Follow us:
  DR. BICKMORE'S YA WEDNESDAY
  • Wed Posts
  • PICKS 2025
  • Con.
  • Mon. Motivators 2025
  • WEEKEND PICKS 2024
  • Weekend Picks 2021
  • Contributors
  • Bickmore's Posts
  • Lesley Roessing's Posts
  • Weekend Picks 2020
  • Weekend Picks 2019
  • Weekend Picks old
  • 2021 UNLV online Summit
  • UNLV online Summit 2020
  • 2019 Summit on Teaching YA
  • 2018 Summit
  • Contact
  • About
  • WEEKEND PICKS 2023
    • WEEKEND PICKS 2023
  • Bickmore Books for Summit 2024

 

Check out our weekly posts!

Stay Current

Look, My English Teacher has Five Reading Heads

9/24/2014

 
Picture
This week’s guest columnist is Crag Hill.  Crag is an assistant professor of English Education at the University Oklahoma, the editor of The Critical Merits of Young Adult Literature: Coming of Age,  and was the co-director of Academic interaction at last year’s LSU Young Adult Literature Conference & Seminar. Any of the attendee’s from last year’s conference can speak to his generosity as an academic colleague.  As the conference organizer, I was thrilled that Crag was there to help out and I am looking forward to working with him again during the 2015 conference, May 31st through June 5th—reserve the date.

In this week’s offering Crag reflects on the various ways preservice English teachers read books.  Many begin their careers speaking harshly about young adult literature. Crag suggests that one of their issues is that they need to become cognizant of the various ways they do read and the possible ways they might read to better prepare their students.


English majors in YA classes

A shift occurs every semester in my young adult (YA) literature class after students have read and discussed the first two or three novels. Students have been surprised and challenged by the novels at the beginning of the course. Laurie Halse Anderson’s Speak or Winter Girls, Stephen Chbosky’s Perks of Being a Wallfower,  John Green’s Paper Towns or The Fault in Our Stars, and Robert Cormier’s The Chocolate War or I Am the Cheese have been particularly effective in transforming students’ mis/conceptions of what constitutes YA literature. But then these students invariably opine how another novel, say Mathew Quick’s Sort of Like a Rock Star or Jacqueline Woodson’s Miracle’s Boys, or Lisa Yee’s Millicent Min, Girl Genius, has not met their literary standards. They subsequently measure each new novel against the standards they have been formulating as readers and literature scholars for a decade. They have acquired the authority of wide and deep reading experiences and of well-tuned analytical skills, yet these readers neglect to consider that the novels selected for this course were written to engage the 14-18 year old readers they will be teaching in the near future, some who may have different (but not lower) standards and some who may or may not have read much fiction—or may not have read much of anything at all.

These English majors have grown up in a literary culture that values their role in reading transactions (reader-response has been a generative critical lens for more than a generation). In fact, many English majors find it difficult to give up the primacy of their perspectives, finding it discomfiting to interrogate a text, especially literary narratives, from perspectives other than their own. If I am going to get these soon-to-be pre-service teachers to read like practicing teachers, I must make space in my course to consider the texts we read from different points of view, so these future teachers can construct and put into practice a variety of approaches to the texts they and their future students will read.

I urge pre-service English teachers to read:

1) as self from their well-earned, well-developed experience;

2) as a character, reading within the parameters of his/her world;

3) as a teacher approaching the narrative, as much as they can, from the point of view of the spectrum of readers they will soon be working with, from independent readers to readers who have not yet been engaged by print narrative;

4) as a writer; and finally,

5) in ways that expand their critical skills. Of course these readings are not transacted discretely but rather simultaneously, synergistically, yet devoting time to considering each perspective ensures they can be made transferable to their students.

Reading as Self

For English majors, to read as self means to tap into reading skills acquired over years of reading, layers and layers of preference and rejection, favorite authors and genres, encounters with clarifying and/or befuddling criticism, conversations with characters and other readers. It means to revel in intra/interpersonal connection with a text world that is as vivid, as vital, as the world outside the pages. It means an incessant intertextuality, a community of books as lively as a group of friends, old and new. It means vulnerability, self-protectiveness—these texts are one’s own (You can’t bad mouth them; you can’t hate them—they are one’s friends). It is a perspective many of the students our pre-service teachers will soon be teaching cannot fathom (avid readers, alas, in the eyes of some are odd birds). Hold on to that perspective, I argue, but don’t privilege it.

Reading as Character

A common reading perspective for emerging readers, one students typically exercise in and out of school from an early age, is identification with one or more characters. The reading process includes begging characters to make the decisions they themselves would, becoming emotionally engaged in what is happening to characters, and sharing successes and failures with the protagonist. As readers grow older, identification is enhanced by the addition of empathy. But whether one identifies with or empathizes with a character, I urge English majors to read from the character’s points of view, to judge them according to the values present within their world, not according to standards imposed from without. For example, my predominantly white, middle-class, suburban students severely judged Sticky in Matt de la Pena’s (http://mattdelapena.com) Ball Don’t Lie. They held him up to standards he had no sustained exposure to, few compelling models of, and no lifetime of practice with. These readers failed to ask what is acceptable behavior for Sticky, to judge him on his own terms. How did he learn the values he lives by? How have these values been reinforced in his life experience? Are his standards moving toward or away from the perceived (received) norms these students know? Novels such as Ball Don’t Lie are rarely a mirror for my college students, but many will teach in schools where the novel will be such a mirror for their students. Reading from within the character’s world exercises the empathy/compassion muscle in our brains and beings.

           

Read as Teacher

The next perspective I ask students to practice is from a teacher’s point of view. How might a mixed group of students approach the text we are reading? What would you want students to take away from it?  What prior knowledge does it require and/or activate? Is this text a mirror for them or a window? What are the language demands? What do you as teacher know now about constructing meaning, about the act/s of interpretation? How can you help students acquire the skills you take for granted?

I remind them that some of their student readers will read anything put in front of them, some who have read extensively in genres not generally included in a classroom (fantasy, science fiction, romance), but some others who have not met an interesting book in their lives, who may not yet have the ability to sort out characters, to predict how they will act in certain situations, who may not yet have the ability to pick out telling detail from plot and setting, who may not be able to use word attack skills or context clues to meet vocabulary needs, and readers who may not be able to hold the first clause of a compound sentence in their minds long enough to make meaning after they have read the second clause. What will you do so each and every student engages meaningfully with the text or texts you will be assigning and/or the texts students will be self-selecting? If this is a difficult text for your students, how will you scaffold the reading for your students so that they will acquire the skills that will help them grow into the independent readers you would like them to be? None of these are easy questions to answer.

Read as Writer

Another approach I hope all future English teachers take toward texts is from the point of view of a writer producing these kinds of texts (fiction or non-fiction). One compelling reason to ask students to read literary fiction and non-fiction is to enhance one’s own writing. This reading perspective then has a dual purpose: to analyze as a reader/writer the decisions the writer has made to expand the awareness of decisions one can make in one’s own writing. What moves did the writer make? Why did he/she make these moves? Are they effective? If not, how could a text be revised to strengthen it? What can this writer teach students about writing and reading?

            In English class at all levels we spend a great deal of time de/constructing characters (e.g. Sticky). Constructing a character is analogous to constructing an argument. The development of a character is cumulative, each element building on the previous, each particle of information contributing to the whole. For an example I ask students to watch how Coe Booth builds Tyrell in Tyrell  and Bronxwood. he doesn’t simply tell us that Tyrell wants a life in the future very different from the life he is currently living. He is not mired in the present moment as is often the assumption made of youth in the inner city, sloughing from one self-centered experience to the next. In every action readers can observe how Tyrell, unwilling to follow in the self-destructive footsteps of his parents, looks to the future, to safe and secure shelter for his brother, to acquiring the means to control his own life. By the end of Tyrell, Booth has fashioned a character that embodies the argument that youth struggling in poverty are not without dignity, not without a sense of purpose. The moves Booth employs are lessons for all readers and writers.

Read as literary critic

College English and English Education faculty and scholars in the last 20 years have done significant work in exposing pre-service teachers to literary criticism and paving the way for literary criticism to be a part of the high school curriculum. Deborah Appleman (Critical Encounters in High School English: Teaching Literary Theory to Adolescents), Lisa Schade Eckert (How Does It Mean?: Engaging Reluctant Readers Through Literary Theory), Tim Gillespie (Doing Literary Criticism: Helping Students Engage with Challenging Texts), Anna O. Soter (Young Adult Literature and the New Literary Theories: Developing Critical Readers in Middle School), John Noelle Moore (Interpreting Young Adult literature: Literary Theory in the Secondary Classroom), and others have published informative and practical guides that describe many strategies to help pre-service teachers and high school students begin to put into action a range of critical points of view: feminism, deconstructionism, sociocultural, and new historicism, among others. Robert Petrone, Mark Lewis, Sophia Sarigianides, and others are currently applying the youth lens to YA literature, work that is bringing nuance to our assumptions about adolescence. Reading YA through these lenses initially challenges my skilled university readers. As readers they are comfortable with and well-practiced in reader-response, with historicizing a text, but when they are asked to take up other layers, to unpack texts for what they say about gender, race, and sexuality, they struggle, at first unwilling to give up their personal reading for a theoretical approach. 


I haven’t had to teach these perspectives systematically yet; my suggestions, my steady reminders to read and think from different perspective, have usually been effective enough, along with infusions of mini-lessons as needed on various critical perspectives. But I have a plan in my back pocket, a plan to structure a YA course around these perspectives, moving through the course from personal/interpersonal readings to critical readings.

Until next week,

Steven T. Bickmore


            


Exploring the Longlist of Nominees for the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature

9/17/2014

 
Picture
I can’t read every YA novel that I should. In fact, I just had a conversation with a young girl at my church (Hi Emily) about why I hadn’t read several recent YA fantasy and steam punk novels. My writing and research tends to focus on realistic YA fiction that is probably best suited for older adolescents—think The Catcher in the Rye, King Dork, We Were Liars, Tales of a Madman Underground—1973, You Don’t Know Me, Kissing the Rain, Wringer, Sexy, and Denial. As you can see, my list might look different from other readers. It is often driven by the article I am trying to write or a specific trend I am exploring. At the same time, I occasionally get to teach a YA literature course and I am always working with pre-service and in-service teachers who are generous with how much YA literature they assume I know. In addition, I am always working on the next LSU YA literature conference and seminar.  Like most readers, I have a group of writers that I follow without fail and I create lists of books that are “must reads” based on reviews, popularity, and award nominations winners. There is always something great to read. As a result, this is an exciting week.

I have new books to read. The National Book Foundation just announced the longlist for the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature. Yeah!!! This list should be in the hands of every secondary English Language Arts (ELA) teacher. If you know one, please connect them to this blog. Make sure they have the list. If you know school librarians ask them if these books are on their purchasing list. Better yet, if you have a few bucks, ask them if you can run down to your local bookstore and buy copies to donate to the school. I am disappointed with the media coverage. With all of the negative comments about education in the media, you would think that occasionally there might be some positive discussion of what is available for young people to read. The Guardian carried a good article. I also found a nice peace in the Denver Post that indicates that the list of ten will be winnowed down to five on October 15, 2014 and the winner will announced on Nov. 19, 2014 in New York City. That announcement occurs just a couple of days before the ALAN Workshop.  

The Miami Herald also carried a story, and well they should; one of their own columnist, Carl Hiaasen, has been nominated. Hiaasen has a very successful career as a columnist and an adult novelist. He has recently contributed several young adult novels that capitalize on his sense of humor and demonstrate his interest in the environment. I have followed Hiaasen’s move to writing for adolescent because of one of my specific academic interests is studying established adult authors who have turned, in part, to writing novels intentionally for adolescents. I have written about Hiaasen, as well as James Patterson, and Ridley Pearson, all of whom can easily be classified as writers of bestselling populist fiction. The second group I have written about are authors with significant literary acclaim in the hallowed halls of English departments, who have also written for younger readers--Joyce Carol Oates, Sherman Alexie, and Michael Chabon.  All of the authors in both groups have written interesting novels and some of them have had significant financial and literary success. Joyce Carol Oates has, in my opinion, written the strongest body of work for adolescents. She is a fantastic writer and her adolescent novels deserve more attention. Of the populist group, I think Hiaasen has the most to offer.

If you don’t want to take my word for it, there are a significant number of middle grade readers that have enjoyed Scat, Hoot, Flush, and Chomp. Ask around a bit. His nominated offering, Skink no Surrender, continues his focus on environmental themes and features Clinton Tyree (Skink), a reoccurring character in his adult novels.

More importantly, the inclusion of Hiaasen in this list speaks to the diversity and range of finalist. The genres vary and include fiction, non-fiction, and memoirs. There are also books from established YA novelist and a sprinkling of a few authors who are fairly early in their careers. It is a great list of books. I have already read several of them and others have been on my must read list. I fell in love with Andrew Smith’s Wringer last year and I was looking forward to 100 Sideways Miles. Clearly, I need to get caught up in my reading.

·         All of the nominated authors and the books titles are listed below with a link to an explanatory page on the National Book Foundation webpage. On that webpage are links to the authors’ other informational sources—webpages, twitter, and instagram. You can find out plenty about these authors by browsing around a bit. Below each entry I make brief editorial comments about novels I know or that I am eagerly anticipating. Laurie Halse Anderson, The Impossible Knife of Memory (Viking/ Penguin Group (USA)

I loved the gritty reality of The Impossible Knife of Memory, the post-traumatic stress exhibited by one of the novel’s characters echoes what we are just now learning about J. D. Salinger’s personal life and what Anderson revealed about her own father during the CEE luncheon at the NCTE Conference last November. Most ELA teachers with any familiarity with YA fiction know Speak. I also recommend Wintergirls and Prom.

·         Gail Giles, Girls Like Us (Candlewick Press)

I obviously need to learn more about Giles. I recommend What Happened to Cass McBride, but I will be reading others as well.

·         Carl Hiaasen, Skink—No Surrender (Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers/ Random House)

See my comments on Hiaasen above.

·         Kate Milford, Greenglass House (Clarion Books/ Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)

Kate’s work is new to me and after browsing around, I am very excited about this new discovery.

·         Eliot Schrefer, Threatened (Scholastic Press)

I heard Eliot speak last year during the ALAN Workshop. It was very exciting. I already have an undergraduate student, Kayla Johnson, who highlighted his books in a presentation of how to include young adult fiction as a cross-curricular bridge to make science instruction more relevant and interesting to students. I think we can expect more great books from Schrefer. In addition, I think Kayla will be referencing him quite a bit as she develops into a scholar, researcher, and future teacher. 

·         Steve Sheinkin, The Port Chicago 50: Disaster, Mutiny, and the Fight for Civil Rights
(Roaring Brook Press/ Macmillan Publishers)

This is another great offering from the author of Bomb: The Race to Build and Steal—the World’s Most Dangerous Weapon (another book Kayla references), one of my favorite books in recent years. How can you live with yourself if you miss this one?

·         Andrew Smith, 100 Sideways Miles (Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers/ Simon & Schuster)

As I noted above Wringer is one of my favorite reads in a long time. I just liked it. Above all who can deny the continual buzz around Grasshopper Jungle?

·         John Corey Whaley, Noggin (Atheneum Books for Young Readers/ Simon & Schuster)

For about a year and half, one of my library science buddies just couldn't believe that I had not inhaled Whaley’s books. Robin Kurz you were obviously right and I am embarassed.

·         Deborah Wiles, Revolution: The Sixties Trilogy, Book Two (Scholastic Press)

Wiles’ collection of work is another new find for me. What is wrong with me? I actually remember the sixties. Here is a perfect opportunity to see if I really noticed anything that was going on outside of my own bubble while I was in middle school.

·         Jacqueline Woodson, Brown Girl Dreaming (Nancy Paulsen Books/ Penguin Group (USA)

Well, if you don’t know her books you are missing out. Woodson was one of the first authors I began to read in earnest when I realized that I was drifting into young adult scholarship. Try Hush, Miracle’s Boys, Locomotion, After Tupac and D Foster, and, one of my personal favorites, From the Notebooks of Melanin Sun.

I wish all of these authors the best of luck. They are all winners in my estimation. Hopefully, the real winners will be adolescent readers. Please share this list of candidates for the National Book Award in the category of Young People’s Literature. Read widely, read for joy, read for knowledge, and read to live.

Until next week.

Steven T. Bickmore


An Interview with Padma Venkatraman

9/10/2014

 
Picture
Fiction for me has always been a way to understand parts of the world that were far removed from my own experience. I appreciate young adult fiction that teaches me something new about the world and, consequently about my own experiences.  One of the authors who continually reminds readers that the world is often more complex than the one most of us experience in our homes, our schools, and in our neighborhoods is Padma Venkatraman.  Two of her young adult novels, Climbing the Stairs and A Time to Dance, provide a glimpse into her native country of India through the lives and experiences of two strong female characters. I am reminded of an article by my colleague, Sybil Durand, an assistant professor at Arizona State University, in which she discusses how Venkatraman’s Climbing the Stairs examines the intersection of sociocultural identities. She states: "In addition to voicing gender issues in this novel, Venkatraman (2008) illustrates how identity categories such as gender, class, race, and nationality intersect in complex ways" (Durand, 2013, p. 24). I discuss similar complexities in my own scholarly work on this novel (Bickmore 2011).  

I recently finished Padma’s newest novel, A Time to Dance, and I had the opportunity to interview her this week. It was great fun. I encourage you to check out her website and her blog. Explore the multiple starred reviews that have appeared at Kirkus, Booklist, and Voya, among other sources. Unfortunately, we don’t have the space to capture all of the conversation, but I hope this wets your appetite for the works of this remarkable author.


Picture
An Interview with Padma Venkatraman

Steve: Both Climbing the Stairs and A Time to Dance are set in India. How closely do these stories reflect your own youth or other members of your family?

Padma: A Time to Dance is influenced both by a Bharatanatyam dancer whom I saw as a child who later overcame physical disability to continue dancing and by an aunt who lost the use of one of her legs as a result of a childhood polio attack. My aunt did not have an amazing modern prostheses (and even today, like Veda in A Time to Dance, few Indians can afford to have such marvelously engineered prosthetic limbs), but she was the most active of all my aunts, joining in our outdoor games and participating as best she could. We never thought of her as disabled, just differently abled.

Steve: I love the strong female characters in both novels. Can you talk about some of the influences for these characters?

Padma: The lack of strong female role models in my own life and in books when I was growing up, oddly enough, makes me invite strong female characters into my imagination, I think. (Padma also mentioned in our discussion that her own reading history is connected to a grandfather’s library and her range of exposure to western literature and literature from her native India is quite similar to the books that Vidya reads in Climbing the Stairs.)  

Steve: What would you hope non-Indian readers would glean from your novels?

Padma: I do want to make the point, here, that I'm American. Unfortunately, we also have stereotypical images of who's American. I have dark skin, I'm as comfortable wearing Indian clothes as I am wearing Western outfits, and, having lived in 5 nations before choosing to become American, my accent is a hodgepodge. My husband is from the West and my child is bi-racial. So it's natural that both East and West find expression in my work. But I am American, as much, if not more than someone who was born a citizen - because I decided this is what I wanted to be. 

Steve: Both novels that we are highlighting here are distinct in style. The first is a prose narrative and the second is a written in free verse. What did you find were the artistic challenges and moments of successes of both?

Padma: On the one hand, I feel like I'm merely  transcribing voices I hear in my head (when I hear voices in my head, luckily, rather than trying to converse with them, I try to listen and write down what they're saying). So I could say that each protagonist spoke to me in a different way - and that would be true. 

On the other hand, writing is not just inspiration, but also a lot of hard work. 

A writer must cultivate a schizophrenia that separates the listening to the voice and letting the writing flow part of the self from the axe wielding editorial self. And I think this editorial, more objective, part of myself told me that verse was a natural choice for a book that dealt with dance and the power of art - abstract aspects of the story that can, in a way, be captured through rhythm, which is so central to verse. Most important, perhaps, verse is also, pretty much, the only way (for me, at least), to convey the deepening of Veda's spiritual understanding and her spiritual growth - a theme that's central to her story and that makes her story unique. 

 My challenge, in using this form to write A Time to Dance, was to overcome my feeling of inadequacy. I have always loved to read poetry and I read a lot of poetry even today. But I've never analyzed it in the way someone might in a literature course. At one point, I was so afraid that I wrote an entire draft in prose, but then I lost Veda's voice, I couldn't see her any more in the movie that plays in my mind when I write. 

So, I knew I had to do something to give myself permission to write a novel in verse. I sat in on a graduate class in poetry, took a short poetry workshop with Richard Blanco, discussed poetry with colleagues who are professors and poets and read many YA novels written in verse or in vignettes, such as Kimberley Newton Fusco's Tending to Grace, An Na's A Step from Heaven, Patricia McCormick's Sold, Carolyn Coman's What Jamie Saw, Sandra Cisnero's The House on Mango Street,  Tracy Vaughn Zimmer's Reaching for the Sun, Thanhha Lai's Inside Out and Back Again, Gary Paulsen's Dogsong, Jacqueline Woodson's Locomotion, and Karen Hesse's Out of the Dust. My editor, Nancy Paulsen, is also someone who is a fan of this form, and she encouraged me strongly and stood by me through the years of struggle as this novel took shape. 

As for moments of success, I feel tremendously grateful and relieved that the novel received starred reviews in 5 journals - Kirkus, Booklist, VOYA, SLJ and BCCB -  and that so many reviewers, in newspapers all over the country and online have loved A Time to Dance. I am also thankful for each time someone lets me know that the novel touched them. One of the most glorious moments thus far, was when someone described A Time to Dance as a Siddhartha with a female protagonist. But, beyond this external recognition, my deepest reward comes from knowing, deep inside, that I did my best to tell the story of the character who honored me by visiting the landscape of my mind. 

Steve: I love your strong use of central metaphors in both books. Do you see metaphors and symbols as a guiding force in your creative process?

Padma: Although my first 2 novels are prose narratives, their styles differ: Climbing the Stairs is past tense and Island’s End is present tense. A Time to Dance, of course, is as you point out, quite a departure - the first two tend toward lush, evocative verse; A Time to Dance is written in lean, spare prose.  As stories, the three are very different as well, but there's one thread that runs through them. In some way, each of them explores the protagonist's search for spiritual meaning. 

In Climbing the Stairs, Vidya discovers the divide between the all-accepting and all-embracing, the philosophical underpinnings of her faith, and the extremely divisive social customs that some members of her family ascribe to her faith. In Island’s End, Uido trains to become the spiritual leader of her tribe. And of course, in A Time to Dance, more than with the other two novels, the protagonist's growth is inextricably entwined with her spiritual musings, the awakening of her compassion, the discovery of the deeper aspect, and the power of her art. 

Spirituality is a damnably hard topic to address - in a novel for any age group - but especially, I think, in a novel for young people (because one absolutely must stay away from pushing any particular religion; as an author for young people, you cannot, must not, be didactic). But I think it's what sets Veda's story apart, what makes her story so much more intriguing, what makes her special as a person. And I feel like I have grown, tremendously, as a writer, by taking on this tremendous challenge of writing a story with this very rarely-explored theme of spiritual growth.

But to get back to your question - I also feel like metaphors and symbols are inextricably entwined with spirituality of any sort, and so it is inevitable that they play an integral role in any novel that takes on the very difficult task of exploring a character's spiritual journey. 

Steve: Thank you

I hope you explore Padma’s novels and some of the books she mentions during her interview. If you happen to be attending the National Council of the Social Studies (NCSS) annual convention this year, you can hear more from Padma. She will be on a panel—Studying the World through Story: Using Fiction to Implement CCSS. I think she has much to offer the readers who find her novels. I know I thoroughly enjoyed them; furthermore, I learned something about the world and myself.


Until next week,

Steven T. Bickmore


10 Young Adult Novels That Have Stayed With You

9/3/2014

 
Picture
For someone who believes they he can’t stay sane without having a book in progress, I am interested in the current Facebook phenomenon that asks people to list 10 books that have stayed with you in some way. While I certainly have mainstream classics that have stayed with me--Moby Dick, Crime and Punishment, The Sound and the Fury, Humboldt’s Gift and Bleak House all jump to mind—I would like to shift the challenge to Young Adult Novels. Most of the YA books that fit in this category for me I actually read as an adult and not as an adolescent. Oh, I was constantly reading. I read at grade level and was constantly asked to stretch by great teachers. For a while I thrived on series reading -  Conan and Tarzan, anything by Louis L’Amour, and the occasional Max Brand or Zane Grey. They were far more interesting than most of the books that were offered up in middle school. Nevertheless, there are a couple of adolescent novels I encountered early on that stayed with me. The first is Berries Goodman and the second is The Contender; both serve as a foundation for my list of ten young adult novels and encouraged my further reading. (Spoiler alert--I offer my apology in advance for not including any dystopian, fantasy, or science fiction. There are many great novels in these genres, but it is my list and I am stuck with my own interests.)

For the hyperlinks this week, I am connecting nine of the novels to their reviews on the Kirkus online archive of reviews and the tenth is linked to the author’s blog for a specific reason to be explained below. It is nice to know that young adult literature gets the attention of the Kirkus Review and has for a long time.

Just before the beginning of the fifth grade my family moved to Tucson, Arizona. I knew absolutely no one as school began. Fortunately, Michael Rein lived on the same small cul-de-sac. We became fast friends; before long we realized we shared something else. Michael was the only Jewish kid in the class and I was the only Mormon. As fifth graders, we had novice theological discussions about our membership in religious groups that were clearly in the minority. After the school year was over, my family moved from the house we had been renting to a new home several miles away. New schools and new friends caused us to lose contact. In the library, during the sixth grade I found the books of Emily Cheney Neville which led me to Berries Goodman, a book that reminded me of my friend Michael. This wonderful book is told from the point of view of a young Jewish boy who moves from the inner city to the suburbs. With this book I had my first introduction to Jewish literature and the viciousness of anti-Semitism. I quickly moved to Leon Uris and Chaim Potock; by college I was inhaling Bernard Malamud, Philip Roth, Henry Roth, Isaac Bashevis Singer, and, my personal favorite, Saul Bellow. After one friendship and one novel by a Newberry Award Winner, my life was enriched by a host of Jewish novelists.

I can connect my list of ten memorable books to a personal story, but rather than outline them all (and risk boring you all) I will mention a couple of brief connections.

Number two on my list is The Contender by Robert Lipsyte. This novel is often considered to be one of the novels published in 1967 that ushered in the golden age of YA literature. Even as a young reader I realized the novel was much more than a book about sports. Here was a story about race, poverty, hard work, and mentorship. It has stayed with me and continues to hold up as one of the most important novels in the history of adolescent literature.

I found the third novel, I am the Cheese by Robert Cormier as a young English major. I know at the time many readers were all abuzz about The Chocolate War, but something about the mystery, complicated narrative, and the inclusive ending resonated then and continues to do so today.

Walter Dean Myers’ Monster fell into my hands in 2002 as I began my Ph.D. in English Education. It seemed like the book was everywhere. I hope everyone reading this post knows this novel. The narrative style and visual presentation set a new standard for YA fiction.

As I began reading more and more YA fiction, I eventually found the novels of Jacqueline Woodson. I found the tender power of From the Notebooks of Melanin Sun one of the moving explorations of how an adolescent deals with a parent’s sexuality.

In one of my teacher personas, I am a die-hard AP Language and Literature teacher. I loved teaching those classes but often found that my students didn’t enjoy everything they read and, furthermore, didn’t get a chance to laugh very much. Many of the novels of Gordan Korman can fill this gap. They are light-hearted and witty. My favorite is still Son of the Mob.  Not only is it clever, but it fills my need to occasionally use YA fiction as a bridge to the classics (Hats off to Don Gallo, Sara Herz , and Joan Kaywell for their leadership in this area!) as it romps through a modern day re-imagining of Romeo and Juliet.

The next book was an assigned text in a graduate course on race, class, and gender in children’s and young adult literature. As part of a course assignment I began a close reading of Joesph Bruchac’s The Heart of a Chief . (This link doesn’t go to Kirkus, instead it’s a link to the author’s blog and a brief video about the use of Native American names and images as school mascots—one of the book’s major issues.) The paper kept evolving and became my first published paper in The ALAN Review.  I loved the book and realized that the literary craftsmanship we tend to reserve for classic fiction exists in nuanced ways in YA literature as well.

For my eighth selection I go back to a memory of sitting in the ALAN workshop in 2005 and listening as Chris Lynch introduced, his then new book, Inexcusable; I was hooked.  I went back to my classroom and asked two students to participate in an exploration of what it might mean to use this interesting novel in the classroom. This study eventually found its way into The ALAN Review as well.

I hope I am not the only one who still finds The Catcher in the Rye worth reading; but it is not part of my top ten. Instead, for my ninth book I pick King Dork by Frank Portman. Portman both lampoons and pays homage to Holden Caulfield’s legacy. If you love The Catcher in the Rye (or if you just can’t stand it) and rock and roll, this book will, in the words of John Green, “…rock your world.”  Even more good news, the sequel, King Dork Approximately will be out soon. Look for it.

      My last choice is a tie. Over the last ten years or so one of America’s literary giants, Joyce Carol Oates (http://www.usfca.edu/jco/), has written five adolescent novels and a collection of adolescent short stories. I think they are all interesting novels that deserve more attention than they seem to be getting in the academic world of young adult literature. Her fiction has always seemed to jump from the headlines or function as re-imaginings of cultural and historical events. My favorite is Freaky Green Eyes. As you read it, you will be caught up in Franky’s fragile family life that rushes to an unavoidable tragedy.

The book that completes the tie for me is E. Lockhart’s We Were Liars. Out of all of the books I have read in the last several years, this is one that I can’t let go. I want to talk about, I want to write about, and I want to figure it out. It finally dawned on me after a couple of weeks of contemplation that, with this novel, E. Lockhart reminds me of Joyce Carol Oates. The writing is elegant. The tone is sophisticated. She captures the dynamics of a family struggling for intimacy in the midst of a mystery that the narrative slowly unfolds, in a manner that reminds me of Oates at her finest. I am thrilled that, as a young adult novelist, E. Lockhart seems to be taking her place alongside novelists like Oates, whose accolades and accomplishments are too long to mention here or, perhaps, anywhere. Like Oates, Lockhart is proving to have a range of styles and audiences within her repertoire—she also writes children’s books under the name of Emily Jenkins.  I hope they both keep writing; nevertheless, Oates has been at it for fifty years. I eagerly await what Lockhart might give us over the next couple of decades. 

1.     Berries Goodman—Emily Cheney Neville 
2.     The Contender—Robert Lipsyte  
3.     I am the Cheese—Robert Cormier 
4.     Monster—Walter Dean Myers 
5.     From the Notebooks of Melanin Sun—Jacqueline Woodson 
6.     Son of the Mob—Gordan Korman 
7.     The Heart of a Chief—Joseph Bruchac 
8.     Inexcusable—Chris Lynch 
9.     King Dork—Frank Portman 
10.  Freaky Green Eyes—Joyce Carol Oates 
11.  We Were Liars—E. Lockhart 

   Until next week,

Steven T. Bickmore


    Dr. Steve Bickmore
    ​Creator and Curator

    Dr. Bickmore is a Professor of English Education at UNLV. He is a scholar of Young Adult Literature and past editor of The ALAN Review and a past president of ALAN. He is a available for speaking engagements at schools, conferences, book festivals, and parent organizations. More information can be found on the Contact page and the About page.
    Dr. Gretchen Rumohr
    Co-Curator
    Gretchen Rumohr is a professor of English and writing program administrator at Aquinas College, where she teaches writing and language arts methods.   She is also a Co-Director of the UNLV Summit on the Research and Teaching of Young Adult Literature. She lives with her four girls and a five-pound Yorkshire Terrier in west Michigan.

    Bickmore's
    ​Co-Edited Books

    Picture
    Meet
    Evangile Dufitumukiza!
    Evangile is a native of Kigali, Rwanda. He is a college student that Steve meet while working in Rwanda as a missionary. In fact, Evangile was one of the first people who translated his English into Kinyarwanda. 

    Steve recruited him to help promote Dr. Bickmore's YA Wednesday on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media while Steve is doing his mission work. 

    He helps Dr. Bickmore promote his academic books and sometimes send out emails in his behalf. 

    You will notice that while he speaks fluent English, it often does look like an "American" version of English. That is because it isn't. His English is heavily influence by British English and different versions of Eastern and Central African English that is prominent in his home country of Rwanda.

    Welcome Evangile into the YA Wednesday community as he learns about Young Adult Literature and all of the wild slang of American English vs the slang and language of the English he has mastered in his beautiful country of Rwanda.  

    While in Rwanda, Steve has learned that it is a poor English speaker who can only master one dialect and/or set of idioms in this complicated language.

    Archives

    February 2025
    January 2025
    November 2024
    October 2024
    September 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    February 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    November 2023
    October 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    April 2023
    March 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    October 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    July 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    April 2022
    March 2022
    February 2022
    January 2022
    December 2021
    November 2021
    October 2021
    September 2021
    August 2021
    July 2021
    June 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    March 2021
    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    June 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    November 2019
    October 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    April 2019
    March 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    December 2018
    November 2018
    October 2018
    September 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    June 2018
    May 2018
    April 2018
    March 2018
    February 2018
    January 2018
    December 2017
    November 2017
    October 2017
    September 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    March 2017
    February 2017
    January 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    June 2015
    February 2015
    January 2015
    November 2014
    October 2014
    September 2014
    August 2014
    July 2014
    June 2014

    Categories

    All
    Chris-lynch

    Blogs to Follow

    Ethical ELA
    nerdybookclub
    NCTE Blog
    yalsa.ala.org/blog/

    RSS Feed

Proudly powered by Weebly