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[personal profile] lady_schrapnell
Just finished this last night, and I liked it quite a bit, but didn't feel a burning love.  I was telling [personal profile] steepholm  that I thought the way the humans - who have always proclaimed the Nightwalkers (magic users) to be EVIL - must be destroyed! - burn them all!  etc - actually turn out to be the land-stealers, torturers and murderers of long standing themselves - a bit less subtle than it might be.  Actually, I'm not sure I told him that at all, but I definitely told him that it belonged to a large group of books in which there is one story told by society, and that is that some group or other is inferior, dangerous or pure evil.  And of course the whole plot-line leads the protagonist to find out that at best, the group feels the same about his/her people or the whole thing is reversed.  But having come up with Malorie Blackman's Noughts and Crosses, and together managing Diana Wynne Jones' Power of Three, I blanked out, while remaining sure there are gazillions of books which do something like this. 

Help?

Only interested in fantasy, and only in children's or YA.  And only in a society in which the prejudice is against a whole group of people (so I'm not talking about individual prejudice as in Crown Duel or DWJ's The Ogre Downstairs). Left Hand of Darkness territory. 

Incarceron by Catherine Fisher, maybe.  (I did think of the Book of the Crow series, which -- well, complicated a bit, but sort of work.)
 
Shannon Hale in Enna Burning and River Secrets?  Not sure about the group aspect, though the number of individuals with magic seems to be growing with each successive book.

The Bartimaeus Trilogy? (It's scary how much I've forgotten about that.) Not sure if it's more your standard corrupt politicians (who happen to have got more power through being magicians) eventually being shown to be corrupt ,which isn't what I'm looking for.

Patricia Wrede's Dragons series?  It's sort of a toss-up between those being inverted fairy tales, which isn't quite what I'm thinking of, and  working perfectly, with the dragons, princes and witches of those fairy tales being totally misrepresented. 

Mercedes Lackey does this in spades, I suspect, but I can't remember whether the books of hers I borrowed were adult or YA. (Uh, borrowed from [profile] dorianegray, not borrowed from Mercedes Lackey!)

Blank. Blank. Blank. But still sure about the gazillions.

Date: 2008-06-18 06:19 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hafren.livejournal.com
I'm not sure you can separate out "only fantasy", mainly because the first example of "young protagonist finding out society doesn't always get it right" that comes to my mind is Huckleberry Finn and I suspect that a vague memory of that has influenced many a children's writer in another genre.

Date: 2008-06-18 06:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lady-schrapnell.livejournal.com
Oh, I just said that because [livejournal.com profile] steepholm is working on something about children's fantasy. We already had to toss out quite a few examples that are too SF.

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