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url 2018-02-13 16:43
Galentine's Day with my Favorite Heroines | Top Ten Tuesday

 

Top Ten Tuesday is a list-based meme hosted by the amazing Jana @ That Artsy Reader Girl. If the meme sounds familiar, it was formerly hosted by The Broke and Bookish.


Happy Galentine's Day!  Since I am a rebel (and by that I mean single and slightly bitter), my Top Ten Tuesday is not going to focus on love and other sappy stuff as it was supposed to. Instead I am going to celebrate a much more important holiday, Galentine's Day.


For those who have not had the enlightening experience of watching Leslie Knope celebrate this holiday on Parks and Recreation, let me educate you. The day before the mushy gushy holiday on February 14 is dedicated to the power of female friendship and the awesomeness that is being a woman, regardless of whether or not you have a significant other. Galentine's Day is about girl-power and self-love, not about crying while watching The Notebook with a pint of Ben and Jerry's as your only companion.


To celebrate this wonderful day, I am sharing with you some of my favorite, kick-butt heroines from YA lit.

 

 

Click the link to learn more about some of my favorite heroines from YA and join in the discussion!

Source: 4evercrazyforya.blogspot.com/2018/02/happy-galentines-day-top-ten-tuesday.html
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url 2016-04-11 19:34
The greatest heroines of all time

It is 200 years since the birth of Charlotte Brontë, who in Jane Eyre created one of fiction’s most memorable heroines.

 

Jane Eyre

 

Read more here.

Source: www.bbc.com/culture/story/20160411-the-greatest-heroines-of-all-time
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url 2015-10-04 06:05
Top 10 heroines from history

From pioneering doctors to fearsome warriors – and the author of the first ever novel.

Source: www.theguardian.com/childrens-books-site/2015/oct/01/sandi-toksvigs-top-10-heroines-from-history
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url 2015-04-26 21:26
Favorite YA Heroines

This video is all about the YA heroines I adore, organized somewhat by “personality type.” I’ve included them in “types” so that if you’ve read a book from one PoV of the same personality type, maybe you’ll like the rest in that category. I’m a huge character oriented reader and most often I continue reading in books only if I feel invested in the characters’ lives, so I thought that this could be a sort of recommendation feature.

 
Unfortunately I forgot to change the size on my video cam, so this is not the usual video (also you can click this link to watch the video).
 
First off, obviously there’s overlap in these categories. A bold heroine is often a strategist and leader too. Second off, I don’t know that I’ve “categorized” these heroines entirely correctly; I may be reacting to an author’s writing style more than the character’s personality (e.g. Sam & Before I Fall; is she really a romantic or is that Lauren Oliver’s magical realism dreamy writing style?). Third off, all of these characters ARE unique, their OWN characters. Grouping them by personality type doesn’t mean that the characters are stock figures. Not one bit. And I’m sure there are many other points to be made about this video, ha, but let’s get to the categorizations first.

Bold/Brash/Confident/Sometimes Extroverted/“Intense”:

Rose (Vampire Academy), Katsa (Graceling), Willowdean (Dumplin'), Meliara (Crown Duel), Echo (The Girl at Midnight), Sophie Mercer (Hex Hall)

Strategists/Logical Thinkers/Planners/Sometimes Unwittingly Made into Leaders:

Kestrel (The Winner's Curse), Bitterblue (Bitterblue), Tula Bane (Tin Star), June (Legend), Cath (Fangirl), Seraphina (Seraphina), Attolia (The Queen of Attolia)

Romantics/Dreamers/Idealists/Sensitive/Open to the World:

Anna/Lola/Isla (Stephanie Perkins's books), Lennie Walker (The Sky Is Everywhere), Terra Cooper (North of Beautiful), Sam (Before I Fall), Macy (The Truth about Forever)

Underestimated (see, lol, not really a “personality type”):

Tris (Divergent), Paige (The Bone Season), Lee Westfall (Walk on Earth a Stranger), Ismae (Grave Mercy), Lia (The Kiss of Deception), Agnieska (Uprooted)

Guilt-ridden/antiheroines/deep thinkers/no category I really knew(?):

Fire (Fire), Briony (Chime), Alex (Made You Up), Hermione (Harry Potter), Nyx (Cruel Beauty), Celaena (Throne of Glass), Sophie (Howl's Moving Castle), Sophia (The Glass Sentence)

In classics: Antigone, Jane Eyre, Jane Austen's heroines

Despite having written a post on why I like fantasy better than contemporary novels, every time I found myself compiling lists of favorite novels, I would see about an equal number between the two. I’d wonder, why. I definitely do like fantasy more than contemporary novels, and I think I’ve stumbled upon a reason.

Having created this list, I wonder at the lack of contemporary heroines here. I think that sometimes contemporary heroines may not be allowed to “shine” as fully as their peers in fantasy, or some personality types are missing from contemporary. Most of the contemporary stories I’ve read have featured some sort of introverted type, few with the “bold, brash, confident” exterior. And I wonder why – is it harder to pull off the moments of reflection needed in a contemporary novel if you choose a heroine who’s a little more intense?

Or am I reading the wrong books? I don’t discount this last question – I leave that to you, my readers, to tell me. And if I am, perchance recommend me some others. Because right now, I’m thinking that contemporary more easily translates to the romantic/dreamer type while fantasy, it’s harder without the character getting a lot of “hate” (e.g. Sansa Stark).

Do you think this is a useful way of recommending books / will you be reading some of these books now? Do we share any favorite heroines? Do you have any books that you would recommend to me based on the above? Let me know!

 

 

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review SPOILER ALERT! 2014-02-22 15:38
Fathomless: In Which I Speculate on Trans Werewolves
Fathomless - Jackson Pearce

It's official: Jackson Pierce is here to stay. You know how I know? Because her books get better as time goes on.

Is it odd to say? That this series gets better with each book, I mean? For book bloggers, that doesn't seem to be much of a recommendation, yet for some reason the series that got talked about the most are the ones that deteriorated over time. Is it because high-profile books get more scrutiny? Or is it the opposite, that we talk more about stuff that provides us with the material?

Why am I even on this tangent? 

Probably because, had it not been for the 2014 prequel/sequel challenge, I would have never looked at Pearce's novels beyond Sisters Red. Despite the beautiful covers and the intriguing synopsis, I would have classified them as sequels to that book with the problematic portrayals. (So thank you, Novel Heartbeat!) That said, if you did read "Sisters Red" and you decided that this series is not for you, I can understand that. But I'm personally glad I gave this one a shot.

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