1. Since all of you are reading different books, the idea is to share the many reads students can
experience from reading YA literature. For each list you, will get
reviews on approximately 20 or more books.
2. What must be included in your posts are:
a. A short summary
b. A connection to YA Lit criteria
c. A link to a resource for further information about the book/novel(
these may include author information, reviews, insight or information
about issues the text references.
d. Your opinion/recommendations of the book/novel relating back to
criteria. A key
question to consider is whether the book is
classroom appropriate, and, if so, what reading
level/grade/students would benefit from reading the text. If it is not
suited for the classroom, if students are reading the book, what is the
appeal?
3. Lastly, you must respond to at least 2 other posts in detail.
Tags:
I just had a student review Twilight and suggest that it,too, promoted suicide and was a problem...which we know, but it was the hot book series for the last few years. We are now into Hunger Games, which is violent...
As educators, we need to know how to work with those ideas in a positive way.
I think that's really interesting. I actually think that Twilight is a book that promotes abusive relationships. If you analyze the relationship that Bella and Edward have, it's really sick. The suicide issue is one I hadn't noticed before, but it makes the saga even more disturbing.
Leviathan by Scott Westerfeld
Summary:
Set in an alternate history at the cusp of World War I, Leviathan is a tale of Austro-Hungarians and Germans have their steam-driven iron machines loaded with guns and ammunition, otherwise known as Clankers. The British Darwinists rely on genetically engineered animals as their weaponry, including the Leviathan, a whale airship and the British fleet’s most powerful air-beast. The orphaned prince of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Aleksander Ferdinand, is on the run from political enemies who seek to destroy him before he can ascend the throne. He flees his own country with a small group of loyal men, dodging the Austrian and German patrols hunting them. Meanwhile, a Scottish girl named Deryn Sharp has dreams of joining the British Air Force--a dream that cannot be fulfilled simply because she is female. However, she disguises herself as a boy and joins the Academy, becoming a brilliant (for lack of a better word) airman. The paths of Deryn (or Dylan, as she renames herself) and Aleksander cross in an unlikely encounter and they soon find themselves aboard the Leviathan on a wild adventure around a world at the brink of war.
Connection to YA Criteria:
Both Alek and Deryn have had their parents literally removed, leaving them to fight their own battles. Alek is left alone with a dangerous title that he must conceal in order to survive, while Deryn completely switches genders to keep her dream alive. Being left without parents and having to manage hidden identities is an extreme scenario, but this is a fantasy novel. Nonetheless, the characters can still be praised for taking control of their lives and accomplishing their goals in spite of the war that is brewing right in front of them.
Links:
Book trailers are always so interesting to me. Here’s one for Leviathan
Recommendation:
This is the first book I’ve read in the steampunk genre, and I have to say that it was pretty cool. I’m not a big history buff, but Westerfeld’s alternate history was a really interesting twist on social studies class, with pretty pictures too. The characters are young, but are taking control over their own futures. I would recommend this book for anyone who is a history, science fiction, and/or fantasy novel fan and who has the attention span to last through the 400+ pages. It might not be such a great read for elementary school readers, but it is definitely engaging for older readers (high school or even early college students) looking to get lost in alternative history. I’m all for twisting the classics.
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