Showing posts with label high school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label high school. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Parrotfish by Ellen Wittlinger

(image via goodreads.com)


Citation
Wittlinger, Ellen. Parrotfish. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2007. Print.

Awards
  •       Finalist, Lambda Literary Awards, 2008
  •       NYPL Books for the Teen Age list, 2008
  •       Nominated: ALA Stonewall Awards, 2008
  •       Advocate Top Picks for Trans YA Fiction
  •       ALA Rainbow List, 2008
  •        Nominated: Cybils, 2007

Annotation

Grady, a high school junior, begins to live his life openly as a transgender boy, and deals with the response of his friends, family, and community.

Booktalk
What does it mean to be a transgender teen? To go through puberty and feel like your body is changing, but not in the way you had hoped? To have to explain to everyone else what it means to be transgender when you are figuring it out yourself?


Grady has cut his hair, has a wardrobe of boy's clothes from the thrift store, and has been binding his chest with Ace bandages. Now he's ready to take the next step - asking his friends, family, and school to stop thinking of him as Angela and start calling him Grady. While his dad has no issue with the change, not everyone takes the news as well. His principal thinks it's a phase and won't change his records, his mom is avoiding him, and his best friend and her new mean girl clique are openly calling him a pervert and trying to make his life hell. 


Despite the obstacles, Grady is feeling good about his decision to be himself. What does the future hold for Grady?




*Be sure to check out the back of the book for transgender resources.

(video by pritchwitt at youtube.com)



Teen Perspective
“[It’s my favorite book] because I don't think there are enough books about transgendered people in circulation.” – Liam, 17.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Annie on My Mind by Nancy Garden

(image via goodreads.com)

Citation
Garden, Nancy. Annie on My Mind. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1982. Print.

Awards
  •         1982 Booklist Reviewers' choice
  •      1982 ALA Best Books
  •         Best Books of the 1980s
  •         ALA Best Books for YAs for past 25 Years, 1994
  •         One of the Best of the Best Books for YAs of the last 4 decades of the 20th Century, ALA, 2000
  •         Won Mock Printz Award for 1982 in contest held at ALA Midwinter in 2002


Annotation
Two high school girls in New York City, Annie Kenyon and Liza Winthrop, find that their friendship is blossoming into a new, sweet love.

Booktalk
Liza Winthrop found Annie Kenyon in the middle of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, singing a song to herself. They find themselves in a spirited jousting battle, dueling their way through the knights in the Hall of Arms and Armor. After that, they are inseparable friends. Soon they realize their friendship has become something more.

“Annie turned around and looked at me and the sadness in her eyes made me want to put my arms around her. “I’ll go, Liza,” she said, standing up. “I – I don’t want to hurt you. I don’t think you want this, so I have hurt you and, oh, God, Liza,” she said, touching my face, “I don’t want to, I – like you so much. I told you, you make me feel – real, more real than I’ve ever though I could fee, more alive, you – you’re better than a hundred Californias, but it’s not only that, it’s…”
“Better than all those white birds?” I said around the ache that was in my throat again. “Because you’re better than anything or anyone for me, too, Annie, better than – oh, I don’t know better than what – better than everything – but that’s not what I want to be saying – you – you’re – Annie, I think I love you.”
I heard myself say it as if I were someone else, but the moment the words were out, I knew more than I’d ever known anything that they were true.” (94)

As their relationship blossoms and their love grows, Annie and Liza deal with becoming intimate, whether or not to come out to their families, and their plans for college and beyond. 



Teen Perspective
“[It’s a]well written, sweet love story about realizing who you are.” – Melissa, 17.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Deliver Us From Evie by M.E. Kerr

(image via goodreads.com)

Citation
Kerr, M.E. Deliver Us From Evie. New York: HarperCollins, 1994. Print.

Award
  •        National Council of Teachers of English Best Young Adult Novels of the '90s pick
  •       Best Book Honor award, Michigan Library Association, 1994
  •        Horn Book Fanfare Honor book, 1995
Annotation
Set in 1990s small town Missouri, Deliver Us From Evie tells the story of Evie Burrman and her relationship with the daughter of the most prominent man in town, through the eyes of her younger brother, Parr.

Booktalk
Do you ever feel trapped? Like your responsibilities are holding you in a place you won’t ever be able to leave? Evie Burrman works on her family farm in Duffton, Missouri. She smokes like a chimney and can fix anything. She and her younger brother Parr know that at least one of them will have to stick around after graduation to run the farm. One day, Parr checks the mail to find a postcard to Evie from Patty Duff (daughter of the town-founding Duff family) that says “Here for the weekend with Margaret Leighton.…Wish you were her.” Parr wants his sister to be happy, and doesn’t really mind that she’s gay, but if she leaves, he’s trapped. When news of Evie and Patty’s relationship gets out (news travels fast in a small town), Patty’s father does everything he can with his wealth and power to keep the two of them apart. Will Evie (and Parr) make it off the farm and out of Duffton? Can Evie and Patty stay together despite Mr. Duff’s actions?

Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Luna by Julie Anne Peters

(image via goodreads.com)

Citation
Peters, Julie Anne. Luna. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2004. Print.

Awards
  •          2004 National Book Award Finalist in Young People’s Literature
  •          2005 Stonewall Honor Book, awarded by the GLBTQ Round Table of the American Library Association
  •          An American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults 2005
  •          2005 Colorado Book Award for Young Adult Literature
  •          2005 Lambda Literary Award Finalist
  •          2004 Borders Original Voices Award Finalist
  •          Chicago Public Library Best of the Best 2004, Books for Great Teens
  •          Michigan Library Association 2005 Thumbs Up! Award Nominee
  •          Rhode Island Teen Book Award 2006 Nominee
  •          Missouri Gateway Book Award 2006 Nominee
  •          Vermont Green Mountain Book Award 2006 Nominee
  •          New York Public Library Books for the Teen-Age List 2005
  •          2004 Book Sense Summer Reading List for Teens
  •          An ALA Popular Paperbacks for Young Adults


Annotation
A teenage girl helps keep her older brother’s secret – that she is a transgender girl and wants to live her life as the woman she knows herself to be.

Booktalk
Regan just wants a normal life, with a mom who stays home to be a mom, a dad that provides for the family, and a big brother that looks out for her, but that’s not what she gets. Her mom is busy with her new business, popping pills to stay awake or go to sleep. Her dad got laid off from his job and had to take part time work at Home Depot, and can’t deal with not being the breadwinner. He wants his wife and daughter at home cooking and cleaning, and his son playing sports. Meanwhile, her brother Liam regularly wakes Regan up in the middle of the night so that he can put on wigs and makeup and dresses.

That’s when he’s happiest: when he can be Luna, a true expression of the woman she knows she is inside. Regan doesn’t really understand what it means for Liam to be transgender. She knows her brother has always thought of himself as a girl, and Regan wants to support her. Regan is the only one who knows Luna, but that is about to change. Going out shopping, telling the parents, living her truth – nothing is easy when Liam becomes Luna.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Rainbow Boys by Alex Sanchez

(image via goodreads.com)

Citation
Sanchez, Alex. Rainbow Boys. New York: Simon & Shuster, 2001. Print.

Awards
  •            Abraham Lincoln Book Award Master List (IL)
  •           ALA Best Books For Young Adults
  •            Children's Literature Choice List


Annotation
Three high school boys deal with coming out, their senior year of high school, and their plans for the future.

Booktalk
Jason loves his girlfriend Debra, but he can’t get boys off the brain. When he goes to the Rainbow Youth group meeting, he sees Kyle and Nelson from his high school. Great. He knew it was a mistake. Now everyone at school will know he’s – what, exactly? Jason isn’t even sure himself. Kyle couldn’t believe Jason, basketball superstar and his biggest crush, might be into guys. Does he even stand a chance? Nelson isn’t sure why seeing the way Kyle reacted to Jason is making him so emotional. Nelson and Kyle are gay, and they’re best friends, but it’s not like they’re in love with each other. Right?

Jason, Kyle, and Nelson take turns narrating chapters as they go through their senior year of high school, figure out who they are and who they love, and deal with coming out to their families and classmates. What will the future hold for these Rainbow Boys?

(Be sure to check out the back of the book for resources on starting a Gay-Straight Alliance, support lines, and sexual health.)



Teen perspective:
“[The book is] based on 3 teens who are my age, just starting to go to uni, having new life experiences, probably one of the most informative LGBTQ books I've read in the past.” – Sam, 17.

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Boy Meets Boy by David Levithan

(image via goodreads.com)

Citation
Levithan, David. Boy Meets Boy. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2003. Print.

Awards
  •   2003, Lambda Literary Award, Children/Young Adult
  •   ALA Top Ten Best Book for Young Adults
  •   ALA Quick Pick


Annotation
Paul meets Noah, the new boy at his high school, and their initial affection blossoms slowly into love.

Booktalk
Paul is a high school sophomore, and has been out since his kindergarten teacher wrote that he was “definitely gay and has a very good sense of self” on his report card. He has a loving family, and a fantastic group of friends. There’s Joni, his best friend since first grade, Tony, who is living his life despite his Christian parents disapproval, and Infinite Darlene, the sassy star quarterback and homecoming queen. When he meets Noah, a senior, sparks fly. It’s like a movie, how easily they understand each other, and how much they enjoy each other’s company. The record skips a beat when Paul’s ex, Kyle, says hello in the hall after months of silence. What does he want? What does it all mean? Things aren’t always easy when Boy Meets Boy.