Monday, July 29, 2013

Blog #11. Korman, Gordon. "Son of the Mob: Hollywood Hustle". Hyperion Books. New York. 2006. Print.

ANNOTATION:  Vince Luca is the son of the Mob Boss in New York.  He wants nothing to do with the Mob Lifestyle.  He decides to go to college at Santa Monica, California with his girlfriend.  Kendra is the daughter of the FBI agent who has been tailing Anthony Luca for years, they are arch enemies.  Is it also a coincidence that Vince's roommate is the son of a well known congressman?  Why do all his Dad's goons keep
 showing up  at his college dorm room? How are all these people CONNECTED? 
 
 
 
JUSTIFICATION FOR NOMINATION:  Organized crime is a serious business and has been for centuries.  Finding out that this story is sarcastic and humorous, instead of all the gore you would expect from a Mob story, makes for a light read with funny characters.  Vince, the protagonist, takes the reader on a mysterious adventure, and  intermingles between college life and the Mob, that not only he knows what to expect.  He wants to become a film editor and leaves New York to go to college in L.A., California.  Vincent can't get far enough away from his families mob lifestyle.  In a strange series of events Vince ends up in Mob wars with the Union Boss and his Dad's goons and a crooked Senator.  Wavering between turning in his Dad, his brother and a klepto roommate, he finds himself in the arms of a very sexy secret agent.  Vince's life quickly goes from looser to hero in a short time without a scratch on him.  Sarcasm and mockery are his friends, but he forgot just how protected he is as the Mafia prince to the Mob Boss, Anthony Luca.
 
 
 
Genre:  Humor, Young Adult, Action & Adventure.

Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Blog #9. Rosoff, Meg. "The Bride's Farewell". Penguin Group. New York. 2009. Print.

ANNOTATION:  During 1850, in England, Pell Ridley had her future arranged.  She was to marry her childhood sweetheart and have 10 children, like her mother, and work herself into the grave, living in poverty.  This is the last thing that Pell ever wants to do.

JUSTIFICATION FOR NOMINATION:  At first I thought the book was going to be nostalgic, full of old English language and it's terminology.  Then I was surprised that the first chapters talk so much about horses and their individual breeds and qualities.  Little did I know that the mundane life of Pell becomes her quest to surrey out onto a journey that women would not dare to take alone during the 1800's.
     The division of class, caste, and Royalty through serfdom, where still in play in merry old England, the mother land.  "Proper girls didn't declare their intention never to marry nor being out in the world on her own" (8).  Women were considered property, and had no rights to own land much less livestock or inherit anything from the father, and were not considered even as valuable as a male child.
     Pell's Daddy was a drunken Preacher, who had sordid affairs and bastard children with Gypsy women, besides the 10 he had with Pell's Mama.  "Her Daddy's generation spawned more worthless than the last, capable of providing neither a living nor spiritual guidance, unless someone needed guiding to an Inn for those other spirits" (75).
     Jack was Pells favorite horse, and she was well taught on the skills of equestrian care and riding.  Seeing her mother as an old, worn-out, washer woman, impoverished with too many mouths to feed, and a drunk of a husband, Pell ran away.  She did not want this life for herself, and took Jack and left at the break of dawn on her wedding day.  Her scrawny, underfed, baby brother, Bean, followed after her.  Bean did not speak, but her could hear.
     Pells journey to find work and to be in charge of her own life, was challenged by swindlers, prostitutes, drunks, hustlers, gypsies, and men with bad intent.  She survives and overcomes many harsh circumstances to near starvation and death.  Pell tolerated the hardships along with being judged as a girl of ill repute, in search of a better life.
     The British Church/State had a man-made belief in place that there were the deserving poor = such as the Catholic Priests and Bishops, and the undeserving poor = those born into poverty.  Pell fit into the second category and stereo-type.  Due to the distinction in British society and the lack of rights for women, Pell put up with abuse and extreme living conditions.  Four of Pells brothers died from Typhoid fever.  They had not discovered quarantining of contagious diseases during this time yet.
     When Pell lost her baby brother, Bean, to the gypsy woman, Esther, who happened to be the mother of 6 more children of Pells father, she also got swindled out of her prize Arabian horse, Jack.  There are some surprising results to Pells efforts and circumstances that turn into a pretty happy ending.  The harsh living conditions of centuries of values carried down from medieval times, make one grateful to be living in our time today.  Survival and perseverance is the name of the game in this book, loving every minute of it. 

GENRE:  Adventure, coming of age, Alex Award.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Blog Review #8. Alexie, Sherman. "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian". Anderson Press. New York, U.S.A. 2007. Print.

  ANNOTATION:  Alexie started writing his memoir about growing up on the Spokane Native American Reservation, but ended up writing a fiction novel instead.  Arnold, called Jr., lives daily with Parental Alcoholism, abuse, bullying, death and tragedy.  To top it all off, he was born with several disabilities.  Throughout Jr.'s obstacles and societies low expectations of his population, he still manages to become the hero in his predisposed community.
 
JUSTIFICATION FOR NOMINATION:  Jr. is not only poor, he is dirty poor.  Jr. lives on the 'rez' and many nights goes to bed hungry. His Daddy does a good job drinking up any money the family could have.  When Jr. saw his mothers maiden name in his geometry book, when school started that Fall, he was angry and threw the book and broke Mr. P's nose.  Jr. was tired of poverty and the low expectations that the white culture had on the Native American population. 
Jr. decides to go to an all-white, rich kids school in Reardon.  He takes up basketball and gets a white girlfriend, Penelope.  Rowdy, Jr.'s best friend on the 'rez' becomes distant and their friendship is strained. Jr.'s Grandma, his confidant, get run over and killed by a drunk driver, his Dad shoots his dog, Oscar, because they can't afford the Vets bill, and his Dad's best friend gets shot and killed in a drunken bar fight.
Jr. deals with his pain and struggles through humor and drawing cartoons. Somehow, living in poverty and racial discrimination and all the physical disabilities, they become stepping stones for Jr., as a way out.  Jr. is adamant to become more than just a statistic as a stereo-type.  There are challenging issues in this book: poverty, bullying, alcohol, violence, profanity, and references to masturbation.  WE live in an imperfect world with imperfect people.  Alexie shows an awesome depiction of the societal injustices and the reality of just how cruel people can be.  He demonstrates just how one Native American teenager did not give up and would not believe the oppressing stereo-types about his culture.  Alexie states he used to believe the world was broken down into tribes, now he knows there are only two tribes: people who are assholes and the ones who are not. I would highly recommend this encouraging story of one brave boy who wouldn't let anything hold him back.
 
GENRE:  Fiction, Coming of Age, Searching for Identity, Multicultural, Awards, Banned.

Monday, July 15, 2013

Extra Credit Blog Post #1. Draper, Sharon Mills. "Forged By Fire". New York, N.Y. Atheneum Books. 1997. Print.

Gerald's life is filled with struggles of socioeconomic barriers, and an abusive addict mother, living with an incestuous step-father and experiencing loss through death of loved ones. Gerald has the strong desire to overcome all of this pain he holds inside of him.  His relief comes from playing basket ball, having one true friend he can trust, and protecting his baby sister Angel. 

JUSTIFICATION FOR NOMINATION:
As a very young child, Gerald is left alone, abandoned many times by his addict mother, Monique.  He learns how to deal with her drug induced mood swings and only tries harder to be a 'good boy', so as not to get on Mama's nerves.  Monique's parenting skills, or lack thereof, are how Gerald finds his own way of protecting  and taking care of himself.  Monique leaves regular bruises, cuts, and cigarette lighter burns on little Gerald's body.  During another time when Monique abandons Gerald, at 3 years old, he plays with her cigarette lighter and burns the apartment down and is rescued from hiding behind the couch, his secret hiding spot.  Some relief of the abuse comes for Gerald while Monique is in prison, and he lives with his loving Aunt Queen for 6 glorious years.  Aunt Queen dies and Gerald is forced to live with his Mother, his abusive Step-Daddy, and his half-sister Angel.  For the next 10 years Gerald finds many ways to protect his sister, Angel, from Jordon's molestations, but is not always there to save her.  
Draper does a good job explaining how abused children feel and the poorly qualified adults who are abusing them,  The children lean on each other for support, thus gaining the courage to let the secrets out in order to get the appropriate help needed.  I felt so much anger, not only at the abusive parents, but at the people who were aware of this and did nothing, and especially the social system.  It's clear that the social and the economic systems failed Gerald and Angel.  There are so many children, each day, that slip through the cracks of the system only to be neglected and abandoned all over again.
This book is a powerful tool for any child or adolescent suffering with the private pain of abuse and the sickness of their secrets.  Help is available and its our duty, as adults, to make children aware of this so they don't feel any shame in asking for help.  There are some challenging issues in this book such as: incest/rape; abuse; spousal abuse; neglect; drug abuse; and underage drinking, however, how will young adults learn that they are not alone and where to go for safety and help.  This book resonates with young adults who are suffering or have suffered at the hand of abuse and made it out alive. 


GENRE:  Realistic Fiction, Multicultural, Coretta Scott King Award, ALA Book Award. 

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Blog #7. Kelly, Joe (Author), Niimura, J.M. (illustrator). I Kill Giants. Image Comics. Canada. 2009. Print



ANNOTATION:
Barbara is in High School and goes through a series of struggles in life, being bullied, gaining courage, love, and loss.  Barbara creates her own make believe fantasy world to help her cope with life's challenges and learns how to kill Giants.

JUSTIFICATION FOR NOMINATION:
The fantasy and science-fiction come through in the descriptive art in this graphic novel.  In order to cope with death, bullying, rejection, love, and the loss of it, Barbara conjures up her make believe friends. She is consistently bullied by a bigger girl at school, and becomes a heroine by defeating her attempts of abuse.
Barbara has been rejected long enough by the bully clan and finds only one true friend in the new girl at school. Sophia soon coincides in Barbara's games to overcome her Giants.  Acting out her anger becomes a strong help in aiding her ability to conquer them.  Through her Giant killing and conquering her difficulties, Barbara has gained the confidence and strength to face a very final situation that no young adult should have to go through.  This is a great book for young adults who are suffering with adversity and how to overcome fears of tackling some very big Giants.

GENRE:
Fantasy/Science-Fiction, Coming of Age, Graphic Novel.

Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Blog #6. Levithan, David. Marly's Ghost: a remix of Charles Dickens's, A Christmas Carol. Penguin Group. New York. 2006. Print.

ANNOTATION:
     Instead of Ebenezer Scrooge, who was visited by Three Christmas Ghosts in the early Nineteenth Century, Ben is visited by Three Valentines Ghosts in present day.  The love of Ben's life, Marly, has passed away, at Sixteen years old.  Ben is heartbroken and acts like Ebenezer Scrooge. A funny resemblance, and a twist of fate turn Ben around to some unexpected future possibilities.

JUSTIFICATION FOR REJECTION:
     I was sorely disappointed.  I thought this was going to be a mystery, supernatural, or some kind of horror book.  Instead, it was more like "Casper the friendly Ghost".  I felt no resonation with Ben, the teenage protagonist.  Levithan did not bring on any narrative hook ,and failed to entangle my emotions into anything similar to scary. I would vote it more of a Children's Fairy Tale, if I had to categorize it.
     Brian Selznick is the illustrator and has several Caldecott Honor books, but I don't think this is one of them.  David Levithan must have copied word-for-word Charles Dickens's : A Christmas Carol and replaced Ebenezer Scrooge with a teenager, lovesick and sad his girlfriend died, on Valentines Day instead of Christmas.  Ben gets the Bah Hum Bug attitude for Valentines Day, instead of Christmas Day, since his girl Marly is gone now. 
     Levithan calls it a remix, frankly, it's more like a duplicate with a few exceptions.  In the authors note it says he captures not only the "holiday spirit" but the human spirit (162). Personally, I didn't catch anything except boredom.  Even the art in the book is adapted from Dickens's Christmas Carol.  I would have to say, back to the drawing board Levithan and Selznick.

GENRE:  Young Adult Fiction, Supernatural.

Friday, June 28, 2013

#5. Angelou, Maya. I know why the caged bird sings. Random House. New York. 1970. Print.

     Annotation:
          Experiencing the Black Aesthetic during the Depression (circa 1930) on into WWII, while coming of age, Maya learned how to survive in an unjust world.

     Justification for Nomination:
          Maya and her brother, Bailey, lived with their parents in California during the Depression (1930's), who soon divorced and shipped the kids off to live with Grandmother in Stamps, Arkansas.  Maya goes to Momma (Grandmother) at 5 years old and quickly learns that she is her stable rock in her life.  Momma is a business woman who owns her own general store and provides goods and credit to the entire Black community as well as some of the White community.  Momma sews all of Maya's clothes and carries her to church every week.
          Maya does not trust many people and does not have very many favorites besides Momma and Bailey.  Maya meets Sister Flowers, who is an avid reader, and teaches Maya some lessons in living through giving her books to read each week.  Miss Flowers said to Maya: "I must always be intolerant of ignorance but understanding of illiteracy.  That some people, unable to  go to school, were more educated and even more intelligent than college professors"(99).
          Maya gets transported back and forth from her mothers in St. Louis to her fathers in Los Angeles, and back again to Arkansas.  A series of unfortunate events happen to her while living with each of her parents.  Maya had to grow up fast to learn how to survive in the big cities, while not receiving  very much supervision from either of her parents.  She learned how to speak Spanish and how to drive a big, fancy car when she was with her Daddy.  When she was with her Mother, she was exposed to hip, slick, and cool characters who mastered the art of being con-men.  She thought their names were drawn right out of comic books.
          Momma lived by the 'good book' and taught it to Maya.  Momma taught Maya about dealing with racial issues and how to protect herself.  She learned the injustices of what it meant to be Black and from the South.  Maya shows the struggles of the African American while she quotes many verses from W.E.B. Dubois and Booker T. Washington and shows what the victory means when Joe Louis won the worlds heavy weight championship.
          Maya's autobiography is real and authentic and with many meaty characters to resonate with.  Her ability to connect her words and how she weaves them together show a talent beyond comparison.  Honestly, I don't know why this book did not win a Coretta Scott King Award.  Her genuine coherence of words melded together made it impossible to put the book down.  This is an author I could read over and over again and never get tired of.  Maya propels past excellence and shows a must read for any young adult or adult.


     Genre:  Autobiographical Narrative. Multicultural.  Coming of Age.

Tuesday, June 18, 2013

Blog #4. Blumenthal, Karen. Let me play: the story of Title IX/the law that changed the future of girls in America.

Annotation:  "We shall someday be heeded, and...everybody will think it was always so, just exactly as many young people think that all the privileges, all the freedom, all the enjoyments which woman now possesses always were hers.  They have no idea of how every single inch of ground that she stands upon today has been gained by the hard work of some little handful of women of the past."--Susan B. Anthony.

Justification for Nomination:  The first women's right convention was held in 1848 I the United States.  These are the stories of women who believed in their gender and that they could do anything, anything men were allowed to do, and were willing to fight for equal rights.  By 1869 Congress approved the amendment giving black men the right to vote but not black or white women.  By 1900 women were allowed to compete in the Olympics.  Women who loved sports and were not allowed the same privileges as men and had to become activists, they were eager and ready to get into the game.  One little league girl said "I was stripped of my uniform because I was a girl, not because of an inability to play, I couldn't stand up for myself, and that really hurt"(55).

By 1923 the ERA is first proposed to Congress. A god sent for women's rights was Edith Green, who was elected to Congress in 1954.  In 1955, Rosa Parks refused to give her bus seat up to a white person.  In 1960, blacks were marching for civil rights as well.  The civil rights act didn't come about until 1964.  This was supposed to end racial and sexual discrimination in America.  Both the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate had to vote the entire bill in.  All jobs were to be opened to all races and genders, which helped create the EEOC, Equal Employment Opportunity commission.  The days of women and minorities in traditional rolls were dissolving to become employed with equal pay.  President John F. Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act in 1963.

The Vietnam War and women being called 'woman's libbers' were becoming draft card burners and bra burners.  Just because the law was passed didn't mean it was being enforced.  Women were able to go to college but were not afforded the funding and the scholarships as their male counterparts were.  Congresswoman Edith Green promoted laws for educational funding for females and minorities so that they could pursue doctorates degrees at prestigious colleges.  In 1972, President Richard Nixon signed Title IX and the Senate approved the Educational Amendments into law.  Women could now pursue any profession or sport they desired. " As Tennis champion, Billie Jean King defeated Bobby Riggs in the "Battle of the Sexes"(126).

There are many more historical markers in this nonfiction book for American History.  Don't get me wrong, many people lost their lives and suffered humiliation while struggling for equal rights.  The struggle was a lot harder than just signing a piece of paper.  For any young adult who has aspirations of their own to pursue an education and a career in sports, this book is a must read.  In order to know where you are going you should know where you have been.

Patsy Mink, 1971 United States Representative from Hawaii says:  "While it is wonderful that equity has become the expected norm, we must also teach each new generation that there was a time when Title IX did not exist.  Further, we all need to be reminded that since Title IX was put into place by a legislative body, it can also be taken away by a legislative body.  We need to be vigilant.  Title IX must be protected and defended to ensure that equal educational opportunities for girls and women are preserved for all generations to come"(128).

Genre:  non-fiction, 2003 Sibert Honor book, sports, law, and legislation.








Justification for Nomination: 
 

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Review #3. Cole, Brock. Celine. Collins Publishers. Toronto. 1989. Print.



Annotation:     Celine is sixteen years old and a product of a divorced family.  Celine's dream of becoming an artist and traveling to Italy are smashed when Jake steals a piece of her heart.  How will she ever show signs of maturity with all these obstacles?

Justification for Rejection:    Celine struggles to find her own identity while living with her step-mother, who is only six years older than she is.  Celine's mother runs off with different men and leaves her with her father, who is always off on a business trip.  Her father in turn, leaves her with her step-mother who is busy completing her college education.
     Where do I fit, where do I belong, who loves me, and what about fear of rejection and abandonment?  These are some of the serious issues that are never addressed in this maladaptive novel.  If I were Celine, I should think I would have far more emotional problems that Cole lacks to describe in this playful book.  Celine seems to wonder around in her own teenage mind of existence, as well as physically.  The adults in her life consistently harp on her to 'show some maturity' and then we will reward you(19).  This becomes an oxymoron due to the circumstances.  She is quite mature and actually glides through many of her obstacles, not by any help from the adults.
     From teachers to parents to step-mother and even the divorcee next door, who consistently dumps her six year old, Jake, off at her own convenience, for Celine to watch, scolds her when things don't go the adults way.  Celine even took care of her girlfriend, Lucille, when she got drunk and threw-up in her sweater.  She got the  blame for that and nothing seems to effect her.  Celine appears quite mature and very well adjusted, something I find pretty amazing and unusual for a sixteen year old with her circumstances and no supervision.  Either the author over-looked her emotional development as a teen or Celine is an exceptional child. 
     The vocabulary that Cole uses for the protagonist reaches far beyond the way a sixteen year old would speak, especially for one who is failing English Literature and cannot complete her essay on "Cather in the Rye".  This puzzled me, as the vernacular did not seem to fit with the character nor the setting.  Nothing extravagant happens in the novel, in other words, there were no real experiential insights about humanity as a complex nature discovered here.  In fact, it lacked in extraneous drama, she did not learn anything meaningful about humanity and any new way to function in that world. The only realistic feature would have been the orphan character that may or may not have the primal fear of abandonment, however, it did not seem to bother Celine to determine any change in her life.  Most likely, I will not read this book again because the novel did not resonate with me as an adult nor as a teenager.


Genre:    Teen Fiction, Coming of Age, Search for Identity.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Blog Review #2. Siena Cherson Siegel. To Dance. Aladdin Paperbacks. New York:2006. Print.



Annotation:  Siena grows from a tiny dancer to her debut performance on stage with the New York City Ballet.  In 1970, her dream becomes a reality while Siena discovers herself.


Justification for Nomination:

A teenage girl could certainly resonate with the many life successions in "To Dance".  Siena shows her development in Ballet and her life from the time she was six years old to eighteen years old.  Siegel's writing style is very matter of fact and stays on topic.  She shows expression in peoples faces and the dialogue is easy to follow from image to image.

Siena overcomes some of her adversities throughout her life and purges forward to grasp at her dream, the dream of a lifetime.  At first the doctor tells her she has flat feet and she will never dance.  Her mother is very supportive of her decision to try anyway.  In spite of her parents continued arguing, their divorce, and moving back and forth from San Juan, Puerto Rico to Boston and to New York several times, she adapts quit well.  Siena buries herself in her dance so she will not have to be in a home with no peace.

Siegel uses vibrant colors, chronological organization, and easy readability in her criteria.  This is an inspiring graphic novel for any child or teenager who has dream of their own.


Genre:  A Robert F. Siebert Honor Book, multicultural, coming of age, search for identity.

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Walter Dean Myers. Monster. Amistad. New York: HarperCollins, 1999. Print.

Annotation:

     Sixteen year old Steve Harmon may have been in the wrong place at the wrong time.  Steve try's to figure out if, indeed, he truly is a monster, while being tried for murder.  Steve turns his diary into a screenplay which gives him insight to his own coming-of-age identity.

Justification for Nomination:

     The concept of showing Steve Harmon as a human being, rather than a monster, is defense attorney Kathy O' Brien's goal during trial.  The scenes are shot mostly in the court room or the jail house.  Walter Dean Myers book draws you into" Monster" with an emotional hook as well as being intellectually stimulating.  Steve, as the protagonist, searches for his own identity while telling his true story in the form of a film he is shooting as a screenplay.
     Steve was fingered as the lookout person for a drugstore robbery went bad, with the owner who ended up murdered with his own gun.  Steve's attorney, Miss O'Brien, does a good job at showing Steve to be human while creating a question beyond a reasonable doubt, in the jury's minds.
     Myers presents rape and violence within the prison walls, that young Steve becomes dreadfully fearful of, listening to human sounds of violation.  There is no privacy in prison.  Some men are just looking for a fight.  One time another man grabbed Steve's meat right off of his dinner tray.  Steve kept a low, quiet profile so as not to stir up any aggression.
     Steve's parents were supportive of their son, but it hurt Steve to see his Mama crying so much.  She gave him a Bible and marked a passage for him saying to trust in the Lord, the Lord is my strength.  Even during church services in prison, a fight would break out.
     O'Brien accomplishes what she set out to do.  Society put a label on Steve, "Monster", she would remove it.  Steve was in the film club at school.  His teacher, George Sawicki, was very fond of him.  On the witness stand he expressed what a talented and outstanding man Steve is.  The jury ate it up, which promoted doubt about Steve's guilt.
     This is a tantalizing story of separating an adolescent self-portrayal from his crime.  The guilt or innocence is left ambiguous and for the reader to decide.  The book is a great example of risk-taking that many youth get involved with.  It also points out racial profiling and the impact that  incarceration has on the African-American population. I feel that the book leaves an impression on young adults by allowing them to think about consequences of their decisions and how their actions can affect others.

Genre:  nonfiction, coming-of-age/search for identity.  Coretta Scott King Award, Micheal L. Prinz Award, National Book Award.  Multicultural.

Posted by Theresa Perl