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March 30, 2005
Life in the Fat Lane
Life in the Fat Lane by Cherie Bennett reads like the Sweet Valley twins decided to tackle eating disorders and health problems. Lara Ardeche is a beauty queen who thinks she's also a nice, sweet person. However, when she starts to gain weight unexplainably, she finds out she's not so nice after all. in fact, she's angry, judgmental, and kind of mean. She keeps gaining weight as doctors try to figure out what's wrong with her and her parents keep insisting that if she would just diet and exercise, she could get back to her perfect weight. Meanwhile, her boyfriend feels alienated and her family is falling apart. As I read this, I thought several times that I could figure out why she was gaining weight (midnight binge eating and denial of her anger at her parents) but that's not the direction Bennett took this novel.
Praise for this book has been nearly unanimous, and it does do a pretty good job of capturing the rage and helplessness of gaining weight in an image-obsessed society. The light tone might make it easier for kids to relate to Lara's problems.
If you've been the new kid or the fat girl, you might like this book.
Reviews by Students:
A review by a student in Illinois
A review by a student in Missouri
A review included on a page from a Rhode Island school
Reviews by Adults:
Annotation from the New York University Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database
Children's Book Page review
Teenagers Today review
Related Links:
All Consuming page about the book (This site is not YA specific.)
Teen CyberCenter list of books about food and weight
A Kansas school's list of books about eating disorders
Have you read this book? What do you think of it?
If you've reviewed this book, send me a trackback!
Posted by Jenne at 09:16 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 29, 2005
The Westing Game
The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin is a fun puzzle of a book about eight heirs (and a mistake) trying to solve the mystery of a man's death so they can inherit his millions. The heirs, who live in the same apartment building, are paired up and given bits of clues to try to find out who killed Sam Westing. Meanwhile, strange messages are left on the building's impromptu message board, and someone appears to be trying to blow the heirs up. Who will solve the mystery? Who killed Sam Westing?
Although this is a book for younger readers (age 10 and up), it has several teenage characters. Trying to solve the mystery could be fun for teens as well. Just when you think you've solved it, Raskin throws in a twist. It doesn't take very long to read, so it's great for those times when you don't have the time or energy for a long, complicated book.
Reviews by Students:
A review by a student in New York
A review by a student in Texas
Reviews by Adults:
Teenreads.com review
Related Links:
All Consuming page about the book (Not YA specific)
A Thinkquest about the book
A Books-n-Bytes page about Ellen Raskin
Wisconsin authors and illustrators page about Ellen Raskin
Have you read this book? What do you think of it?
If you've reviewed this book, send me a trackback!
Posted by Jenne at 09:47 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 28, 2005
Whale Talk
Whale Talk by Chris Crutcher is about the Cutter High School Mermen, an unlikely swim team of misfits trying to earn their letters. The team is put together by The Tao Jones, better known as TJ, one of the three mixed-race people in his town, and coached by a teacher who started the team to avoid having to be the assistant wrestling coach. Along with being an unlikely group of athletes, the swimmers don't even have a pool of their own. They swim in a too-small pool at a local rec center. They also face the harassment of a town where football rules everything and star players never move on from their high school glory.
Whale Talk is worth reading, and then it's worth reading again. It tackles race relations (TJ's parents are white, as is most of the population of his small Washington state town), the obsession over high school athletics, drugs, violence... but Crutcher does it with a light touch and an appealing, realistic, teenage narrator.
Reviews by Students:
Review by a student in Virginia
Reviews by Adults:
Teenreads.com review
Review at a Pennsylvania library
Related Links:
Allconsuming page about the book (Not YA specific)
Booksense.com interview with Chris Crutcher about Whale Talk
Chris Crutcher, hero or villain?
Detroit News article about a ban on Whale Talk being lifted
Parents question language in Whale Talk (St. Joseph, Missouri article from 2001)
Have you read this book? What do you think of it?
If you've reviewed this book, send me a trackback!
Posted by Jenne at 10:09 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 26, 2005
Miss Thang Reads
Miss Thang Reads
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Posted by Jenne at 11:32 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 15, 2005
"The Giver" Stays on Reading Lists
Lois Lowry's The Giver will stay on eighth grade reading lists in Blue Springs, Missouri (Link might require registration). The school board voted six to nothing to keep the book on the lists. Parents who objected to the book say it's "lewd," "twisted," and "extremely violent." Did you have to read this book in school? What do you think?
Posted by Jenne at 06:26 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 02, 2005
When My Name Was Keoko
When My Name Was Keoko is a compelling look at life in Korea under Japanese occupation before and during World War II. The book follows a brother and sister through several years at the end of the occupation. This is a great read for people interested in Korean history, life, and culture.
Posted by Jenne at 08:47 AM | Comments (0) | TrackBack
March 01, 2005
The Rag and Bone Shop
Robert Cormier's The Rag and Bone Shop tackles some huge issues in its few pages, including showing how far some people are willing to go for personal gain... to the extent of destroying someone else's soul. It's a heart-breaking story of an evil crime made worse by greed.
Like every Cormier book I've read, I recommend this one highly.
Posted by Jenne at 08:41 PM | Comments (0) | TrackBack