For
Readers Who Cut Their Teeth on Vampires
Maturing
Kids Need Something More To Chew On
Good
parents try to stay plugged into their kids’ lives, and nowadays – for parents
of teen girls, anyway – that’s likely
to mean reading the Twilight vampire
series by Stephenie Meyer and tuning into the hit teen TV drama, The Vampire Diaries, on The CW.
With
the fourth in the series, The Twilight
Saga: Breaking Dawn, opening in movie theaters Nov. 18, there’s plenty of
bloodlust building, but how to keep whetting that appetite for books? As teens outgrow the high
school drama and simple romance of adolescent fantasy fiction, they need
something with the same allure – and a little more substance – to keep them
reading.
Bravo
to those 30-, 40- and 50-something parents who want to continue hanging with
their kids, even if it’s only in the pages of books. Many of these adults have
become vampire literates, though by now they’re hankering for something a
little more substantive than Type 0 fantasy.
Paul
Dorset, a father of five girls and boys ages 13 to 27 years old, says it’s
important to keep kids reading – even if they’re 20-something “kids” – and when
parents and children can talk about the books they’re sharing, that’s better
yet.
“Kids
have a short attention span these days,” he says. “It takes a really good book
to get them focused. You really have to encourage kids to read.”
As
a pioneer in the computing world (he was writing classified code for the
British government in the late 1970s and early ‘80s), Dorset
has an unusual insight into what clicks, literally, for young readers – and
their parents.
His
newest book, New Blood: Melrose Part 1
(PaulDorset.com), draws from his 30-plus years in
Information Technology. Toss in a little paranormal activity (a graduation from
vampires) and Da Vinci Code-style
intrigue and you’ve got something older teens, young adults and their parents can sink their teeth
into.
“I
wouldn’t recommend it for my 13-year-old, but it’s perfect for my 16-year-old,”
he says. “Even my 22-year-old loves it, and the guys like it as much as the
girls.”
Dorset,
a British native who lives near Seattle, Wash., says it’s important to give
young adults books that offer readers something to chew on intellectually
without being overly graphic, something that both parents and their young adult
kids can have fun with and talk about – without blushing.
How
does one do that? Hit on the themes affecting all of us today: layoffs and
corporate reorganization; technology and the looming shadow of “big brother;”
ambition and its costs.
“Add
to that mystery, the paranormal culture and two people who must never get
together and you’ve got lots of layers for any adult, or young adult, to peel
back,” he says. “The more things that happen, the more you uncover.”
That
should keep young people perpetuating a declining skill: reading.
About
Paul Dorset
Paul
Dorset is a father of five who has worked as a computer consultant
for more than 30 years. His previous publications include fantasy novels for
ages 12-plus and how-to books for adults. He incorporates his extensive
experience in computers – and his insightful perspective on the possibilities
therein – in novels that include layers of contemporary intrigue, romance and
mystery.
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