Showing posts with label Speculative Fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Speculative Fiction. Show all posts

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Boy Meets Boy: David Levithan

Title: Boy Meets Boy

Media Format: Book
Genre: Homosexuality, Speculative Fiction
Selection Source: Teen Reads
Reading Audience: Junior High+
Reading Recommendation: 3 ***
Curriculum Connection: Tolerance

Summary
This novel is different from most teen novels that deal with homosexuality. By working within the speculative fiction genre, Levithan bypasses most of the issues that teenage homosexuals are faced with; grappling with one's sexuality, coming out of the close, guilt, and isolation. By normalizing homosexuality in this one town, he allows us to consider the way things could be. Paul is gay. He has known he was gay since kindergarten. His parents accepted the news that he was gay with the same disinterest some parents might feel if the kindergarten teacher told them their son prefers soccer to dodgeball. It doesn't end in Paul's household. The star quaterback is a transvestite who gives new meaning to the the phrase homecoming queen. Against this backdrop we read about the love story between Paul and Noah. The most unusual thing about it is how normal it is. We are allowed to forget about the homosexuality and take it for what it is, a romance between two individuals who have strong feelings for each other, but their immature love leads them to do things that have the potential to alienate each other.

Evaluation
This book works. It does what it sets out to do which is to make a "normal" love story about two gay boys. It also does what all books offering a minority viewpoint should do, it allows us to feel what the protagonist feels, and see the world as the protagonist sees it. In my view, books like this are more powerful than divisive arguments about homosexuality. It appeals to our sense of empathy rather than intellect, and in the end we are happy when Paul inevitably gets the boy.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Nation: Terry Pratchett


Title: Nation
Author: Terry Pratchett
Publisher: HarperCollins

Media Format: Book
Genre: Speculative Fiction
Selection Source: YALSA Top 10 Books for YAs 2009
Reading Audience: All YAs+
Reading Recommendation: 4 ****
Curriculum Connection: none

Summary
Nation is set in a parallel universe with similarities to Victorian Age England. Almost all of it takes place on an island in the Pacific, known to its inhabitants as The Nation. After a tsunami wipes out everyone on the island, but a boy who was away on his manhood journey. It also wrecked a ship that killed everyone and everything on it except for a young girl and her Victorian sensibilities. It's one of those classic tales that must appeal to humans on a deep level, because they're always being retold. It's a tale of two civilizations meeting, a tale of rebuilding a nation from the ground up, and a friendship tale about two people from alien civilizations who learn to communicate and understand each other.

Evaluation
This story of two cultures meeting and of friendship should appeal to many readers. It allows us to relive and rewrite our tragic history of the meeting of civilizations. We realize that things might have worked out better if those people who met in 1492 had the sense and curiosity of young people. It is really a leisure reading book, but one that has the potential to teach and provoke thoughts.