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Professional Readings for Personal Identity Week

Posted by teenlibrarylit on April 24, 2008

Woah! That was some intense reading and I feel a little bogged down with what I am supposed to do now when it comes to teens and identity and literacy. I thought that all of the writers brought up interesting points and seemed to be in love with “Gee” who I had to look up just because he was referenced so many times.  James Paul Gee seems to be the expert when it comes to identity and literacy spending the last decade writing and studying sociolinguistics and literacies. He is a professor at the University of Wisconsin, Madison and wrote Why Video Games are Good for Your Soul: Pleasure and Learning (a book I think I may have to pick up).

Overall, I felt the pieces brought up good points like self and identity being different. I agree that one’s sense of self is more stable and internal and one’s identity can change to fit the social setting or situation allowing someone to have multiple identities. I think that teens are still trying to figure out their sense of self through trying out different identities if that makes any sense. When you are in such an intense social setting such as high school, it is hard to figure out which will be the path of least resistance and how to hop on that path or if you want to be on that path. I think that this is a struggle that doesn’t really end with one’s teen years. I have a difficult time believing that people are always aware of what role (identity) that are projecting and that it changes with every new situation.

I was a little surprised to read that girls are not as computer literate as boys and that girls are still considered to be good at English and not as good at science and math. Are we still living a society where that stereotype really exists? I thought that was changing and getting better from the teens that I know and interact with, but they are a very small portion of the teen girls out there. I just thought that it was an old way of thinking. I can remember my mother reinforcing that belief when I was younger. And I’m glad I didn’t listen. I’m numbers and math person for the art team at the magazine. Figuring out the budget is one of the most satisfying parts of my job and I usually look forward to it with every issue.

I think it will probably take me a couple weeks to really process all of these readings, but I am glad to have some of these issues back out front. I think I had forgotten that they were still current and need to be addressed.

Posted in Teen Readers | Tagged: , | 1 Comment »

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian

Posted by teenlibrarylit on April 24, 2008

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian was a great book and good choice for this week’s theme of personal identity. I thought the text of the story was interesting and good, but it was the drawings that made it really great. I felt like I learned more about Junior from his illustrations than I did from the text. And I thought it was very fitting that was the way I read the book, since the opening of the story addresses why he draws. He wants everyone to understand without facing a language barrier.

Again, this book is difficult to read because of all of the abuse. The scene where his father shot his dog because it was too expensive to take it to the vet may have made me cry and reminded me a bit of Old Yeller.

They way that alcoholism is discussed is really interesting to me. I have to admit that I was surprised in the casual manner in which Junior brought up his parents alcoholism. It was if they were just another couple that had a problem with alcohol but at least they weren’t abusive like Rowdy’s father. It is also the cause of many of the deaths in the book, like Eugene and Junior’s sister, but it always sounds like it is just what happens. I was horrified when I read about Eugene’s death and being out with his friend who shot him and was too drunk to remember or when his sister died in the fire and was too drunk to wake up and get herself and her husband to safety. Alcoholism seemed to be commonplace for the “rez” and the people who lived there. I have always thought of this a total stereotype and couldn’t tell if the author was playing on this stereotype or if there is truth to it. I have to admit, I do not know a lot about Indians and there culture outside of bad John Wayne westerns. There were other Indian stereotypes mentioned like going to work at the Casino and gambling being a part of the culture. I don’t know how I feel about that after living here in the “Happy Valley” where I have been encouraged to always look at people for people and not to believe the stereotypes to the point of being almost overly sensitive to them.

I also like that he was a good student and a good basketball player, yet he was constantly picked on. When I think about stereotypes in the fictional high school environment, usually being really good at school and sports would mean instant popularity. I do realize that it is because of other contributing factors like the lisp and stuttering problem (that I pretty much forgot about after the first few pages) as well as the glasses and clothes that make him the target of every bully except for Rowdy. It was a dynamic that made me really think about Junior fitting in or not fitting to school, the “rez” and his culture.

Posted in Teen Readers | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

Alter Ego: Avatars and their creators

Posted by teenlibrarylit on April 18, 2008

This book was especially fun to read because my friend was heading off to the NY Comic-Con this week, so I felt like spirit of this book was there. We talked about whether or not we would create our own avatar. And both of us agreed that we probably would not, but that leads into a discussion about all the friends that we have that have multiple and what that means to us. Both us agreed that part of the beauty of the Internet is that is the one place where everyone starts on an even playing field. When a person is on the Internet they are not defined by sex, race, age, size, sexual preference, or anything. People can be whomever they choose or nothing at all and that is the same for every person when they first log on. There is not a different log-on for people who are less than 5 feet tall and have red hair. And if I wanted to be that when I went online no one would ever be the wiser unless I wanted him or her to know. We also talked about the international and familial aspects of being an avatar. People are playing and communicating with each other from all over the world and making connections with people they may never had the want or means to do.

Both us found it fascinating to look at the professions and ages of the people in this book and then to see what their avatars were. We had a couple personal favorites like Cassien Guir/ La Blonde. My friend thought he was perfect example of what was so great about the Internet and being able to be whomever you choose without public or private repercussions. No one would ever have to know that Cassien was a man. I thought it was really brave of these gamers to expose themselves in this book. Now, anyone who reads it could know who they are and they could face all of the issues that having an avatar can save them from.

This would be a great book for teens if you could get them to read it. My concern would be that only teens interested in gaming would think about picking up this book and checking it out. Also, I don’t know if non-gamers would be able to read it without judging and thinking that gaming is only for geeks as many of them do. I would like to think that it would open their eyes and show them that gaming is for more than just nerds or geeks.

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Good Girls

Posted by teenlibrarylit on April 18, 2008

I like the way this book gets right into the action of the story. This seems to be a common occurrence with most teen novels, but it still always gets me every time. I read this book in one sitting and couldn’t put it down. It wasn’t that this the most amazing book I have read all semester. I liked it, but it wasn’t my favorite. It was more that it was like watching a car accident. You don’t want to look, but you just can’t avert your eyes.

From the moment Audrey comes on the scene, she is a likable character who seems a bit naive and a little unsure. I was worried for her from the start. I try not to read the back covers or front flaps, so the book is always a surprise. But I knew as soon as she entered the bedroom that everything was going to go horribly wrong for her and it did. I felt like Ruby was consistent in her message about people’s perceptions and also that mistakes made can sometimes linger for longer than they should. I also liked how the author tried to work within the stereotypes of student’s at a high school and break through them, even though I was able predict most of the character development. I don’t know if a teen would read it the same way I did though.

I can see some people shying away from having this book in their collections due to some of the more graphic passages and the trip to the gynecologist. Again, I think this would be a mistake. There are lots of teens out there going through some of the same issues as Audrey (maybe not having their photo taken) like wanting to have sex, being unaware of some of the emotions and consequences that having sex can have, fitting into a stereotype and being seen as nothing more. Overall, I would say that I think teens would enjoy this book. I think that they will get the messages in without realizing that they are there.

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Fanboy and Goth Girl

Posted by teenlibrarylit on April 5, 2008

I was worried when I started this book that I was entering the world of Jodi Picoult and 19 Minutes all over again. After the first couple chapters, the bullet, and “The List”, I was waiting for the shooting to begin. I was hopeful when I read that he would never do that because it wasn’t worth him dying over. But still every time the bullet made it on to the scene or his hatred of the Jock Jerks a.k.a. the JJs were mentioned my stomach would tighten. I was worried about all the way to end and the playground scene with Kyra. And the terrorist fantasies did not help at all. It seemed like danger and darkness was lurking on almost every page of this book. Luckily for me, it never turned as dark as I thought it would.

Overall, I liked the book despite feeling nervous through most of it. Fanboy was an interesting character that had moments of feeling real. It was interesting how he could have so much self confidence when it came to his studies and comics, but would turn into a puddle of goo when challenged by a bully and not do stop the situation. He could be really quick and cruel and then a few pages later be really scared and quiet. I found it all kind of fascinating. I would sometimes get the feeling from him that if was too hard or too unknown that he would just shut down and hide. This would kind of irritate me. I just wanted to reach into the book and smack him. There were a couple times that I almost couldn’t feel bad for him, because I felt like he didn’t help himself and would make things worse by not doing anything. I also thought his friendship with Cal seemed too strange to be real (I know it’s fiction). There were things about it that seemed too strange but I think were there to show that even the popular jocks struggled to be their true selves and that the society of high school can stifle anyone and everyone.

I also went and checked out the web site for this book hoping to gain more insight and closure to a book that left me lacking in both departments. The book seems to have a really big following and the teens that posted on the site seem to feel a real connection to Barry Lyga and his book. And I found some of the dialog on there from them really interesting. They talked to him like I have heard teens talk to their friends. There doesn’t seem to be that gap where they think of him as an adult. It is like they see him as Fanboy, a teen author trying to figure it out just like they are. I don’t think that I have seen that with any of the other sites of the books we have covered in class yet.

Posted in Comics, Self-Esteem, Teen Readers | 1 Comment »

Gossip Girls

Posted by teenlibrarylit on April 5, 2008

This book wasn’t what I expected. I thought that it would only be an entertaining story about the glamorous lives of young rich teens in the city living like they were 25. I thought I would find it a little shallow and unrealistic in its portrayal of the teens living the high life in New York city and there would be little that teens not living that life would really be able to relate to. I was wrong. I don’t know if it is because I am an older woman reading this book and not a teen, but there was a constant sadness that I couldn’t get away from. Here were these characters who seemed to have everything that a teenager could dream of: money, popularity, perfect looks, great clothes (I didn’t know half of the designers but they sounded impressive). But their lives were still extremely complicated and hard despite all of their advantages. There were so many different mini drama tornadoes through the entire book that I could fill the whole posting with the different issues brought up by Cecily von Zieger, who seems to sound like she may have been similar to the Serena character in her own life. There was love, sex, drugs, alcohol, bulimia, sexuality, divorce, smoking, body image, popularity, and so on. I felt like I was in some kind of crazy soap opera New York where life was never as perfect as it seemed.

I was talking with a friend of mine who has two teenage daughters one morning at work about the Gossip Girl series and television show. She was saying how she would never tell her teenagers not to read it, but she hoped that they never would. I told her that it wasn’t what she thought and that the book would be a great way to open up conversations about a number of issues that her teenagers may be dealing with and that it was actually a very sad book. She said that she could see my point of view, but that she thought that I would be able to see that the lives of the characters in the book were sad because I am older and have more experiences. She said that most teenagers she knows, including her children to a certain extent, would admire the fabulous lives that these teens were living and wouldn’t see the unpleasant things that I was seeing. She feels that are no real strong female characters or celebrities out there for teenagers and a book series like this only reinforces that. She said that there are teenagers who are actually looking up eating disorders on the web because they want to have one. I still tried to argue that she should have her girls read it and then talk to them about the book making sure that some of the messages cleverly weaved between Tiffany’s and vacations in Sun Valley wouldn’t be lost on them. We continued to disagree and discuss until we realized that we were never going to come to an agreement. I will be giving her this book to read on her own on Monday and she said she would at least give it a chance and read it herself but she wouldn’t pass it on to her kids.

While I can understand where she is coming from, I still don’t agree. I think that the snippets of the television program that she has seen may have something to do with it, but I have also only seen snippets so I don’t know. I will be interested to see what other people thought of this book tomorrow in class. I for one was pleasantly surprised.

Posted in Teen Readers, Teen Romance, Television | 2 Comments »

Grace After Midnight

Posted by teenlibrarylit on March 26, 2008

This book was another somewhat difficult read. I read this book as if it were fiction instead of non-fiction. It was only when she began talking about being on The Wire and I did a Google search for her that she became real for me. While searching around the web, I found this interesting interview that she did for Fader magazine to promote her character on The Wire. http://www.thefader.com/articles/2006/12/05/listening-in-part-i. I also found a quote online from a New York Times article that said “Stephen King, in Entertainment Weekly, called her “perhaps the most terrifying female villain to ever appear in a television series.” and she was playing a character that was similar to her own life and the show somewhat mirrors and is filmed where she grew up. Once, I started to extra research about her, I found that I just wanted to more and more. I wanted to make sure she was real.

I think that teens would probably do the same thing. The Wire is one of the most talked about and popular shows on television and DVD. I have multiple people suggest that I watch it and the video store where I used to work can hardly keep it on the shelves. She is a celebrity and during her time on the show it seemed that everyone wanted an interview with her because her story is so interesting. I think it is great that she shared it as a novel. I wouldn’t be surprised if it ends up as a movie.

It is still amazing to me that her real life almost read like a movie or a television show. I kept thinking this stuff couldn’t really be happening, no one’s life can really be like this. I wonder if teens would also read it this way, especially teens that are growing up in rural and suburban settings. I wonder if it would read like they were watching an episode of The Wire or Law and Order. The one thing that I thought was too good to be true was the fact that she survived it all and was able to get a job as an actress on a show like The Wire. I know this is non-fiction and I know that she probably wouldn’t have had the opportunity to share her story otherwise, but it still stuck with me in a strange way.

Posted in Non-Fiction, Reluctant Readers, Television | 1 Comment »

Body Type

Posted by teenlibrarylit on March 26, 2008

Ok, so I loved this book. I think everyone in class knew I would. I loved it because there were some really great tattoos in here and many of my friends have gotten similar tattoos. Most of them English majors as undergrads have tattooed their favorite passages from various works from Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Green to a passage from Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. I always thought I might like to get something by Dorothy Parker, my favorite poet, tattooed on the inside of my lower arm. Her poetry can sometimes be a bit lengthy. I was afraid it would be too long and I wouldn’t be able to sit that long.

I also love this book from a graphic designers perspective. Typography is a big part of my job. It was really interesting how he knew that most of the people with the typographic tattoos were graphic designers or people who had some art training. Almost all graphic designers have their own personal favorite type. My favorite font is Minion. I have used it for my resume’ and almost any project where the type has not been designated by the template or the client.

I think that teens would find this book interesting for some of the same reasons I do. It is a great book from the art perspective and teens interested in art and type would probably like to see this alternative look at typography. It is nice that Ina Saltz names the type used in the tattoo. Also, most people get tattoos for very personal reasons and there is usually an interesting story behind someone’s tattoos. People’s stories behind each tattoo are given in small digestible chunks. They are all given in first person, which seems to be a common trait that most teens enjoy when reading a book.

I know the argument is that teens cannot get tattoos until they are 18 without a parent’s permission, so some as a book may see this book just for adults. Again, I disagree with this, especially when thinking about Body Type, because even though this book is filled with tattoos, it is more about the typography and the story behind why people chose to get these particular tattoos.

I’m actually excited to bring the book to work tomorrow and have all of the graphic designers check it out and maybe search for their favorite fonts.

Posted in Art, Reluctant Readers | 2 Comments »

Teen Television?

Posted by teenlibrarylit on March 13, 2008

A friend told me that I would get to watch television for homework for this class. As a very open television junkie, I was extremely excited for this week in the semester. I read the list of suggested shows and saw a couple favorites like Chuck and Project Runway (though I didn’t watch this past season because of school work). After I got over my excitement about having an excuse to sit and zone out in front of the television, I started to really think about the examples given.

I had never really thought of Chuck as a show for teens. Initially, it was just the show on before Heroes (which I would have thought of as more of a teen show), and then it became that show I wouldn’t miss for anything. I don’t know why I don’t think of it as a show for teens. I can see now after some thought that the characters are witty, yet very vulnerable in their own way. Teens could definitely identify with the feelings that Chuck has about being attracted to the woman he works with and the animosity he feels for the guy who got him kicked out of school. Marshall is an extremely likable character who never quite fits in but is always himself with moments of an almost a naive lack of personal awareness. I think that it had never registered until this class that teens may identify with the characters on a broader scope and not in the pigeon hole I had them in because they were mid-to late twenty somethings and working, not going to school. I also missed the obvious technology aspect to the show. There are tons of cool gadgets on Chuck as well as simple everyday gadgets like televisions and computers. Also, there is often a scene with one of the characters playing a video game or referencing a video game.

This made me look at another show that I would have said was a show for teens, Freaks and Geeks. While I think this show is still a good show for teens to watch because of the struggles that Lindsay and Sam go through. Lindsay is a “geek” who is trying to transform her into a “freak” and will do anything to be accepted into that group. And Sam is a freshman who is struggling with not “being a little kid” any more. I think that teens could identify with some of the characters on the show and some of the choices they have to make. But I know part of the reason I enjoyed this show were some of the things that reminded me of the time period I grew up during. I’m not that many teens now would appreciate Bill’s love of the show Dallas and Nick’s obsession with Styx or Ken’s hilarious laser show date. I don’t know if these references would be too much and loose the teen in the time period or if the teen would want to watch the show because it is one of the most honest representations of what it is like to go through high school that I have ever seen.

In the end, I think a show isn’t a teen show or an adult show. Different shows, like books, are going to attract different people with different likes and dislikes.

Posted in Television | 2 Comments »

Prom Nights from Hell

Posted by teenlibrarylit on March 13, 2008

The title of this book grabbed me from the moment I saw it on the reading list. I think they couldn’t have picked a better title to grab teens, especially teen girls who may be dreading their prom or have no interest in going. I think this book would appeal primarily to teen girls. I can’t imagine that many teen boys would have heard of or really enjoyed writers like Meg Cabot or Kim Harrison. I thought that it was interesting to see Meg Cabot step out of her comfort zone and write a short scary story. The other authors seem to be well-known horror/thriller/fantasy writers.

This book is a nice transition book for the teens who may feel like they are too old to read series like Goosebumps and Fear Street books, but are looking for that quick fix of kind of creepy and want to look like they are reading a more adult like book. I like that the stories were short and easily digestible. A teen could read them all in one sitting or pick up the book on the way to school or before bed and not have to feel like it was a heavy commitment. Some of the stories were better than others. I felt like Madison Avery and the Grim Reaper left the story too open, even for a short story, and there was really no closure for Madison. It was the longest of the group, so I would have expected more from it. The Corsage on the other hand was great. The story was a little predictable and you knew that things were going to go horribly wrong for Frankie. I was a little shocked and delighted that there was no happy ending for Frankie and Will. I thought that with most wish stories that Frankie would be able to set things right.

Again, as with every book, I would want to see what the teen was interested in. But I think what is nice about this book is that it is an anthology and there may be some stories that the teens really like and some that they like less. It is not like a typical novel where they have invested the time with only one or two characters they don’t like and a plot that they hate. That being said, I wouldn’t suggest this to a teen that would never read something in this genre and hate it just because the stories are short and varied.

Posted in Fanstasy/Suspense, Teen Readers, Teen Romance | 1 Comment »