Showing posts with label coming of age. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coming of age. Show all posts

Monday, July 5, 2010

Anderson's: Fever: 1793

There is nothing more horrific than that which has actually happened. Laurie Halse Anderson relates the details of Philadelphia's yellow fever plague of 1793 through the eyes of a fictional teenager Matilda Cook who is forced to grow up before her time in her novel Fever: 1793. The blood-sucking villain she faces is more terrifying than any fictional vampire or werewolf. Her villain actually exists to this day and made a ghost town out of the largest city in the United States. Is it possible for this villain, or another one like it to strike the United States again? Do we know enough to protect ourselves, not only from the villain itself but from what follows after such a disaster? Matilda finds the courage to defend her family and home from robbers and murderers. This novel may cause today's teenagers to question what they are prepared to do in the face of extreme and sudden adversity.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Avi's: Crispin: At the Edge of the World

Picking up on the same day where The Cross of Lead ended, At the Edge of the World has Bear and Crispin running from their enemies determined to find a place where they can live in peace. Along the way a new member is added to their small family. Avi is able to build some suspense in this volume of the series; however, very little, if any, mystery is present. The once jovial and endearing Bear is either unconscious, melancholic, or privately introspective throughout causing a loss of some of the original appeal. All in all this edition seems merely like an addition and not its own fully realized novel.

Saturday, June 26, 2010

McCormick's: Sold

McCormick's Sold is a gripping tribute to the millions of children who have been sold into the sex-slave trade throughout the world. This heart-wrenching tale pulls readers into a wretched world where young girls are sold by their families, tortured for years, and then tossed away into the filthy gutters of Calcutta. A poetic and entrancing voice leads us on a journey from hopefulness to despair and misery where each daily survival is a triumph of spirit over circumstance. This truly remarkable work, funded through a fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts will likely make our more sophisticated teen readers thankful for everything they have in their lives.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Angelou's: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

I decided to read Maya Angelou's autobiographical I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings after reports on a listserv of its being challenged in two Orange County high school districts. I was struct by Angelou's brutal honesty told in such an innocent voice. Her love and connection to her brother compelled me through the beginning chapters. Her guilt over her rape and the events leading to it she was able to make both understandable and shocking in the same innocent voice. The racial prejudices she experiences, learns, overcomes, and feels herself are described in unabashed manner to allow the reader a clear understanding of what it meant to grow up in a small Alabama town and then be transplanted to an urban setting as a teen. Probably not the best choice for most tweens, but definitely a popular choice for some of our library's more mature middle school readers.

Another review