24 Nov 2011
The Firework-Maker’s Daughter is the first Pullman book we read at home. As endearing as we found this book to be, I am fully aware that Pullman’s writing can be dark. So I always check out the reviews. While doing so, I stumbled across Publisher’s Weekly’s editorial review of Pullman’s The White Mercedes at Amazon.
Cut+Paste of the review here
“The menacing darkness that lurked at the edges of Pullman’s trilogy of Victorian-era thrillers ( The Ruby in the Smoke et al.) comes to the fore in this contemporary tale of shattered innocence and betrayed love set in Oxford, England. From the first line–“Chris Marshall met the girl he was going to kill on a warm night in early June”–the sense of imminent evil and inexorable doom builds unrelentingly to the novel’s violent, gutwrenching climax. Naive and well-intentioned, 17-year-old Chris has love, not murder, on his mind when he meets and later beds Jenny (described in lyric and intimate detail), who has run away from her abusive father. Indeed, it is precisely Chris’s trusting nature and sense of justice that cause the youth to be duped by a vengeful felon into causing Jenny’s death–and only then because she is mistaken for someone else. Here is a modern-day Shakespearean tragedy, with star-crossed lovers separated by fate, a terrifyingly philosophical villain and assorted innocents, cads and buffoons. Its evocative narrative and throat-tightening suspense make this novel a compelling read; however, the graphic sex, moral ambiguity and somber ending make it most suitable for mature YA readers. Ages 12-up. ”
I was doing perfectly fine, mentally valuating the appropriateness of this book(NOT for Chula, for some other purpose). But the last two lines left me gaping. Since when does graphic sex and 12 year old go together?
Which brings me to the questions,
Do you agree or disagree with me?
Do you think I am over reacting. A 12 year old can handle this content?
What were you reading when you were 12?
Would you let your 12 year old read this?
Thanks and have a good one folks.
9 Responses for "Answer This For Me Will You?"
No. I think 12 yr olds cannot handle this book. I haven’t seen the book in question, but based on the review you have presented, I do not think so. Even though some of them might be biologically there, they certainly do not have the emotional and cognitive maturity to appreciate and process it.
Same reason why I have always been strongly against children watching movies with inappropriate content. Most parents do not give a second thought to this while watching such movies with their kids. I find myself in the minority at most times.
I have a 12 yr and no way I will let her read this.she has read dark books, the hunger games, the third children but graphic sex is something I do not want her reading.
however, if she reads this without asking me and then I find out, and she shows me the line that says its for 12 and up, then what should my reaction be?
What I was reading at age 12 will probably shock for its naivete in these days.
You’re not over reacting! Anyone who isn’t reacting needs their head checked….*visualize Obelix tapping his head*
No ways! at 12, I dont think anyone will let their children read graphic sex….not a chance
At 12, I think I was still stuck at Enid Blytons, Nancy Drews and Hardy Boys…pretty sad eh?
no way.
12 yr olds are NOT adults, young or otherwise.
i HATE the term ‘YA’.
as to what i was reading – same as sangi.
havng said that, as i told you, hey if an 8 yr old girl can be taken to watch ra.one (as a friend did) then this review sounds like peanuts for a 12 yr old. same with rockstar for 3 yr old boy (yet another friend).
I think I had just discovered the world of St.Clares when I was 12. So no point comparing those days. Access was limited.
Im just coming to terms with my 6 year old finding out the F word. Reading graphic Sex at 12? Let me go kill myself right now!
i never like the pullman chap.
never liked any of his writing.
i dont like the book covers even.
and after this
he totally gets my dislike button
More about what I will do with the kids later. Um..I see I am an exception here ! See I remember I started getting access to books of Enid Blyton, Nancy Drew and the Likes around 10 years. So started with those. Then around 13 or 14 years and after that, I started reading Sydney Sheldon, Irving Wallace and lot of other mysteries/thrillers. We had a library with lots of books near our house and so it was easy access to books. I don’t recollect parents ever coming with us to libraries. we friends used to go together. So I have given you the facts now :-).
Echoing Sandhya and Chox – I can’t understand how kids can be taken to B’Wood movies!
..and I’ve always been on the ‘unfashionably conservative’ side about such things…
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