Making Curriculum Pop

From the Boston Globe/Associated Press...

This book cover provided by FLUX Boosk shows the cover of 'I'll Get There. It Better Be Worth The Trip.,' by John Donovan. Reads that speak to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning teens, all parts of who they are, have exploded over the last decade and traveled light years since John Donovan's 'I'll Get There'.
This book cover provided by FLUX Boosk shows the cover of "I'll Get There. It Better Be Worth The Trip.," by John Donovan. Reads that speak to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning teens, all parts of who they are, have exploded over the last decade and traveled light years since John Donovan's "I'll Get There". (AP Photo/FLUX Books)

By Leanne Italie
Associated Press Writer / June 23, 2010

At his Kentucky elementary school, kids taunted Brent on the playground about being gay, whatever that was. By eighth grade, he realized what they meant and came out to a friend -- and vice versa.

She was an avid writer, he a voracious reader. They headed to their school library in search of stories that spoke to their lives: gay, gay in the South, gay and fearing stereotypes like "disgusting" and "worthless."

"There were tons of books about gangs and drugs and teen pregnancy and there were no LGBT books. I asked the librarian about it and she was like, 'This is middle school. I can only have appropriate books here,'" said Brent, now 15 and heading into his sophomore year of senior high.

So they went to their public library, where they discovered plenty of romantic gay steam between covers -- for adults. "We weren't complaining," said Brent, who asked that his last name and hometown not be used.

Turning next to bookstores, they finally found what they'd been looking for -- a recent explosion in the publishing world of reads that speak to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and questioning teens.

First came a gem, a book for young people that made them cry: Martin Wilson's 2008 debut, "What They Always Tell Us," set in Tuscaloosa, Ala. The story about a troubled year for two brothers, one of whom finds solace in a relationship with a boy, made him feel less like an "alien on your own planet."

A world of books followed. Brent read his way through Tom Dolby, Robin Reardon, Julie Ann Peters and David Levithan. He soon realized there were lots of coming out stories but he also craved romance, fantasy and paranormal books with characters who just happened to be gay, like Damien in the "House of Night" vampire series he loves by the mother-daughter team P.C. and Kristin Cast.

"I see the characters trickling into the mainstream genres. I really like that," Brent said. "It makes being gay feel natural, which it is, of course. Books give you hope."

Read the full article here.

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Replies to This Discussion

Another good book is How Beautiful the Ordinary. It's a collection of different mediums, comics to poems to short stories, and it looks at LGBT in a variety of ways. I think everyone should read it. Also, the author of the wonderful The Bronze Age comics Eric Shanower does a comic.

Also, another good one is The Less-Dead. Gay boys are being killed in Austen, TX. Little does the main character know that his new friend is gay, until his new friend is a target when the killer is leaving clues.

Hero by Perry Moore (producer of the Narnia movies) is a great superhero novel where the lead character is gay. Its characters are fleshed out, complex, and likable, except for the famous superheroes. Moore takes superheroes like Wonder Woman and Superman and draws them out into comedic allusions. The book is not only mainstream, but it's about coming to acceptance and being comfortable with who you are.

Black and White by Jackie Kessler and Caitlin Kittridge is another superhero book, but there's a gay supporting character. I love this book too. It's a different take on the superhero genre.
Sean, thank you for the addl. suggestions!

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