Thursday, March 18, 2010

H.G. Bissinger, Friday Night Lights



Friday Night Lights: A Town, a Team, and a Dream, by H.G. Bissinger, is a title often mentioned by students when lauding must-read books.  Not being much of a football fan--horrors! that's a heretical confession for a teacher at a college-prep school famous for its academics, but also for its pin-up status in the pages of Sports Illustrated--I never did get around to reading it.  But, I finally did, and thus far, my students, as usual, are batting a thousand when it comes to good recommendations.

Mixed sports metaphors aside, Bissinger offers up a reflective, documentary journalism-style examination of one fateful season in the history of the Permian Panthers, a small-town Texan high-school football team.  Bissinger lovingly documents the obsessiveness surrounding the sport  and highlights the dramas on the athletic field and in the locker room.  Yet Friday Night Lights is so much more than a non-fiction book about football and the adolescents who play it; rather, Bissinger reveals the integral role that the sport plays in the life of Odessa, Texas, and how it is inextricably interwoven with the town's socioeconomics, race relations, and educational context.  

Monday, March 8, 2010

Libba Bray, _Going Bovine_



What do you get when you cross Cervantes with The Catcher in the Rye, and toss in the deadly Creutzfeldt-Jakob pathogen, a pink-haired angel in combat boots, a talking yard gnome, physics, a time-traveling Inuit rock band, and kitschy snow globes? In her latest novel, Going Bovine, winner of the Michael L. Printz Award for young adult literature, Libba Bray delivers a hallucinogenic mix of social satire peppered with allusions from literature, mythology, and pop culture. This dark, brilliantly crafted page-turner is, by turns, laugh-out-loud hysterical, sublimely surreal, and poignantly philosophic.

The basic premise:
When alienated 16 year old slacker, Cameron Smith, is diagnosed with mad-cow disease, he and his "Sancho Panza", a hypochondriac, video-gaming dwarf, Gonzo, embark on a wild road trip to find a cure, with stops in Mardi Gras New Orleans, the Church of Everlasting Satisfaction and Snack-n-Bowl, the Ya! Party House in Daytona, and Disney World.  Yet their long, strange journey is a metaphoric one, as well: one of self-examination, discovery, and love.

Don't hurt your happiness.  Borrow this addictive book now.

Friday, March 5, 2010

Sue Monk Kidd, _The Secret Life of Bees_



Several students of mine recommended Sue Monk Kidd's acclaimed first novel, The Secret Life of Bees, to me over the past few years, and as usual, I am glad I took them up on it, for it is truly a taste of honey: a compelling, lovely narrative which marries gorgeous, lyrical language, authorial crafting, symbolism, and substance. In fact, I liked this novel so well that I successfully convinced the Hogwarts English I subdepartment to adopt it as one of our required novels.

Without revealing any spoilers, here's the premise. It is the summer of 1964, South Carolina. Resilient 14 year old loner, Lily Melissa Owens, lives with her abusive father, T. Ray; she is haunted by a traumatic childhood incident which has left her motherless. Shortly after the Civil Rights Act is passed, Lily's nanny, Rosaleen, goes to town to register to vote, taking Lily with her. When Rosaleen spits snuff juice on the shoes of a notorious town racist, however, it sets in motion a dramatic chain of events, which get both in trouble with the law. The two fugitives seek refuge in Tiburon, South Carolina, where Lily hopes to unlock her dead mother's mysterious past. A trio of African-American women take Lily and Rosaleen in, and as the novel unfolds, Lily confronts civil rights issues, discovers love, and comes to terms with her troubled past.