Subject: How 'bout an obscure one?
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Posted on: 2015-04-15 06:41:00 UTC

Well, relatively speaking. I don't have any major ones from my childhood in the pre-teen sense, but in terms of memorable literature from my past, there's quite a lot of popular book series, and then there's this one from completely out of left field.

Ladies and gents, I give you... Raptor Red.

Basically, it's a 1995 American novel by paleontologist Robert T. Bakker, a third-person account of dinosaurs during the Cretaceous Period, told from the point of view of Raptor Red, a female Utahraptor. Though a bit dated for its time, it's one of the most accurate works of dinosaur media for its day, and it is amazing.

The first time I saw this book, when I was in my mid-teens, it was sold at a local Goodwill for around $3.00, I forget the price. But I still have it to this day, and I've read it cover-to-cover way too many times to count. It's THAT good. Incidentally, most of Velociripper's mannerisms have been influenced extensively by it, which says a lot about how memorable Raptor Red's characterization is. Believable, relatable, and completely plausible in terms of animal behavior.

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