They like the Narnia movies but not the LotR movies? Interesting!
Like DeRego said, I think it is due to the level of complexity between the two. They didn't hate LotR; they just weren't as excited as I'd hoped (except for Parker).
On similar another note, I am probably being like some parents that David Barr Kirtley ran into at a bookstore.
From that encounter, David was challenged to create a list of books for teen boys to help them want to read. What would you add to the list? Would it be different for teen girls? If so, how?
I'll take the challenge. However, with the caveat that you can lead a kid to a bookstore but you can't make him read unless you (i.e. the parent) are an active reader. If a kid grows up with you reading books for enjoyment they learn that books = enjoyment before they learn that Dora lives in the TV. In my experience (and I was a preschool/kindergarten teacher) is that parents are usually good readers for really little kids, but they typically aren't readers. So once the kid gets out of board books and disney stories based on the movies, they don't have a reason to keep reading. Mom and Dad don't read, they watch TV...
That said -
10 books for Boys -
The Jungle Book - Rudyard Kipling
Rumble Fish - S.E. Hinton (any S.E. Hinton is good, but Rumble Fish is my favorite of her stories)
Tunnel in the Sky - Robert Heinlein
The Illustrated Man - Ray Bradbury
The Three Musketeers or The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas
The War of the Worlds - H. G. Wells
Captain's Courageous - Rudyard Kipling
The Coming of Conan - Robert E. Howard (it's a collection of his original Conan shorts in publication order)
Christine - Steven King
A Clockwork Orange - Anthony Burgess
ALTERNATES FOR BOYS - Dolphin Island - Arthur C. Clarke, Jurassic Park - Michael Crichton, Call of the Wild - Jack London
10 books for girls-
Tex - S. E. Hinton
Podkayne of Mars - Robert Heinlein
A Room with a View - E. M. Forster
The Jungle Book - Rudyard Kipling
Little Women - Louisa May Alcott
I Robot - Isaac Asimov
Firestarter - Steven King
Watership Down - Richard Adams
The Three Musketeers or The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas
National Velvet - Enid Bagnold
I don't have any alternates for girls, as I am not a girl. I've read all of the books on both lists, and I'd stand behind all of them. I almost always put Moby Dick on any book list, and I first read it as a 6th grader (in a bowdlerized edition) and every school year after that until Senior Year in high school when I read the unabridged version. I grew up in New Bedford, home of the Pequod, but that book is harder than diamond to get into, without a good edit that streamlines the story elements and temporarily removes all of the superfluous whaling-techno-stuff, at 11 to 15 or so.