is not worth reading. On top of it many of the well written books have material many parents won’t want their minor children reading, at least until they are older. I post reviews based around individual authors and try to cover a variety of their work when possible. This includes authors from the late nineteenth century to current authors.
I hope this is particularly helpful to parents who may be homeschooling or who otherwise want their kids to read on their own, but don’t know where to start. Adults will hopefully like most of what I recommend as well.
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