Amber Baker's Reviews > Tithe
Tithe (Modern Faerie Tales, #1)
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If I could have given it 0 stars I would have. To publish this as a young adult novel is horrifying. I wouldn't read past 30 pages it was too offensive and to think it was published as content for young adults is terrible. It would be R rated as a movie. Not only was the f word used liberally throughout the few pages I read, teens were drinking, smoking and hinting at being sexually active. NOT something I would want my kids to read, or myself. I normally wouldn't dream of rating a book without reading more of it, but I was so appalled by what I read I couldn't go any further in the story. I just don't want to subject myself to that kind of trash posing as literature.
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Finished Reading
June 24, 2008
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Kayli
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rated it 4 stars
Feb 12, 2009 09:01PM

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And I would like to point out again, this would be at least R rated as a movie. Teens wouldn't be ABLE to go watch it without an adult. Then why is it okay to sell it as written for the teen generation?



So, while the writing may give the impression of caricature, for many teens it is reasonably accurate. The novel has its own faults (of note is the erratic pacing), there is no need to invent more.

Most teenagers do worse than this daily.
I should know, I'm a teenager, and I've been exposed to worse at HIGH SCHOOL. There is nothing wrong with this book, and if ever had children, I'd have no problem with them reading this book.





And as with only finishing the first 30 pages of the book then calling it off, you should know it is our obligation as a reader to remain openminded and malleable to the author's message in his or her book. If we neglect this duty by not giving the author the chance to explain themselves with the remainder of the book, then who are we to judge them on incomplete, opinionated assumptions on what their book could have been. You can't know if the book was trash or not because you did not read it. Your claim is not justified and is flawed as well as unsound due to your irrational, almost narrow-minded approach to it's contents.

That's true. I'm 14 and I can get over the swear words because Holly Black is an AMAZING writer and I love her books. My mum has read the book, and she liked it too. You can't be put off the book, 30 paghes in, because of the words it uses, you should look at the content and the talents of the writer and -like many have said- be open minded. Kaye, the protagonist- has purposefully grown up in an environment where things like that are acceptable, and THAT is what Holly Black is trying to show.
She doesn't just put things in like that because she wants too ;)


I agree with your review. I found it an unenjoyable read and was deterred in the first 15 pages. There are many other books out there with inspiring and uplifting messages and I'd rather invest my time into those. I'm 17.

I read this at15, twice. I still love it. It's fantastic and I adore everything Holly Black writes, this was the book that started it. Language helps create characters Kaye would not be Kaye if she curved it, the book would be lessened and the conflicts dulled. It's real it portrays a human characteristic that is real, that you will encounter and that you can not censor. You can choose what is worth reading in your opinion but you can't squash the personalities that exist around you. Good writing mimics life in all it's faults. There's nothing more I hate in writing then happy go lucky Mary Sue characters with silly, little problems like which boy to date.
Books are personalities and extensions of their creator. They weren't created to please your 'ideals' and ideas of censorship. They were created to expand narrow minds and to fulfill the author's desire to create their art and present it in the hopes some people, not all would enjoy love and appreciate it the way they do.

I find Twilight more offensive then this book.



You had stated that its not how you would want to raise your kids.. And thats fine and all but, no one is asking you to. You should trust that your raised them well enough that their judgement wouldn't be changed by one book. Sheltering them from things that actually occur, like teen raves, teen sex, and drinking. Thats just foolish.
I'm 17, and this book did NOT make me want to go get raped by a guy with thorns, or get drunk in an abandoned building. However, I did think the author may have been trying way to hard to appeal to the out-casted teens who can relate to some of the things Kaye faced.




I am right with you!! I was extremely uncomfortable reading this book! Belongs with supermarket romance novels, not young aduly books!

I am 16 and nobody I know does any of these things let alone all of the sex and drugs in this book. People who assume that this is everyday for teenagers are dead wrong. Maybe some shady losers who are going nowhere do but the vast majority of young people looks down on this stuff just as much as the average adult does!





I agree with the comments that it's a somewhat accurate (if not corny) reflection of what "real teenagers" are like. But as a teenager myself who hates the way other teenagers at school act... WHY WOULD YOU EVER WANT TO READ ABOUT THOSE IDIOTS??? I'll stick to Harry Potter where the teenagers actually have morals (not to mention far more exciting adventures..)

I know a lot of smart teenagers who don't act like that.




