Friday, July 14, 2017

No! Don't make that book into a movie yet!

Scrolling through my twitter feed this morning, I saw a casting call for Seven and Khalil for the film adaptation of The Hate U Give.

Ugh.

Not even a year in print, this story will be viewed by the vast majority of my students before they've created voices for the characters, visualized the scenes, flipped back to re-read a section, or anticipated what would happen in the next chapter. What's more, many will watch it superficially--kinda understanding the plot but focused only on certain pieces, missing the complexity of characters, Thomas's nuanced plot, and Starr's compelling narration of current racial tension in our nation. "I already watched it," they'll tell me.  "I know what happens, so I don't need to read it."

This rush to put YA lit on the screen frustrates me; it's as though we're robbing future potential readers of experiencing the story come alive from their book. One of my favorite reads this spring was a student-recommended Everything, Everything. I ordered two copies for my library, then learned its movie had just been released--big plot twist 4/5 of the way through, no longer a surprise for future readers.

I know it's not a new thing: Twilight by Stephanie Meyer was published in 2005 with the movie following in 2008; Suzanne Collins's Hunger Games was released in 2008, with the film version in 20011. Lots of kids, teens, and adults were turned on to reading the series from watching the first movie. I didn't start reading Harry Potter to my boys until Alex had already seen the first two movies. What's more, I probably never would have read (or seen) anything from the Twilight saga in book or on screen if I hadn't looked up from grading vocab quizzes while subbing for a Spanish V class as the Cullens raced back to hide Bella after the bad vamps caught them playing baseball. (All but five of the Spanish students were on a field trip, and I suspect the movie was supposed to be playing in Spanish with subtitles.) The clip piqued my interest enough to ask my student aide about it; she lent me her copy of the book. And so it went.

So why am I all bent out of shape about print-to-film now?

Reason number one, hands down, is the classroom library. Still only available in hardcover, #1 on the YA Fiction Best Seller list, The Hate U Give was a costly title to add. Plus, at 440 pages, kids will need some stamina to push through to finish. I suspect a few more who do pick up the book after they've seen the movie will skim through some of the latter half of the book--I'd argue the half that requires the most attentive reading to glean all the insights that Thomas provides about the history of the racial conflicts in our society. There's a conversation between Starr, her brother, and her boyfriend as the novel approaches the climax--rioting in her neighborhood--a "white people are like this"/"black folks do this" conversation among teens (Starr and her brother are black; boyfriend is white)--and white boyfriend asks a question that makes the other two stop. It's an off-limits, offensive, 'racist' question to them. On the surface. Then Starr considers the conversation they'd been having, and how in the context of that conversation, boyfriend's question was pretty logical from his vantage point; so she answers the question, following up with an explanation of how what he'd asked would be construed by her and brother as offensive. My suspicion is that the movie version will amp up that riot, and that while conversation might include the dialogue, close-ups of Starr's expression and her changing tone of voice can't replace the author's paragraphs of narration conveying Starr's thinking.



Having a classroom library with gripping, relevant, high-interest texts is key to its success. In her awesome recent post, Anne cautions against confusing pop fiction with meaty literature in our haste to entertain the children, arguing that the 'classics' still belong in our English curriculum and we ought not be so hasty in casting off a title because someone said it's difficult of boring. As we've discussed often, almost all of the best current YA lit includes allusions to those classics; those connections are lost if kids have never been exposed to them.

The Hate U Give is an excellent example of a mentor text that can spark discussions and facilitate writing instruction. As meaty literature goes, it's got a lot of protein. (A lot of f-bombs, too.) It's one of those books a kid graduates to, challenges themselves with. [Check it out: plural pronoun for 'kid'. I'm unlearning/relearning. Growth. Woot.] I believe we're taking something away from that achievement by showing them what happens before we let them experience it in their mind's eye themselves. Sure, this movie will generate many of the same discussion points as the novel, but when I hark back to Louise Rosenblatt's Reader, Text, Response, I see so many passages in THUG where readers will bring their own experiences to bear as they create their own meanings. What powerful conversations could stem from them! The viewer of the film version will have a more reactionary response--meaningful still, yes. But I'd argue, probably less so.

But Gretchen, you say, To Kill A Mockingbird was made into a movie in 1962, just two years after it was published. We still have kids read that. Yeah, you got me there. The difference for me, I guess, is my desire for students to lose themselves in their independent books--following their characters and turning pages past their bedtime to see what happens next. While it is a part of what we do in teaching required texts, building their reading minds is a chief purpose of independent reading. I'm a little deflated that, for some of my kids, their experience with these characters and this story will be framed by a director's take of the words on the page rather than their own.

Who knows? Maybe I will love this movie. Maybe it will lend itself to an awesome book chat discussion and draw in more readers. I'll hope for that.




Thursday, July 6, 2017

Text-rich Environments

After two years of reading research about text-rich environments and classroom libraries, I still do not think I fully grasped the importance of having text surrounding you day after day.  Then, I had Aiden; there is now a book for him in every single room in our house.  He runs to any book, grabs it, and will sit down to "read".  Because of his options, he does not need to look far to find a good book.

However, I witnessed another example of this today.  My newly-retired mother-in-law came over to watch Aiden today while I popped in to school for a quick meeting in the afternoon.  Unfortunately/fortunately, my mother-in-law came right as Aiden was ready to go down for his nap, so she had two-hours with nothing to do.  She found the book I was currently reading, American Street, on my kitchen counter, so she picked it up and started reading.  Over 100 pages later, she found herself hooked.  When I came home, the first thing she asked was if she could borrow the book when I was finished.  Yes.  Always yes.  I did not have to talk about the book to get her interested.  She simply saw the book, picked it up, and started reading.  Now, I completely understand that this is not the normal behavior of a high school student, especially if they had free wifi available.  However, I also know that this would not have happened if the book was not just lying out for my mother-in-law to see.  How do we create more of these situations in every day life and within our classrooms?  How do we set up these opportunities for others who may be looking for something to just take up some time?  We need to have books ready at any time because who knows when that moment will happen where someone finally has time to pick up a book.  We need to be ready.

I have also decided that I am the worst book critic EVER because I love every single book, and American Street by Ibi Zoboi is no different.  I really enjoyed this book and the main character who is an immigrant from Haiti.  The story starts with the main character, Fabiola, and her mother coming to the United States to live with her Aunt and three cousins.  At customs, her mother gets stopped, and Fabiola gets sent on to stay with her relatives.  The plot develops as Fabiola needs to learn how to live in Detroit, Michigan while wondering what will happen to her mother.  The conflicts in this novel bring up some tough issues that deal with abusive relationships (boyfriend/girlfriend), drugs, gang violence, deportation, and the conflicts that develop in different types of relationships that Fabiola has.  The end of the book is realistic in that it's not just some happy-ending and everything is fixed.  I left this book feeling sad for the characters that still had to keep on living even after all of the tragedy.  I would be careful in recommending this book to high school students, and I would definitely want to know the student well before suggesting this one.  On the other hand, I love that it is a quick read with short chapters which I always think is appealing for high school students.

Next up is Choice Words by Peter Johnston.  This is a "school" book, and I'm already desperately wanting to read another YA book.  I may have to head to library to start finding some other YA titles that I have been wanting to read or at least books to scatter around my house to encourage others who visit to pick a book to read. 😀

Saturday, July 1, 2017

(Re) Discovering Ourselves


     Lately, I have found myself remembering different parts of my former selves. Not necessarily with a longing for times gone by, but with a sense of nostalgia. Like that feeling when you wake from a dream and can't quite sift through what was real and what was the dream. That moment when you hear a certain song, and it triggers the memories and the wave of emotion that is attached to those memories, unexpected and raw.
     I've always been someone who gets too involved in 'other worlds'. When I watch movies, I have a hard time separating myself from the fact that it isn't 'really' real. This is probably why I find it impossible to watch horror films. 
     I'm always reminded of Tim O'Brien's novel The Things They Carried. He explores the idea of truth, of fiction vs. fact. He talks about how often the "story-truths" are more true than "happening-truths." I find the same to be true with really great literature and movies. I find myself drawn into the worlds like I'm a part of them, a part of the characters' lives. This year, I found myself a sobbing puddle at the end of The Book Thief. The emotion of it stayed with me for days. If I'm honest, it still haunts me a bit from time to time. I suppose good literature really should never stop haunting.
     I had the fine experience of heading to the library alone yesterday, a bit of a lost art for me. As much as I can spend endless amounts of time perusing children's literature with my kids, and I really can, I am a lover of children's books, there is something about the endless possibilities of walking into a library and choosing books...for myself.
     This is where the my former selves come in. I have been rediscovering my need for nature and the outdoors, of escaping the busy-ness of life and remembering to be mindful. To take a damn minute. To breathe. 
     I was drawn to non-fiction, hungry for some peace and quiet on the page. I need to feed my soul, and my soul needs a break from the escapism of fiction. Though, Mr. O'Brien might tell me that fiction is the real non-fiction...or something like that. These books are a way for me to feel that old familiar feeling of the things I care about most...but have left for a while. I chose a book about wandering and listening, about the environment and helping to create urban green space, hoping to channel some remnants of Thoreau and Whitman, Kerouac and maybe London. I also chose a few wild cards. I never know what I really want, so I get more than I need. I am also a chronic over-packer...I think the two ideas are closely linked, for better or for worse.
     The shelves of the library are full of words and ideas screaming to be discovered. I, of course, ended up with more books than I could comfortably carry. What hit me, though, was the weight of the books I'd left on the shelf. It was almost painful to walk away from the books I knew I might like as much or even more than what I'd chosen. What if I'd chosen "incorrectly?" What if there was something on that fiction shelf that would speak to me more? I had to talk myself down...it WAS ok to walk away. There is always a tomorrow, or a next week, or a week after that. There is summer. There is ice water with lemon and lime and cucumber. There is sun and warmth. There is a garden growing in my back yard. There are the voices of small children riding circles on their bicycles. And there is an infinite amount of minutes to read or re-read, to discover and re-discover the selves I have been and the selves I am to become. 

What I ended up carrying out of the library: 

     


 



What I have on my immediate "To-Read Next" List but left on the shelf:



     
     

Monday, June 26, 2017

Riveting, powerful stuff: The Hate U Give

Angie Thomas pulls no punches in The Hate U Give.

When I was one hundred pages in, I emailed a former student who noted a need for more black narrators in my library, recommending she read it. The next day another former student, who's long graduated from South, posted a video on Facebook of a woman protesting in the wake of no charges being filed in the Philando Castille case; I messaged her about this book as well.

I think this text could be a powerful springboard for discussion about racial tensions, stereotyping, and how our prejudices and biases (and sometimes ignorance, fear, resentment, etc.) often stunt candid and eye-opening conversation. One of my first thoughts was, "Who's taking over Diversity Club now that Rikaia has graduated?" Thomas creates awesome examples for character study and rich opportunities for open dialogue. And I found it more than a classroom library choice; discussion around it deserves a variety of voices--not just freshmen or adults, black or white students, etc. A diverse group feeling safe to share their take and their suggestions about these issues could be some pretty powerful stuff.

Narrated by sixteen-year-old Starr, The Hate U Give includes a LOT of profanity and references to drugs, gangs, violence, and criminal behaviors in its depiction of the struggles in Starr's community.
It's a weighty read at 440 pages, but it's a perfect example of a book riveting enough to keep kids engaged through the extra time and effort it takes to complete it. I do think that because of its complexity and more volatile subject matter, kids should have some guidance in the discussion.

I love this book. There are a couple spots where this pushing-50-white-midwestern-Catholic-school-girl teacher metaphorically clutched at her pearls--but again, great opportunities to start some meaningful conversations.

I have three copies right now--happy to drive toward Waukesha to lend them out. :-)


Thursday, June 22, 2017

Music On My Brain (What's new, huh?)

Just finished two music reads for the summer.  Both are easy reads and very insightful into their respective topics.  I really enjoyed both of them.

First was The Road to Woodstock by Michael Lang (co-creator of the festival).  Cool behind the scenes tales of the music festival that defined a generation.  I knew quite a bit about this already but to hear it from Mr. Lang himself was cool.













Second was Kicking & Dreaming: A Story of HEART, Soul, and Rock & Roll.  The story of the rock band HEART.  Told by both Ann and Nancy Wilson.  I never knew much about the band and this book did a great job of explaining the battles these two talented sister-musicians had to take on throughout their entire career.  From sexism in a male-dominated profession to drugs and alcohol to relationships, this book tells a lot.  Having seen them several times during their 80's heyday, I know feel a bit bad knowing how they really felt about that moment in the band's history.  It's ironic how the common theme in their story is the tight bond between Ann and Nancy during their entire lives but now, currently, they don't even speak to each other and the future of the band may be in doubt.













Not sure what the next read will be.  I'll see where the music takes me......

Wednesday, June 21, 2017

#20minutes-Just Mercy

Amazed.  Shocked.  Naive.  Ignorant.  Hopeful.  These all describe how I am felt after finishing the book Just Mercy by Bryan Stevenson.  I was not intending to read this book as it's outward similarities to To Kill a Mockingbird seemed too heavy for the beginning weeks of summer.  However, I lost my first choice in my car, so there I was.

You cannot miss the obvious similarities to one of my favorite novels, To Kill a Mockingbird.  Sure enough, it's right on the cover: "Every bit as moving as To Kill a Mockingbird, and in some ways more so...a stirring testament to the salvation that fighting for the vulnerable sometimes yields."  Chapter one is even titled "Mockingbird Players".

Yet, there is so much more to this nonfiction book than the comparison to TKAM.  Bryan Stevenson is a lawyer who started the Equal Justice Initiative, and he has the stories to prove it.  He started his legal practice, according to the back cover, "dedicated to defending the poor, the wrongly condemned, and those trapped in the furthest reaches of our criminal justice system."  The book focuses on one of his biggest cases with Walter McMillan, but throughout the book, he weaves in a lot of other stories of clients that have been treated unfairly by the justice system.  Besides stories, Stevenson includes jaw-dropping statistics of the injustice within our systems.  I personally had no idea of some of the horrific facts that come from present day.

Here are reasons why I think Just Mercy would be a good book to bring in to any curriculum (with a big focus on TKAM):

1. The stories are true and more current in JM  than TKAM.  The main story of Walter McMillan takes place in the 90s, but there are smaller, side stories all the way up to 2013.  Take the timeliness and then add the shockingly, true stories, and I was hooked.

2. Bryan Stevenson tells the stories of each individual client in a way that makes you feel connected to the client.  You hold on to each story thinking something good will happen, but page after page, you see justice fail.  Right when you think there is no good in this world, Stevenson pulls you back in with a breath of hope.  Only to throw you right back in to the data that may show our nation still has a ways to go in improving our justice system.

3. I am in no way saying that this should replace TKAM.  Absolutely not.  I personally would not teach this as a literature circle text unless I had students who were very interested in the topic and strong readers.  The vocabulary in this book is tough, and there were so many times where I caught my self rereading pages to figure out what just happened.  I found my thoughts wandering so much more frequently as the topic of death row and justice kept making me think beyond the text.  BUT holy cow could you use passages in this text to show students the idea of justice and how it fits in our world today.   Ideas:

  • A compare/contrast activity with a fictional text (TKAM)
  • An informal socratic seminar by using a short story from the text to discuss
  • Philosophical chairs where you create controversial questions based on the passages (I would help create the questions if you want!)
  • A silent discussion either on posters around the room or with a notebook pass about one of the stories
  • Use a passage as a model text to show how you interact/mark/annotate. 
This text brings a lot of opportunity for nonfiction reading paired with fiction reading.  I'm in love. 💕

4. Stevenson is a big believer in hope, and this is a concept that I have become more and more interested in.  Stevenson states, "But Havel [a great Czech leader during the era of Soviet domination] had said that these were things they wanted; the only thing they needed was hope.  Not that pie in the sky stuff, not a preference for optimism over pessimism, but rather 'an orientation of the spirit.'  The kind of hope that creates a willingness to position oneself in a hopeless place and be a witness, that allows one to believe in a better future, even in the face of abusive power.  That kind of hope makes one strong" (219).  Let's show this to students.  Let's give them hope in a time of their lives when they are struggling to grow up.  The other "hope" quote I loved from Mrs. Jennings (a woman who took in one of Stevenson's clients), "We've all been through a lot, Bryan, all of us.  I know that some have been through more than others.  But if we don't expect more from each other, hope better for one another, and recover from the hurt we experience, we are surely doomed" (126). Stevenson and many others, like Mrs. Jennings, show the reader countless times that it is so important to not give up no matter what situation you are in.  Stevenson is faced with the impossible in many of the cases that he takes on, but to see him put every ounce of his energy in to helping others is so inspiring.  If he can accomplish what he shows in the book, what can we accomplish as an individual?

I'm going to stop there, but I'm sure I am missing more reasons of why this book should be included in any curriculum.  I strongly encourage the English 9 teachers to pick this book up (shout out to all of you crazies teaching the freshmen next year!), or you can definitely borrow my copy!  I will even steal (shhhh!) my copy for one of your classroom libraries; it is much more appropriate in an English classroom than an intervention room.

Okay, on to my guilty pleasure First and Then.  Gretchen has made me even more excited to read this!

#20minutes

Friday, June 16, 2017

My first summer read: First and Then

(Shout out to Alyssa for mentioning this book in her Commitment-to-Summer-Reading post)

Finished my first book of the summer, YA fiction First & Then by Emma Mills, and though it requires some suspension of disbelief in spots, OMG, I loved it. As Alyssa would say, "Not gonna lie." 😊 It was a guilty pleasure.

A lot of teen fiction is written for a well-read reader who will appreciate the literary allusions and twists of language, and Mills uses more than most. Our protagonist/narrator is a fan of Jane Austen, referencing characters and plot twists from Sense and Sensibility and Pride and Prejudice foreign to the majority of high school readers. Which isn't necessarily a bad thing--these references could nudge a few readers toward reading Austen's works.

Additionally, the central plot weaves original conflicts and more rounded minor characters into into the more traditional, somewhat predictable high school storyline, giving all readers who've experienced high school some connection and relevance. There's football, there's padding the resumé for college applications, and there's the girl-likes-boy motif, sure--but Mills' style and the narration excused the clichés for me.

I see myself using a couple paragraphs as read-alouds, and several lines jumped out as mentor texts for writing in the fall. It's definitely a title I'll add to my classroom library, but it's a more solid recommendation for upperclassmen, who'll tend to better appreciate its subtleties and nuances.

Next up: The Curious Incident of the Dog in Nighttime, borrowed from Ashlee. Happy reading!


Conferring is the Pixie Dust: The Power of Two Minutes

To get students reading more --more books, more often, more widely, our English 9 team includes independent reading as a staple in our curri...