deborah: the Library of Congress cataloging numbers for children's literature, technology, and library science (Default)
[personal profile] deborah
In some YA novels, the heroes have to decipher their journey through a literal guidebook they find.

Sometimes it's a manual provided by the PTB, as in So You Want To Be A Wizard by [personal profile] dduane.

Sometimes it's a guide left by the parents' generation, as in Jellicoe Road, The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks, or the Marauder's Map of the Harry Potter books. There's something similar in the Rebel Angels books, right?

In Walter Dean Meyers' Handbook for Boys, there's no literal book, but the title layers an implication of guidebook nature over the advice given by the prior generation.

Other examples? [personal profile] astern and I will thank you.

Date: 2012-08-31 02:33 am (UTC)
grrlpup: yellow rose in sunlight (Default)
From: [personal profile] grrlpup
In E.W. Hildick's The Active Enzyme Lemon-Freshened Junior High School Witch Alison is working out of a book by an older witch.

Will Stanton reads the Book of Gramarye in The Dark Is Rising.

There are teenage overreadings of classic romance, as in Sheila Greenwald's It All Began With Jane Eyre or Mary Calhoun's Katie John and Heathcliff. (And surely more recent Austen-related books in that vein?) But maybe those aren't really a match for your request.

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Gnomic Utterances. These are traditional, and are set at the head of each section of the Guidebook. The reason for them is lost in the mists of History. They are culled by the Management from a mighty collection of wise sayings probably compiled by a SAGE—probably called Ka’a Orto’o—some centuries before the Tour begins. The Rule is that no Utterance has anything whatsoever to do with the section it precedes. Nor, of course, has it anything to do with Gnomes.

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