Ok a couple of questions. @
Silver Sean
1) Have you read them? All of them I mean.
2) Do you feel that the 500 million books that have been sold and translated into 73 different languages somehow means that all of those people like 'Appallingly written, reductive, rehashed shite' Kids and Adults alike?
3) Are you experienced in writing yourself and because of that you feel your opinion carries some sort of weight?
4) Do you think any books that are written for kids could in no way be read by an adult and enjoyed?
5) May I ask what you would classify as a good well written book or maybe you could venture an author you admire.
Cheers
In reply. I read the first one, which is for 10 and 11 year olds as I am a writer and I wanted to see what the fuss was all about. I then read half of the second one before I'd read enough. They are children's books that are a mix of Enid Blyton's Mallory Towers/Famous Five/Secret Seven and Tolkien by way of C.S. Lewis and Roald Dahl. Clever of her and undeniably well thought out and well constructed with a good use of inventive language to create a world.
The amount of sales holds no merit. The Da Vinci Code is one of the worst written books of all time but sold millions. My dispute is that there is a huge difference between being a good storyteller and being a good writer. The bible is the best selling book of all time and that's some of the worst fiction ever written by dozens of people. I didn't say Rowling couldn't spin a good yarn.
I am a novelist with a literary agent who is marketing two of my novels as we speak. I have a Masters in Scriptwriting and a degree in journalism, so I think I know a little about writing, yes.
Many children's books are brilliantly written and great reading for adults. I would try Killing God by Kevin Brooks, the Silver Sword by Ian Serrallier, A Wrinkle In Time by Madeleine L'Engle, the Little Prince
by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, any Jack London, The Secret Garden, Gullivar's Travels, most of Dahl is still beautifully written AND tells a great story and the Phillip Pullman trilogy is very clever and well-written. Modern adult fiction IMHO doesn't get any better than Willy Vlautin, James Frey, Ron Rash, Donald Ray Pollock (I could go on and on) and of the old guys I love Graham Greene, Hemingway, Keroac, John Buchan, Huxley, Orwell, Twain, Dumas, (again I could go on and on) but it's all personal taste of course.
Having said that anything that gets kids excited about books and reading is to be celebrated, and I read a good deal of badly written but well-told stories as a child myself. I'm sure my daughter will too. My main issue is fully grown adults buying the adult cover versions of Harry Potter books and reading them as if they are reading Proust's Remembrance of things past. Just winds me up.