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    « Magical Things | Main | What's With the Nonfiction? »

    July 07, 2009

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    Cannot even tell you how much I loved Billy and Blaze as a kid. Had totally forgotten about it. Must find it...wonder if my mom still has it!

    One of the things I noticed when I was little was how many of the "classic" horse books featured boys. (The Black Stallion series, My Friend Flicka, etc.) When did horse stories start to feature girls?

    I think that the main problem is that girls will read "boy" books (I know I did) but that boys will not read "girl" books (in general). And that's a shame.

    I agree with Akycha. Brynn prefers to read books about girls, because she's such a girly-girl, but she will happily read books about boys if they are good. But I'm not sure the opposite is true. My little brother wouldn't read "girl books" no matter what.

    When my son was born, I was worried that I wouldn't be able to share the books I loved as a girl; I just assumed that a boy would reject those books.

    Turns out that's not true. My 9 year old son definitely prefers books about boys (just as I tended to prefer books about girls when I was his age), but he's also found plenty to engage him in books like Ramona and this summer he's loving the Little House books. I think that boys of today have a very different expectation of gender roles; certainly my son does (thanks, Hillary!).

    I've also sought out books about boys where emotions are experienced and acknowledged. Two I HIGHLY recommend: The Cabin on Trouble Creek, by Jean Van Leeuwen. It's the story of two boys left alone to homestead over the winter in Ohio; v. compelling.

    And The Seven Wonders of Sassafras Spring by Betty Birney, about a boy searching for excitement in the world of his 1930s small town in Missouri. This book is an amazing read-aloud (I read it to the 2nd graders in my school the last two years in a row). And the hero, a boy named Eben, is quite charming.

    Interesting.

    I write action-adventures & mysteries especially for tween boys. Why? I have a background in the production of dramatic films for kids. My work also involved the marketing, promotion, and distribution of those films for rental. What we found was that boys would not watch a girl's story, but girls were interested in, and would watch a boy's story.

    So I adopted that same template for my books and it works well. I believe there is a great need for books that will attract boys to read, and I know that isn't happening, on a large scale, if the stories are girl centered.

    Max Elliot Anderson
    Books For Boys Blog - #1 on Google today
    http://booksandboys.blogspot.com

    It's an interesting question; I remember one of the first books I read that really dealt with grown-up questions was "The Yearling," which was one of those marvelous finds from wandering the grown-up shelves in the library for possibly the first time. I didn't really think anything of the fact that the main character was a boy; probably given the historical context, it made sense to me. I don't know if you would have found a story about a girl left alone to homestead while her father went back east to fetch the family (or whether it would feel kind of forced if you did?).

    I also loved the Oz books, which seem very girly to me; few of the characters are male, and the main characters (Dorothy, Ozma, Glinda) are all female. So far, my son is enjoying those, but he's 5, so his interests are a little fleeting and his gender awareness isn't overwhelming yet. I hope he continues to like the best of the "girl" books as he gets older.

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