Tamora Pierce's Recommended Reading Lists

(updated 10-08)


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  1. Booklist of Harry Potter's Effect on Publishing (list only)
    (from my speech about the effect of Harry Potter on publishing, given at the Terminus Conference)

  2. Recommended Books for Boys (revised 9-08)

  3. 2007 Recommended Books

  4. Spring/Fall 2006 Recommended Books (list only)

  5. Ultimate Ever Fantasy List (list only - incorporates all past general fantasy lists)

  6. Fun for Fall: Books I Recommend as Cool Reads (list & commentary)

  7. Past Books I Recommend as Cool Reads (list & commentary)

  8. Books on Writing I Recommend (list & commentary)

  9. "Pumpkin? We Don't Need No Stinkin' Pumpkin!" Teens and Young Women in Young Adult Fantasy Literature (list only - revision of 2004 Booklist: ALA '04 Recommended SF/Fantasy)

  10. Recommended Books for Homeschoolers
    (list only - but includes sections on Contemporary Teen fiction, general fiction, nonfiction, classics Tammy liked, poetry, Books you're
    supposed to have read if you want to be considered "educated", and plays)

  11. Recommended SF for Teens (list only)

  12. Making the Shift to Adult SF/Fantasy (list only)

  13. SF - Thinking About the World We Live In (list & commentary)

  14. Young Female Protagonists in SF/Fantasy (list only)

  15. Recommended Books for Gifted Readers: (all list & commentary)
    Contemporary Fiction
    Historical Fiction
    Alternate History
    Mythology
    Science Fiction

  16. Just Plain Good Books (Compiled for 2005 Beyond IQ, Boston) (list only)

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Please Note: These lists have been compiled by Tammy over the years for different occasions including various library and educational conferences, SF cons and fan requests. As a result, there is some duplication of recommended titles between lists. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause,

- Tim, Your Admin

Fun For Fall 2005:

I know some of these were published before this fall, but this is when I caught up to them!

  • THE PRINCESS ACADEMY by Shannon Hale. This is very different from Shannon's THE GOOSE GIRL and ENNA BURNING. It's not as dark, but that doesn't mean it isn't serious, either. The seriousness is on a very different plane from that of the first two books. When it comes time for the prince to marry, a prophecy is taken to see from which province of his realm his bride must be chosen. This time the prophecy nominates the marriageable girls of not a province, but a mere territory, the mining region of Mount Eskel. Since these girls are educated only in mining the silvery blue rock linder, their sole cash crop, a noble tutor, Olana, is sent to prepare them for a year. At the end of their princess lessons, they will be presented for the prince's inspection at a ball. Miri is one of the girls. She is a loner: her mother died bearing her, and her father forbids her to work in the quarries. At first the other girls hate her because she costs them their first visit home from the distant academy. Miri, though, is resourceful. She works out ways to deal with the others, to learn the lessons in books, to use the magical quarry speech, and to get word to their families that the traders have been giving them bargain prices for linder that makes the traders rich. I like how we get to know the other girls and their varied reasons for wanting to catch the prince's eye, as well as Miri's very mixed motives for doing this. Slowly the villagers themselves become three dimensional, and use their kinship with each other and their mountain to deal with their distant rulers and their autocratic ways. This book starts as Miri's story, but slowly and carefully Shannon opens up the perspective to show us her father, the teacher Olana, the other girls, the traders, the boy named Peder who Miri likes, even the prince. Miri's victories are not handed to her, any more than the girls' victories are handed to them. This is a solid story of girls bonding out of common interest and pride as well as friendship, making it wonderfully realistic. As always, Shannon doesn't give readers the Disney ending, but one that is satisfying.
  • VALIANT by Holly Black. The Spiderwick books were fun, but I wanted Holly to return to writing for teenagers, as she did in TITHE. Happily I can say "She's baaack!!!" VALIANT is as dark and gritty as TITHE. Don't look for Tinkerbell cuteness and fragile butterfly wings from Holly. She will just hurt you. In VALIANT, runaway Val joins a group of teenagers who live homeless under Grand Central Station in New York. They are glamorous, cynical, sexy, and dangerous, half frightening to Val and half enchanting in their own right. Eventually they teach her about Never, a drug that makes them able to do magic. Some of them deliver Never, made by the troll Ravus for faeries who have been exiled to New York from the realms of their birth. Never keeps them from being slowly poisoned by the cold iron that is fatal to their kind. Like them, Ravus is an exile from his home, sent away for murder. Ravus and Val meet and form a delicate friendship as she works for him, delivering Never. At the time of Val's arrival, Ravus develops a real problem: his customers are dying. Suspicion falls on Ravus and the drug he makes. The faerie court is coming to judge his guilt. In the meantime, Val, whom he trusts, has become a Never addict. Like any addict, she begins to steal the drug for herself and her addicted friends. The tension--will Ravus find out, and what will he do, coupled with the danger of his being found guilty by the faerie court--is exquisite. Val has to make some very tough choices and face the loss of the one she has come to love, a loss she knows she deserves. Holly demands high prices of her characters for a possibility of great gains, and you can't be sure things will go the girl hero's way in the end. This isn't TITHE, but then, I didn't want another TITHE, I wanted something new and übercool. Coolness VALIANT has in abundance. People who object to grit and an uncompromising look at drug addiction will want a safer book written by somebody else. Holly will never be safe.
  • THE GODS IN WINTER by Patricia Miles. On September 28 Front Street Press will reissue a book I love dearly. An English family moves to a house on a rambling estate in Wales as Mum's expecting a baby. On their way they see a girl who may or may not have been kidnapped drive into a huge hole in the ground with a man in his great black motorcar. In their new home, a helper arrives to assist them pending the baby's arrival, a Mrs. Korngold. In her wake come Odd Things: pictures that move, visions of the world as viewed from very lofty heights, a transformation of the obnoxious visiting cousin, and strange party guests who ask her to please change her mind. Mrs. Korngold is strangely compelling to the members of the family, aloof one moment, sloppily drunk another, competent and brisk yet another time. She reminds the story's narrator of a refugee. She also responds very strangely when someone mentions the girl and the man in the motorcar. There's some confusion about her presence--apparently the home help hadn't sent anyone to their house--but she's there, and she looks after the children well, leaving them a little different than they were after a very, very, very long winter, when at last her daughter returns to her.
  • A.D. 62: POMPEII by Rebecca East. Don't get all excited by the title. The fireworks don't happen in Pompeii for another 17 years. This story is about a time traveler named Miranda, a scholar from our time, who goes back to the era she knows best with an implanted device that will take her home. She ends up in the sea, which may explain why later, when she is trying to escape a bad situation, the implant won't activate. Before this happens, however, she continues to explore her new surroundings, striking up a friendship with an educated and egotistical fellow slave who arranges for her to be sold into the same household as he is. Making mistakes, discovering that the Latin of our time is not the real, colloquial stuff of Pompeii, Miranda adjusts awkwardly to her place, learning the awkward politics of slave and master, wife, child, and concubine. She discovers that her storytelling and songs will bring her status in the household, and her need for solitude beatings. And her knowledge of the future may doom her, or save her, depending on how she uses her wits. This is a gentle book that immerses the reader in the time. I never felt the writer, or Miranda, looked down their noses at these Romans. Their customs are alien, and there are some things we would not do that are part of their daily lives. Miranda can only change so many things. Every now and then the author lays a little too much information on us, but the story soon picks up again. I recommend this to any of my readers age 12 and if, and if you're reading adult romances at ten, you'll like this as well. It's a treat for those of us who love good fiction with realistic Roman settings.

Books I have recommended on previous versions of this page


Of the gazillions of questions that writers are asked, most are about how they write, where they get ideas, how to get published, and so on. Since I've found some good books along these lines, here they are--Books I recommend for those who want to write, whatever their ages:

  • A TOUGH GUIDE TO FANTASYLAND by Diana Wynne Jones. I've recommended it before; I'll recommend it till the cows come home. Reading this book is the best possible education you'll ever get on things that appear in fantasy novels all the time, including the ones which make no sense, and the ones which are done to death. If you write fantasy already it's an uncomfortable read, because some of these errors we've committed ourselves, but it's funny, it's clear, and it makes sense. (Currently out-of-print, but available second-hand on Amazon and Barnes & Noble - and will be reissued later this year by Firebird Books.)

  • AUTHOR TALK, compiled and edited by Leonard S. Marcus, Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2000: Marcus interviewed a number of top kids' writers (Judy Blume, James Howe, Karen Cushman, Lois Lowry, to name a few) for this book, but it's of interest even for those who mean to write for the older markets because he gets each writer to describe his/her work style, sources for ideas, work space, and how they came to what they do. He also includes a manuscript page for each author which the author has already gone over and rewritten, so the reader can see the kind of work individual writers will put into getting the story right. I like this book because it shows, vividly, the mantra I'm telling to writers when I go on author visits: "Whatever works." There's no right or wrong way to write, no right or wrong subject to write about, no right or wrong source of ideas--there's only what works for each individual writer. Check it out!

  • ON WRITING by Stephen King, Scribners hardcover, 2000. Yes, yes, I know, it's Big Bad Steve, the guy with the violence and the monsters and the sex in his books. Still, when it comes to writing a book about writing, he's awfully qualified, don't you think? Not only did he once teach English literature for a living and study it in college, but his literary tastes continue to range all over the map. I think he has to be the most adventurous writer being published in fiction today: he's written out-and-out horror, psychological suspense, fantasy, science fiction, revived serials (THE GREEN MILE), and tackled a number of forms on the Internet while the rest of the writing community worried about getting ripped off. I'd say he's well worth listening to, and the book is definitely a keeper. While I don't agree with a few things he says about how to write, obviously what he does works for him and may for someone else. We also get a good luck at how he got started as a writer, both as a kid and as a young dad, and we also learn more about the accident that nearly crippled him permanently (it did cripple him for months), and the way he found to come back from it and to start writing again. Younger kids, check this one with your folks before bringing it home, because Big Steve uses bad language all over the place, but I can't think of a book that gives writers serious insight into the workings of the mind that must be onto something good, or he wouldn't appeal to so many readers so much of the time, and that includes me. (Oh, no, I did a Fangirl Turn. I guess I was due.)

  • ANTHEM: the 50th Anniversary Edition by Ayn Rand, Signet paperback: Technically this isn't a book on writing, but a science fiction novel in which humanity is trained to think of itself as "we"
    --no individuals, no getting careers you want, no marrying the one you love. The story itself, which rocked my world when I was 14, but which impressed me less at 33 and 46, is actually short, only half of this edition. The treasure is in the other half--the manuscript pages with all of Rand's corrections and additions, all the editing she did herself. When I do school visits I bring along copies of my first and second drafts to show kids what writers do to improve their work and how editors help writers improve their work. Here is an incredible opportunity to observe one writer's thinking as she rewrote: would you make the changes she did? Why did she choose to rewrite some parts and not others? This is a kind of real world textbook for writers, well worth time and study.


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