Saturday, December 8, 2012

Module 15: Go Ask Alice





Book Summary

This book is based on a collection of diary entries written by an anonymous teen drug addict.  It begins with "anonymous" attending a party and drinking a soda which is -unknown to her- laced with LSD.  She quickly becomes an addict and her life spins out of control.  She runs away from home at least twice, participates in risky behaviors, and even ends up in an institution. 

APA Reference

Go ask Alice.  (1971).  New York, NY:  Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers.

Impressions

Having never been in the presence of someone on drugs, there was a lot of new information and insight for me in this book.  It is shocking that teens can be turned on to drugs so unintentionally.  Although this book is reportedly based on true events taken from an individual's diary, much of it feels fictionalized to me.  (The copyright material even includes the phrase "This book is a work of fiction").  Some of "anonymous's" thoughts seem very unintelligent, unrealistic, and immature for her age.  For example, at one point she is sure she is in love with a guy and he is in love with her, yet he only wants to see her once a week and she doesn't suspect anything strange about this... I found myself asking "how stupid can you be?" 

The anonymous writer depicts her experiences with drugs as both wonderful and frighteningly horrible.  With this in mind, hopefully impressionable young readers are more disgusted by the events in this book than intrigued or made to be curious by them.  Although insightful, I did not enjoy this book at all.  It is very sad and quite depressing.  I would much rather read something fun and uplifting.

Professional Review


Alice is your typical teenaged girl. She worries that she is too fat. She wants a boyfriend: "I wish I were popular and beautiful and wealthy and talented." She frequently makes resolutions in her diary to do better in school, work toward a calmer relationship with her mother, and lose weight. Her life changes when she goes to a party and is given acid in her drink. She loves the feeling the drug gives her: "Closed my eyes and the music began to absorb me physically. I could smell it and touch it and feel it as well as hear it." She wants more and quickly becomes a part of the drug scene. For about a year and a half Alice goes on and off drugs and runs away from home twice. Each time she manages to find her way back to her parents. They take her in, get her help, and all seems to be rosy until Alice is once again given acid without her knowledge. This time, she has a bad trip, ends up in the hospital, and then a mental hospital. Her parents stick by her, but her life of drug abuse ultimately ends with a fatal overdose—whether it is intentional or accidental is not known. Go Ask Alice has become a classic story of warning against the use of drugs. For the teen scene of 2006, this story will appear as slightly dated. The issues of relationships both in and out of school have not changed much in the last thirty years, but there are subtle differences in the culture that may prove distracting for a young person reading this book today. The basic story remains a chilling cautionary tale. 2005 (orig. 1971), Simon Pulse/Simon & Schuster, , and Ages 14 to 18.

Smith-D'Arezzo, W. (n.d.).  [Review of the book Go ask Alice -Anonymous].  Children's Literature.  Retrieved from http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/go-ask-alice-anonymous/1100300729#product-commentary-editorial-review-1.

Library Use

Have students choose a character from the book who was impacted by the main character's actions (one of her parents, grandparents, or siblings).  Write a one-page diary entry from that person's point of view.


Book cover image from:  http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/46799.Go_Ask_Alice.

Module 14: The Llama Who Had No Pajama






Book Summary

This is a collection of 100 poems covering an assortment of topics such as animals, insects, children, and seasons.  Fun rhyming and word-play in an assortment of short and long poems.

APA Reference

Hoberman, M. (1998).  The llama who had no pajama.  New York, NY:  Browndeer Press, Harcourt Brace and Company.

Impressions

I think this is a poetry book that most kids would enjoy.  The topics of the poems are all things that seem to be of interest to kids (animals, bugs, rainbows/weather, seasons, growing, etc...).  The majority of the poems using rhyming and a variety of short and long poems are included.  The illustrations are bright and cheerful.  Most of all, I think that children would enjoy the poems in this book because they are pretty straight forward and fun to read.  It's an enjoyable collection to read without all the figurative language and "hidden meanings" that are often present in poetry.

Professional Reviews

Mary Ann Hoberman has charmed us for years with her singable, readable, factual, fantastical poems. Now we have a collection of 100 of her favorite poems in The Llama Who Had No Pajama, stylishly illustrated by Betty Fraser. Whether writing about animals or insects, e.g. "O Mrs. Mosquito, quit biting me please! I'm happy my blood type with your type agrees..." or about the human condition as in "Changing"--I know what I feel like; / I'd like to be you/ And feel what you feel like/ And do what you do..." or chanting an ode to the letter O--"O is open/ O is round/ O's a circle/ O's a sound..." her musicality sparkles. What fun she has with the sound "bit" in "A rabbit/ bit/ A little bit/ An itty-bitty/ Little bit of beet. /Then bit/ By bit. / Because he liked the taste of it..." 1999, Browndeer Press/Harcourt, Ages 4 to 8, $20.00.

Lieberman, J. (n.d.).  [Review of the book The llama who had no pajama by Mary Ann Hoberman].  Children's Literature.  Retrieved from http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/llama-who-had-no-pajama-mary-ann-hoberman/1102303750#product-commentary-editorial-review-1.


K-Gr 4Hoberman's poems, accompanied by Fraser's illustrations, have been delighting children for 40 years. Now, many poems from their out-of-print books are available in this satisfying collection. The selections are mostly humorous, sometimes contemplative, and deal with animals, family, play, and plain silliness. Hoberman's rhythms are lively and agile, and her imagination and sense of humor are still in tune with young readers. Fraser's simple but detailed gouache and watercolor illustrations exhibit the same qualities. The layout is masterfully varied and never overwhelms the poems. There is a table of contents as well as an index of first lines. Good for beginning or experienced readers of poetry, this should indeed become a favorite.
Lindsay, N. (n.d.).  [Review of the book The llama who had no pajama by Mary Ann Hoberman].  School Library Journal.  Retrieved from http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/llama-who-had-no-pajama-mary-ann-hoberman/1102303750#product-commentary-editorial-review-1.


Library Use:

Design a bookmark with a short poem from this book on it.  Make several different bookmark designs, each with a poem from a different poetry book.  Print out the bookmarks on sturdy, bright colored paper and give them to students when they check out poetry books.  Display this book during poetry week. 

Book cover image from:  http://www.maryannhoberman.com/books/theLlamaWho.html.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Module 13: Wonderstruck

 

Book Summary

Ben, a deaf child, has recently lost his mother in an accident.  He discovers clues to his past among his mother's belongings and runs away from home in search of his father (whom he's never met).  Rose, also a deaf child, is lonely and unhappy at home so she runs away to see her mother who is a famous actress.  Their two stories take place 50 years apart but unfold and connect through a series of coincidental events.

APA Reference

Selznick, B. (2011).  Wonderstruck.  New York, NY:  Scholastic Press.

Impressions

This was a quick and easy read despite its size (most of the pages are illustrations).  It's definitely an intriguing story to begin with.  There are two separate stories unfolding -one through words and the other through pictures- and it's definitely engaging for the reader to try to figure out how they are connected.  Although, about half way through I started to figure it out and it then became very predictable.  I think many children would enjoy the book, it's presented in a unique way, the main characters are deaf (which may be interesting and different for some to read about), and it deals with running away (something many children think about at some point).  Adults, as I previously stated, may find it predictable.  The events seem to unfold a little too coincidentally, but it's still an enjoyable read.  The illustrations are captivating and mysterious.

Professional Review

Sequels and seconds-in-a-series are as often as not better than the starter volume, and yet it seems incumbent upon us all to doubt them anyway. “Through the Looking Glass” is an incomparably better book than its predecessor — its chess-problem structure more ingenious; its nonsense poems far more inspired — but we still say “Alice in Wonderland” and always shall when we refer to Carroll’s world. Freshness of vision is in all departments of life an aesthetic category not to be sneezed at.
All of which is a necessarily elaborate way of saying that Brian Selznick’s new book, “Wonderstruck” — engrossing, intelligent, beautifully engineered and expertly told both in word and image — cannot entirely escape the force field or expectations set up by his 2008 Caldecott winner, “The Invention of Hugo Cabret.” “Hugo Cabret” was one of those rare books — Chris Van Allsburg’s tale “The Polar Express” is the last that comes to mind — that strike imaginations small and large with a force, like, well, thunder. Neither graphic novel nor illustrated book, its composite of storytelling forms seemed derived from the storyboards of some lost Czech genius of the silent film era rather than anything evident in other books. (Martin Scorsese has adapted it into a film to be released this fall.)
Though not a sequel of matter, “Wonderstruck” is very much a sequel of method, and a test of it. Can Selznick’s black-and-white chiaroscuro spell-making be transported or extended beyond the European fin de siècle setting that seemed essential in its first appearance?
The material for this new book is, it seems, very deliberately wrenched at once into an entirely new and more American landscape. Ben, an adolescent boy growing up in “Gunflint Lake,” Minn., in the 1970s has lost his loving mother in a car accident — his true father is unknown to him — and a second disaster (telephone, lightning) soon costs him his ability to hear. An obscure series of clues suggests that his father may live in New York, and Ben sets out in search of him. In the midst of the subdued narration of this sad story we are suddenly — with masterly abruptness, and a complete absence of explanation — thrown into a second tale, told entirely in black and white panels and far more melodramatically conveyed, of an unnamed deaf girl who in the 1920s runs away from her Hoboken home in search of a Broadway star. In a New York made more hallucinatory by its silence, she discovers the actress, and we are given a startling revelation about her identity. Then the two stories, Ben’s flight to the city and the as-yet-unnamed girl’s flight to safety 50 years earlier, slowly entangle and become one, and the mysteries of the two flights (his toward his father, hers toward him) resolve beautifully on the night of the New York City blackout in 1977 (which exists here, rather against the grain of history, as a peaceful, not to say pastoral, occasion). Throughout, Selz­nick’s eye for the details of New York’s enchanted places — the dioramas at the American Museum of Natural History, Times Square in the 1920s and the too easily forgotten marvel of the City Panorama at the Queens Museum of Art — are pitch, or rather picture, perfect.
There is so much to like and admire that the reader reluctantly confesses to what our children’s teachers call, delicately, “some problems” with the story. The hero, Ben, seems rather routinely imagined: one of those isolated Fine Boys with a Disability who are the default heroes of too many children’s books. The heroes and heroines of imaginative literature need not be tragically flawed, but they ought to be tarter, more capable of imperfection, than this. Even Ben’s deafness seems oddly un-disabling. He manages the flight to New York, and then secrets himself into the Museum of Natural History with suspiciously little difficulty. The practicalities of his circumstances in New York are hard to imagine credibly, even on the somewhat dreamlike terms in which they are offered. That a deaf boy would run all the way to New York is the necessary premise — but surely his sleeping and sanitary arrangements could be explained with more clarity than Selznick provides. Selznick’s style is so silent that it seems logical that it take in the mute world. But the concern with the deaf “issues” that fill the book, though in one way “appropriate” as those same teachers would say, feels at times too appropriate — uncomfortably pious, a medicinal outgrowth of the fable rather than essential to its magic.
Yet whenever such doubts arise they are overcome, overwhelmed even, by the purity of Selznick’s imagination. The moment, for instance, when the heroine is rescued by an at first enigmatic museum worker named Walter — yields an almost unbearable tenderness.
In a long, gracious afterword, Selznick cites “From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler” among his sources and models, and promises references to that earlier classic about children fleeing to a New York museum buried throughout his book. (We’re looking.) Though a lovely tribute, the juxtaposition of this book and that one is arresting, and instructive. Where that ’60s classic, like so many of its kind and time, was lightly satirical and assumed an easy passage between the material of children’s literature and that of grown-up affairs, books of equivalent ambition and point a half-century later are more purposefully enigmatic and drawn above all to sites of silent mystery like the Natural History museum, not only as it appears at night (as in the movies), but as it was in the past. Konigsburg’s children, hiding in the Met, were practical people with practical problems, and the mystery that entices them is resolved, even debunked a little, at the end. They were being educated in the realities of life.
For Selznick, as for Van Allsburg, or for that matter, Kate DiCamillo, the beauty of strangeness, more than its management, is the purpose of storytelling, and though some of their questions are answered, their mysteries remain intact. Selznick’s gift is for the uncanny and the haunting, and his subject is not only the strange poetry of ordinary things but the poetry of things from another time: train stations, frozen museum dioramas and old bookstores. Small bells ring at midnight, and mute protagonists embrace in darkness.
So, while the ostensible moral of “Wonderstruck” is the entanglement of people, its real lesson is about memory. Beyond its honorable message about the dignity of deafness, it teaches a respect for the past and for the power of memory to make minds. In an age when mass entertainment inclines children toward movement and energy, and screens accustom their eyes to the sparkle of pixilated light, one of the tasks books have taken on is to teach them, and us, to value stillness. Mere nostalgia, maybe? Well, what is nostalgia, save the vernacular of memory, and so the place where reading starts?
Gopnik, A. (2011, September 16).  A deaf boy's New York quest [Review of the book Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick].  The New York Times:  Sunday Book Review.  Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/18/books/review/wonderstruck-written-and-illustrated-by-brian-selznick-book-review.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0.


Library Uses

This book incorporates several ways of telling a story without the use of words; through illustration, sign language, and silent film.  This would be fun to incorporate into a larger unit on storytelling.  Students could work as groups to tell a story without using words/sound; they could act it out, tell a story through pictures or sign language, or even create a silent film.

 

Book cover image from:  http://www.scholastic.com/teachers/article/reviews-wonderstruck.