Saturday, August 24, 2013

Doppelganger by David Stahler

Doppelganger by David Stahler



To me it seems strange that the last two books seem to be about different topics but have so much in common.  Stahler's Doppelganger, which in German is a double of a living person,  is about a shape-shifter or chameleon who has no name.   A doppelganger will kill a human and take on his or her life form to live as a human. 

So what does this have to do with The Tragedy Paper that I just finished before picking up this novel? Shakespeare.... or even more specific Macbeth.  Both novels tie in the character's story with Shakespeare's tragic hero Macbeth and the choices Macbeth makes.

When the doppelganger takes Chris' life, he thinks living with a real family, going to school, and dating will be like what he sees on television.  He finds out quickly real life and TV shows are not the same.  That is what I keep telling my children and students: the reality shows are not real; producers focus on the drama to keep the audience entertained and wanting more.

Like Emma Donoghue's Room in which Jack is locked in a room for the first five years of his life with books and television, Stahler pulls me in at the beginning when the doppelganger is isolated from everyone in a cabin and reads and watches television to learn about life.  While I am not as emotionally pulled toward the doppelganger as Jack, I do feel for him as he deals with "a crappy place, filled with crappy people."

The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth Laban

The Tragedy Paper by Elizabeth Laban



This reminded me of Jay Asher's 13 Reasons Why

During the senior year at the private Irving School, students have to write the Tragedy Paper, "the Irving School's equivalent of a thesis project."  That is one of the three items on Duncan's mind when he returns to school for his senior year.  He also worries about what room the previous senior assigned him and what "treasure" they left for him. 

Like Asher's 13 Reasons Why, in which Clay listens to Hannah's story on tapes, Duncan listens to Tim's CDs of what happened to him his last semester of his senior year.  Laban keeps alluding to a tragedy throughout the CDs and Duncan's thoughts but readers do not find out what the tragedy is until the end.  As Hannah's tapes help Clay change the way he is around girls, Tim's CDs help Duncan do the same with Daisy. 

I do like Laban's allusion's to various Shakespeare plays and events, but without being familiar with those plays most readers will not understand the significance behind characters'  names and events.  I was just discussing Jane Smiley's Thousand Acres with a co-worker the other day, and I read this novel.  Would that be a coincidence or fate?




Thursday, August 22, 2013

Bad Boy by Dream Jordan

Bad Boy by Dream Jordan


While I think Jennifer Brown's Bitter End is better than Bad Boy, this does have merit.

Katie is in the foster care system in New York. She is about to be adopted, but because of extenuating circumstances, she has to be returned to foster care.  When she volunteers to help with a 4th of July picnic, she meets Percy who takes an interest in her.  They begin dating and he spoils her with expensive gifts and her own cell phone so that he can reach her when necessary.  Percy begins losing his temper with Katie and after he smacks her, she decides to break up with him.

I hate to think of teenagers and women who are in abusive relationships and do not have the friends or resources to get out of it.  Katie is a tough girl, and she has to learn that she does need to open her eyes to the type of friends she wants to be with.  How many of do ignore the bad side of someone because we want to only see the good side.  I like wearing my rose colored glasses, and I am just as guilty of being in an abusive relationship when I was in high school.  Luckily I was never hit, but he did cut me down and verbally abuse me all the time.  I was not mature enough to end the relationship until college and see that I do deserve better.

Do not think you are the only person this has happened to because you are wrong.  And there is help out there for you. 

Thousand Words by Jennifer Brown

Thousand Words by Jennifer Brown

While this is not my favorite Jennifer Brown novel, I do think the content about sexting is relevant.  One of the high school counselors recommended that I read this novel, and when I told her I finished it but I didn't think the actions the school did are realistic, she told me that we should have the resource officer read it to see his viewpoint.

Ashleigh is a junior in high school, and at the end of the school year pool party where alcohol is involved, she is dared to take a naked picture of herself and text it to her boyfriend, Kaleb, so that he will pay more attention to her than his baseball team friends.   (If that is all the guy thinks is important about you, dump him!)  I think if Ashleigh wasn't drunk, she may have not made this poor choice.  Her boyfriend leaves for college in the fall, and when Ashleigh would call him, he would say that he is busy or she would hear girls laughing in the background.  Ashleigh thinks Kaleb is cheating on her and they begin fighting.  They end up breaking up and he text her picture to his contacts who then forward it to their contacts.  Everyone in the school ends up seeing Ashleigh naked, including her father, the superintendent. 

Both Ashleigh and Kaleb are arrested for child pornography, and Brown shows us how Ashleigh deals with the aftermath. 

Both Brown and I grew up in the 1980s without all the technology at our fingertips that the world has today, and I worry about all the girls who act before they think and then their information and pictures are out there for the world to view.  I worry everyday about what my own children post on the Internet that could come back to haunt them in the future. 

Girls think that just because you send that picture to your boyfriend doesn't mean that he won't send it to others where it can be posted on the Internet for anyone to see.  Do you really want men your father's or grandfather's age seeing you like that?