Stephenie Meyer maybe the hottest writer to reach teenagers to read, but it is her method to get the teenagers to read more. Put a hunky handsome vampire in the story, which will get female teenagers to read. The romance part maybe good.

In the latest J.K. Rowling novels of Wizardry with Harry Potter adventures, pre-teens are reading her novels. Magic and Fantasy books are getting attention, which is good for the imagination. Some people are against it because of the magic. The magic is in the book and the magic is in the mind of the teenagers who are reading her novels. It’s not real. It’s a fantasy and people like fantasy. But when fantasy crosses the line and put sex in the book or the movie, that’s the imagination of the writer who’s writing the book.

I hope the writers like Stephenie Meyer and J.K. Rowling know their readers not to put too much sexual innuendo in their books. When the teenagers read this, they will ask their parents “what does this mean” and the parents will make money by suing the writers.  If the parents don’t like the book just get a Nicholas Spark novels or R.L. Stine books.

These authors like to challenge and take a risk with the characters in the story and mostly there were controversial, because of the situation and the time-period. “The Catcher and the Rye” written by J.D. Salinger had sexual content and language.  Harper Lee’s “To Kill A Mockingbird” had language and racism.  Alice Walker’s “The Color Purple” had sexual content and language. Robert Cormeir’s “The Chocolate War” had nudity, language and sexual content. I have all of these novels and they don’t offended me. It’s a book what the writers write they are telling a story of what the characters are going through. Don’t get offended. If you don’t like the book, get another book, and don’t make a public scene and put in the local newspaper. Get another book.

“mostchallenged2009_oif,” American Library Association, April 14, 2010.
http://www.ala.org/ala/newspresscenter/news/pressreleases2010/april2010/mostchallenged2009_oif.cfm (Accessed April 14, 2010)

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