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Totally Wired

Archive for the ‘Flashback’ Category


October 29, 2008

Flashback: 'I Capture The Castle' : The Non-Classic YA Classic

Posted by alli

I Capture the Castle.jpgI Capture the Castle isn't a young adult book per se, at least not as we now generally define the genre. Those categories really didn't exist in 1948 when it was written. However, it certainly has all the makings of a great young adult story with the perfect teen-age protagonist. It doesn't have the savvy modern characters or the fast pace of the YA fiction we read today, but what it's lacking in those departments it makes up for in heart and soul. The drama in Cassandra's life is very similar to those in most contemporary YA novels. Dysfunctional family, class, first love and the sheer agony of growing up are the daily challenges she labors over in her journal. Her descriptions of brand-new feelings, thoughts and discoveries are as fresh and new as any modern day storyteller, and that's what makes it so timeless.

Cassandra grows from a playful young girl into a thoughtful, sensible woman over the course an eventful year. Very straight forward is the telling of her families' life in their beautiful but old and dilapidated rented castle in the English country-side. They are growing poorer by the hour to everybody's terror except the man of the house, Cassandra's father. Mortmain, the mad genius, is a seemingly washed-up author whose last great work of literature was published almost a decade ago at the time of Cassandra's memoir. A central theme in the novel is Mortmain's writer's block and his questionable sanity. This weighs on Cassandra as does her sister Rose's unhappiness with their station in life. At one point in I Capture the Castle, Cassandra compares Rose and herself to the Bennett sisters of Pride and Prejudice. And besides the obvious British-isms and the oh-so-proper language, it does read like a Jane Austen novel.

The other central plot is your typical love triangle, but it's more like a square with a triangle inside of it…let me explain. One day at the castle the landlords show up. The Cottons are a wildly rich American family who at first are simply obsessed with Mortmain's celebrity as a writer. Soon though they become intertwined and equally fascinated with the whole family and love triangles, squares, and ovals abound. It's really fun: Rose wants nothing more than to escape their eccentric desperate life so she talks herself into falling for Simon, the wealthy eldest Cotton son, but she never really loves him. While he worships her, she's really falling for Neil, Simon's brother. Simon and Rose get engaged. Stephen, (he's essentially the adopted-super-hot-stable-boy-turned-model/actor…) has always been in love with Cassandra and professes his love over and over to her. She never reciprocates. She can't. She's in love with Simon….. and on and on. There's much more to these relationships than I can describe here, and a few more triangles to boot, but the main thing is how Cassandra processes and navigates in completely new emotional territory.

I think what I love best in I Capture the Castle is Cassandra's voice. I first read it in college and when I picked it up to re-read, I could completely hear her sweet, enthusiastic voice as clear as a bell in the very first line. It had the exact same musical quality I remembered liking so much — so endearing, so refreshing. She is an insanely likable narrator and tells a colorful and rich coming-of-age story. I'm not sure if this Dodie Smith novel is considered as much of a YA classic as her 101 Dalmatians is for children, but after re-reading it as such I think it should be.



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October 6, 2008

Flashback: 'Boy Meets Boy' - An Adorable Teen Love Story

Posted by anastasia

Note from Anastasia Youth Advisory Board member Megan Reid has written a "Flashback" to a book she feels is emblematic of her generation, David Levithan's Boy Meets Boy. In the same spirit of Alli's flashbacks to Gen X classics and Jezebel's "Fine Lines" feature, Megan offers her reflections on what she considers to be a YA classic for Gen Y. A lot of our Youth Advisory Board members want to write book reviews. If you are a publicist and want to send board members books, please email us at youthadvisoryboard at ypulse.com.

Flashback: Boy Meets Boy

Boy Meets BoyBoy Meets Boy by Scholastic PUSH editor David Levithan (who also co-wrote the book version of "Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist") is one of those books I've re-read over and over again. I was so addicted to Boy Meets Boy when I read it as a sophomore in high school that I once checked it out from my town library for three months. The fines wiped out my pathetic 14-year-old savings and prompted several lectures from my mother about responsibility, but it was SO worth it.

I first read Boy Meets Boy after a couple of my friends had just come out, and being gay, or straight, bi or unsure began factor into my consciousness a whole lot more. Obviously, figuring out your sexuality is a big deal for any teenager in real life, but the fantastically accepting world Levithan's characters inhabit lets the characters deal with other teen issues, too, like messing up relationships, controlling relationships and being yourself, which is probably one of the reasons the book won a Lambda award for LGBT literature. As the main character, Paul, says in the first chapter,

"There isn't really a gay scene or a straight scene in our town. They got all mixed up… Most of the straight guys try to sneak into the Queer Beer bar. Boys who love boys flirt with girls who love girls. And whether your heart is strictly ballroom or bluegrass punk, the dance floors are open to whatever you have to offer."

Conflict over sexuality definitely figures into the plot: I don't think it's the focal point of the book, but it makes Boy Meets Boy still feel real, like acceptance to this extent COULD happen somewhere.

Though the fantasy world of general tolerance and hopefulness Levithan depicts was unlike anything I'd ever read, my obsession with Boy Meets Boy admittedly also stemmed from the fact that it's a really adorable teen love story…just one that happens to be between two guys. Happy-go-lucky Paul meets Noah, the new boy in town, while dancing to Gaystafarian music at his local bookstore. (Like I said, it's that kind of town.) He's smitten instantly. One of my favorite scenes is when Noah brings Paul to his house to listen to Chet Baker and paint the music they hear, which in my 14-year-old mind–okay, in my 19-year-old mind, too– seemed like the most perfect, creative, romantic thing date (do real guys ever come up with dates like this?! I'm holding on to hope).

Reviewers called "Boy Meets Boy" "provocative" and "an important gay novel". It is, but even today, reading it just makes me happy.

About Megan (Meg) Reid
Megan ReidMegan is a college student, freelancer and hardcore bookworm. She began writing fashion articles for her hometown newspaper at age 15, and her work has since appeared in publications like Boston magazine, Mountain Living and CosmoGirl. Meg also loves theatre and the arts, and when she's not sending postcards, devouring YA novels, or reading up on 19th-century cultural studies, she's probably dragging someone along on a late-night ice cream/Starbucks run. Meg has lived in three (soon to be four) countries and five states, though she currently resides in Arizona.


September 24, 2008

Flashback: 'Go Ask Alice' - When Books Cheat

Posted by alli

goask.jpgGo Ask Alice is one of those books that is totally up there with Judy Blume's Wifey in my mind. It was forbidden and scary in its treatment of what I perceived to be adult issues: sex and drugs. I remember hearing about it over and over again from the older kids in my neighborhood. What made it more dangerous, of course, was that it was supposed to be the true story of an actual, real-live, average, American girl-next-door. Someone like me.

When I did take it out of the library I remember it was so worn out and ragged I thought to myself, "I'm really in on something. This must be hot." I felt very mature and cool simply having it in my backpack. It was all it promised to be too; an absolutely riveting, terribly tragic story of a girl-gone-bad on drugs. So sad, I thought. And really frightening. The main character (who is never named) ultimately overdoses.

For me this story is about the loss of innocence: MINE! As everyone now knows the whole thing was total bullshit; made up by a Mormon youth counselor who claimed to have "found" the diary. Later she said it was based on diaries of clients similar to that of the main character. Even that claim was ultimately challenged.

Maybe it wasn't the first time I'd been duped (after all, there was Santa Claus) but rereading Go Ask Alice really bummed me out. Knowing it's "false" as Lizzie Skurnick says in her review at 'fine lines', changes how one digests and discusses it. As an adult, it really forced me to address a bigger issue: Was this the first time I was lied to, misled by something I read, subjected to an untruth for the sake of someone else's agenda? No. But it was probably one of my first experiences realizing it.

I started to lose my trust in stuff when I learned that Go Ask Alice was made-up. It was a few years after I had read it, and I'm sure I was already well on my way to being my cynical jaded self, but I do recall being very surprised, confused and disappointed: "What?! They can't do that. You can't just print lies and say it's real, can you? That's not right." (Talk about innocent.)

I didn't read A Million Little Pieces by James Frey, as Skurnick also referenced, but I so wanted to. It was on my list when it hit the news that his tale of addiction was all a big fabrication. A good friend had read it and said she stayed up all night devouring it. She couldn't put it down. It was the best thing she'd read in years…yada, yada, yada. I couldn't wait! Needless to say it lost all its sex-appeal for me when I found out it wasn't true. I was crushed. I was so looking forward to reading a really good book.

Cheated again. This time by something I hadn't even read yet. I don't know which is worse.


August 20, 2008

Flashback: 'The Chocolate War' by Robert Cormier, 'We Don't Need No Education'

Posted by alli

200px-Chocolate_War.jpgI just finished The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier and I have to say I'm very depressed. I remember loving all of Cormier's books but I didn't recall any of the details of the stories at all. On this read, I could really see the true darkness in Cormier's vision.

All of Cormier's books deal with the alienation of the human experience, but The Chocolate War is one of those books that leaves you feeling just hopeless. Man, it's bleak. The Trinity School, the Catholic school our main characters attend, is a vision of adolescent male Darwinism–Cormier's interpretation of Golding's Lord of the Flies. It's devoid of women but not sexuality or primal competition. Of course I'm referring to the "masturbation" scenes which have made The Chocolate War the 3rd most banned book ever by the ALA. But this is hardly the most interesting, or disturbing aspect of the novel.

"Bullying 101" would be a good alternate title for The Chocolate War. And it has all the trappings: The headmaster is ill, leaving the twisted Brother Leon in charge of the students. The "Vigils" (a gang of students) bully the others; and on and on and on. They are cruel and extreme, but only as much as their leader Brother Leon, who emotionally abuses his students in humiliating and unethical ways. Centered around his evangelical enterprising zeal for a fundraising student chocolate drive, the novel exposes the essence of corruption, manipulation and malfeasance, and how it infects every layer of the socio-political strata. As the lead character, Jerry, defines himself through a kind of pacifist refusal to sell the chocolates, the novel pushes deep into territory that is, in truth, more adult in its sophistication. That the scene could explode into a near riot as Jerry is beaten bloody and unconscious exposes the lengths to which this (male) society will go to suppress reason and stifle individualism.

There is only one boy that verbalizes the evil, soul-sucking energy at Trinity– Jerry's friend Goober, and thank God for him. No one else in the book offers any hope for the human race or the ability to choose a different path. Jerry chooses to rebel against selling chocolates, but is violently attacked by ALL of his classmates for it. Goober simply bows out. He stops playing sports, quits the clubs he belongs to, and even stays home from school after participating in a particularly cruel prank on a teacher. We are made to believe that in Cormier's world those are one's only choices: Follow the pack, leave, or die.

Dismal.

I remembered the visceral impact The Chocolate War had on me as a young adult, but like I said, I didn't really remember the story. In the very last pages though it came back to me. (Oh yeaaaaah.) I very vividly recalled the last scene: As all of the students cheer and rejoice in the public beating of Jerry as he is brutally and violently defeated in a fixed boxing match, Brother Leon appears on a hill in the distance. He has been "tipped-off" by one of the students. He watches with joy as Jerry is finally rendered unconscious. As he turns away, satisfied, his image is the last thing Jerry sees.

So dark.


July 25, 2008

Call Of The Wild Reluctant Reader

Posted by alli

Call of the Wild.jpgWhen I was in sixth grade, we followed the Iditerod Race and I thought it was the coolest thing ever. I was so intrigued by how the dogs communicated with each other and how they worked as a team, each with an individual and important role but part of a very complicated hierarchy. I found the whole concept of them loving that grueling hard work fascinating. My teacher explained, "It's in their blood. They live to work. They're the happiest doing what they were born to do." I found that absolutely remarkable…but I don't think I really got it until I read Call of the Wild.

I confess, I never read it as a youngster. It's one of those books you see so often growing up that you think you've read it. You've heard the name Jack London so many times, and you know who he is and what he's about. You've seen the famous black and white, wind-blown portraits of him– you must have read his books, right?

So when I saw the paperback lying on a table at Borders the other day, I thought, "Here I am in Jack London's own San Francisco, literally blocks away from where he was born. Now's the time to finally read Call of the Wild." Seize the day.

And I did.

And I loved it.

The whole time I was reading it, I was thinking about how much fun it will be to read this with my son someday. I can't wait to talk with him about the great white north, the Gold Rush, sled dogs and mushing. I can't wait for him to hear about how beautiful the wild outdoors can be, how different and untouched it was long ago.

I can, however, wait for him to hear about dogs being ripped to shreads by each other and beaten bloody by their adult masters. Ugh. This was a particularly difficult thing to reconcile with the splendor of London's natural world, but I guess that's the point.

Call of the Wild is a book that transcends the outdoor action adventure genre and goes beyond just being a dog book. The main character, Buck, is a dog, but as the narrator of the story, he thinks, feels and behaves like a human, too. This dichotomy is played out for us as he struggles to embrace the essence of his "natural destiny": similar to the concept my teacher had once tried to explain. I love him because he also shows us the range of human nature too, equally brutal and beautiful.

London's great American classic made me think of what Jeff Savage had talked about at our conference last week. In a conversation about reluctant readers, he explained that he thought what boys really wanted was a lot of action, of course, but also honesty. 'Boys don't want things buttered-up or delivered in a watered-down way,' he said. They want the truth and they'll make their own judgements. If that's the case, Call of the Wild could be the original boy-book for the very first reluctant readers.


June 25, 2008

Flashback: Inside 'The Outsiders'

Posted by alli

The Outsiders.jpgLast night I re-read The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton in one sitting and it gave me the chills. I remembered most of the dialog verbatim and revisiting those lines made me really nostalgic. I have read it so many times. I knew and loved each and every character and still feel like they are real people from my past — my childhood.

The iconic The Outsiders was written in 1967 by S. E. Hinton. She was 15 when she started writing it and 18 when it was published. The fact that it was written by a teen was compelling to young readers, but so was the fact that S.E. Hinton was female. I don't remember paying much attention to the author's gender when I read it as a teen, but I remember finding out Hinton wasn't a man later and being shocked. I assumed S.E. Hinton was a man. I'm not sure if I was simply surprised because Ponyboy's voice had seemed so convincing to me (Hinton maintains that he remains the most autobiographical of all of her characters), or because I couldn't believe publishers didn't trust that male readers would read a female author. Either way, I devoured it and so did all of my reader friends — girls and boys. And even though she's long been "outed" as a woman The Outsiders continues to be among the most loved and popular books for youth today.

I remember watching the Francis Ford Coppola movie from the 80's, too. I would sit in my basement-turned-tv-room and watch it over and over again on HBO while developing a new and different crush every time. It's possible that "The Outsiders" was my first "page-to-screen" experience. Sure, I had seen movies like "The Wizard of OZ," but they didn't count because I hadn't actually read the book. I liked the movie because of all the cute boys, but mostly I remember the dialog not quite passing muster. It was like something was lost in translation. In the book, the language was old-fashioned, but somehow it didn't seem to matter. It was still fresh. Still relevant. To be fair, the movie adaptation was very true to the book, but for whatever reason I felt like the actors were trying too hard, forcing something that had originally seemed so natural. That bothered me — immensely.

Even if some of the language is slightly dated (downright clean, by contemporary standards) I think readers respond to The Outsiders so viscerally because Ponyboy's voice is organic and his storytelling honest. S.E. Hinton wrote The Outsiders about similar events a friend had experienced in her hometown of Tulsa. I can't help but wonder if the ability to be so genuine came from simply being a teenager herself. I think a lot about how teens react to writing that is expressly for them but not by them, and this is a great example of a book that works because it is so authentic. Could it be that the best books for teens are by teens? No. But it's something to think about. What if teens were the only writers for teens? What would the YA landscape look like?

The Outsiders symbolized a transition in my reading from tween titles to books with heavier more mature content, characters, and dialog. Before S.E. Hinton, I had been reading the likes of the Anastasia Krupnik books by Lois Duncan, for example. They were great but offered nothing as riveting and as gritty as The Outsiders. Not only was I completely unaware of the level of violence some teens experienced, I hadn't really heard class discussed in a way that made any sense to me. I grew up in an affluent coastal town in Maine where class differences abounded but I never realized how I fit into the puzzle. I hadn't thought much about the reality of class even though I lived with it everyday. Oklahoma in the 60's was completely foreign to me but Ponyboy Curtis seemed to sum up his feelings about the issue in ways to which I related very personally. To me, he was a kindred spirit. He straddled two worlds; living among two classes yet never really feeling completely at home in either one.

Beyond socio-ecomomics, isn't "fitting-in" the bane of all teenage existence–the very definition of the universal adolescent experience? Ponyboy and his friends repeatedly articulate what it's like to feel trapped by circumstances–unable to move beyond something that's out of your control. That sense of powerlessness is something I think all teens feel at some time or another and one more reason Ponyboy and the story of his gang resonates with readers.


May 16, 2008

Flashback: 'A Wrinkle In Time'

Posted by alli

A Wrinkle In TimeIn light of the posthumous release of Madeline L' Engle's The Joys of Love I decided to revisit her most famous book A Wrinkle in Time. I hadn't read it in years and I must say, it brought back a lot of memories. One in particular was of my friend Jen presenting her book report on the title to our 6th grade class. I vividly remember her describing the principals of the tesseract to our class and thinking "Huh?" I also remember thinking the cover was really cool and how different it was that my friend, a girl, liked science fiction. It's funny what our memory filters out and retains: I also remember her book report on The Wolves of Wolloughby Chase, and ironically, a science report on long and short term memory. I digress.

No joke. A Wrinkle in Time begins with "It was a dark and stormy night." I love it! And so it begins — the tale of a motley crew of children and ex-stars (literally) "tessering" through time and space and fighting the dark forces of evil. Meg Murry, her youngest brother Charles Wallace and their friend Calvin O'Keefe embark on a quest that takes them to distant planets as they search for Meg's missing father, a genius physicist working for the government on a top-secret project. On their journey they discover the truth about good and evil and of course, the power of love.

Madeline L'Engle wrote A Wrinkle in Time after a long cross-country trip with her own family. At the time she was reading about Einstein and his various theories. Her tesseract and the concept of traveling through time and space are based on those principles. (This NPR piece is a fun and informational look at L'Engle's famous time traveling tool through the eyes of a real-live scientist.) Throughout the book L'Engle quotes historic figures that challenged our concepts of reality. A Christian herself, she also quotes the Bible and includes Jesus in a long list of artists, philosophers and scientists who have fought against the dark force of evil. For this reference, among other things, A Wrinkle in Time has been one of the top 100 censored books of all time.

I love reading books from my childhood because I notice so many different things the second time around, and they mean something totally different to me as an adult. Take Meg's mother for example. Her physical beauty is emphasized over and over again and I can't decide if it's simply used to help romanticize her enduring relationship with her missing husband or if it's necessary to make her more lovable in general. After all it's 1962 and she's a woman in the sciences. She's a brilliant microbiologist with a Ph.D — and she's gorgeous too. Phew! God forbid she be plain, or worse ugly like Calvin's toothless mom. In fact, she's so lovely Calvin comments during his first visit to the Murry house. Here's what he says after meeting Dr. Kate Murry:

"Do you know how lucky you are?"

She {Meg} smiled wryly. "Not most of the time."

"A mother like that! A house like this! Gee, your mother's gorgeous! You should see my mother. She had all of her upper teeth out and Pop got her a plate but she won't wear it, and most days she doesn't even comb her hair."

Poor Mrs. O'Keefe. Cut her some slack, she had 11 children!

I liked A Wrinkle in Time when I was in 6th grade, but I have to say I had a hard time getting into it the second time around. I'm not sure why. It's a magical and wonderful book. The characters are earnest and the ideas are very thought provoking. I was aware I was reading a classic, a book at which I was supposed to marvel, but I kept getting distracted. I think I've concluded that it's as simple as this: science fiction and fantasy for tweens and young adults has just gotten more sophisticated and grown-up since 1962. Good and evil are nothing new to today's readers. Strong girls in sci-fi are no longer revolutionary. While there is no doubt that A Wrinkle in Time is legendary, and no one would argue the impact it has had on children's literature, unfortunately, I think it will be slightly disappointing for anyone who has already read Harry Potter.


Flashback: 'A Wrinkle In Time'

Posted by alli

A Wrinkle In TimeIn light of the posthumous release of Madeline L' Engle's The Joys of Love I decided to revisit her most famous book A Wrinkle in Time. I hadn't read it in years and I must say, it brought back a lot of memories. One in particular was of my friend Jen presenting her book report on the title to our 6th grade class. I vividly remember her describing the principals of the tesseract to our class and thinking "Huh?" I also remember thinking the cover was really cool and how different it was that my friend, a girl, liked science fiction. It's funny what our memory filters out and retains: I also remember her book report on The Wolves of Wolloughby Chase, and ironically, a science report on long and short term memory. I digress.

No joke. A Wrinkle in Time begins with "It was a dark and stormy night." I love it! And so it begins — the tale of a motley crew of children and ex-stars (literally) "tessering" through time and space and fighting the dark forces of evil. Meg Murry, her youngest brother Charles Wallace and their friend Calvin O'Keefe embark on a quest that takes them to distant planets as they search for Meg's missing father, a genius physicist working for the government on a top-secret project. On their journey they discover the truth about good and evil and of course, the power of love.

Madeline L'Engle wrote A Wrinkle in Time after a long cross-country trip with her own family. At the time she was reading about Einstein and his various theories. Her tesseract and the concept of traveling through time and space are based on those principles. (This NPR piece is a fun and informational look at L'Engle's famous time traveling tool through the eyes of a real-live scientist.) Throughout the book L'Engle quotes historic figures that challenged our concepts of reality. A Christian herself, she also quotes the Bible and includes Jesus in a long list of artists, philosophers and scientists who have fought against the dark force of evil. For this reference, among other things, A Wrinkle in Time has been one of the top 100 censored books of all time.

I love reading books from my childhood because I notice so many different things the second time around, and they mean something totally different to me as an adult. Take Meg's mother for example. Her physical beauty is emphasized over and over again and I can't decide if it's simply used to help romanticize her enduring relationship with her missing husband or if it's necessary to make her more lovable in general. After all it's 1962 and she's a woman in the sciences. She's a brilliant microbiologist with a Ph.D — and she's gorgeous too. Phew! God forbid she be plain, or worse ugly like Calvin's toothless mom. In fact, she's so lovely Calvin comments during his first visit to the Murry house. Here's what he says after meeting Dr. Kate Murry:

"Do you know how lucky you are?"

She {Meg} smiled wryly. "Not most of the time."

"A mother like that! A house like this! Gee, your mother's gorgeous! You should see my mother. She had all of her upper teeth out and Pop got her a plate but she won't wear it, and most days she doesn't even comb her hair."

Poor Mrs. O'Keefe. Cut her some slack, she had 11 children!

I liked A Wrinkle in Time when I was in 6th grade, but I have to say I had a hard time getting into it the second time around. I'm not sure why. It's a magical and wonderful book. The characters are earnest and the ideas are very thought provoking. I was aware I was reading a classic, a book at which I was supposed to marvel, but I kept getting distracted. I think I've concluded that it's as simple as this: science fiction and fantasy for tweens and young adults has just gotten more sophisticated and grown-up since 1962. Good and evil are nothing new to today's readers. Strong girls in sci-fi are no longer revolutionary. While there is no doubt that A Wrinkle in Time is legendary, and no one would argue the impact it has had on children's literature, unfortunately, I think it will be slightly disappointing for anyone who has already read Harry Potter.


April 9, 2008

Flashback: 'Interview With The Vampire'

Posted by alli

Interview Vampire.jpgRecently browsing at a bookstore, a friend asked me what she should read. I showed her some of my stand-by faves and then picked up Twilight. "People love these," I told her. "They're all the rage." She loves vampire stuff and is new to the YA genre. Perfect. Well, she devoured it and New Moon and was super disappointed when she couldn't get the third. Later, when she asked for other suggestions, I thought about it a while. "Why not start with Anne Rice? I dunno, it might be fun to compare them."

I'd never read Interview With the Vampire but I remember it was huge when I was in high school. It was up there with Clan of the Cave Bear; cult-y, but shopping center-available, yet slightly risque. It was the kind of book that I thought too frivolous for me, but wondered about. I think I was a little scared. Like the paperback of L.Ron Hubbard's Dianetics that was always kicking around my college cafeteria; I didn't want to know.

In light of the vampire craze, and in anticipation of the inevitable onslaught of more on the way, I took my own advice and decided to finally read Interview with the Vampire — begin at the beginning, sort of. Let me say there were many things I liked about it: The fast pace, for one, was exhilerating. To span 200+ years, from the states to Europe and back again, so briskly gave it that really big feeling without the weight and volume so many epics suffer from. Also, I loved the notion of the interviewer, Daniel. I liked his presence and I could feel his titillation as he listened to Louis' ghost story. From the very first pages it had an old-fashioned "twas a dark and stormy night" quality that I found fun. But honestly, at the end of the day, the prude in me was repulsed. There are only so many overtly sexual teachings one can bear–only so many violently detailed descriptions of submission, murder, and the lust for flesh this reader could take.

Of course, it's horror. It's goth. It's supposed to be graphic and vile. It's just doing its job. I appreciate that. In its defense–and my friend agreed–it was ultimately riveting and I could not put it down! I confess, Louis and his story of angst and duplicity as a vampire were totally believable to me and like one of his victims, I surrendered. I'm not saying I enjoyed it, or that I'm interested in reading more of Rice's 'Vampire Chronicles,' but I was enthralled.

As stated in this Observer article, it's clear vampires are back. Actually, some might argue they never went away (ask any "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" fan). The most recent and popular manifestation is the aforementioned Stephenie Meyer series, but there are others and no doubt there will be more. Why? What is it about vampires? The YA vampires of today are watered-down shadows of what they have traditionally been in folklore and in other literary arenas, but their essence lingers in our consciousness. We want them around for some reason. Do they satisfy our need to be scared? Do they represent a repressed human desire to witness the depraved? YA or not, let's not forget vampires suck blood, they live by feeding on others. Vampires are death, the paradox being they can't die.

I did a little research, (just a little) and when I started to think about it, teens' love affair with vampires makes total sense. In ancient times vampires were created in the minds of people to address death. We've been trying to understand death since we've been walking on two feet and the idea of escaping death, cheating death is irresistible to us. The "un-dead" are equally exciting to us. Not yet alive but unable to "cross-over." Ghosts, witches, zombies, and spirits from the "other-side" are part of our intricate relationship with the unknown. While the sympathetic, thoughtful vampire is relatively new to us, the idea of living forever is not. The interesting thing to me is the issue of what price is paid for living eternally and the internal conflict it causes. The modern vampire struggles with this and it sets him apart from the other ghouls in an elegant way.

I think reflective teens get this on some level and are struggling with some of the same existential dilemmas, albeit not eternal life, but the meaning of life in general. The idea of immortality is both exciting and scary for teens. Developmentally, they are right on the cusp of understanding their own humanity in a sophisticated way. I would argue that knowing vampires is one way they work out their understanding of death.

(And perhaps develop a life-long penchant for the forbidden fruit, the archetypal "bad-boy"… Ahhh, but that's another post isn't it.)


Flashback: 'Interview With The Vampire'

Posted by alli

Interview Vampire.jpgRecently browsing at a bookstore, a friend asked me what she should read. I showed her some of my stand-by faves and then picked up Twilight. "People love these," I told her. "They're all the rage." She loves vampire stuff and is new to the YA genre. Perfect. Well, she devoured it and New Moon and was super disappointed when she couldn't get the third. Later, when she asked for other suggestions, I thought about it a while. "Why not start with Anne Rice? I dunno, it might be fun to compare them."

I'd never read Interview With the Vampire but I remember it was huge when I was in high school. It was up there with Clan of the Cave Bear; cult-y, but shopping center-available, yet slightly risque. It was the kind of book that I thought too frivolous for me, but wondered about. I think I was a little scared. Like the paperback of L.Ron Hubbard's Dianetics that was always kicking around my college cafeteria; I didn't want to know.

In light of the vampire craze, and in anticipation of the inevitable onslaught of more on the way, I took my own advice and decided to finally read Interview with the Vampire — begin at the beginning, sort of. Let me say there were many things I liked about it: The fast pace, for one, was exhilerating. To span 200+ years, from the states to Europe and back again, so briskly gave it that really big feeling without the weight and volume so many epics suffer from. Also, I loved the notion of the interviewer, Daniel. I liked his presence and I could feel his titillation as he listened to Louis' ghost story. From the very first pages it had an old-fashioned "twas a dark and stormy night" quality that I found fun. But honestly, at the end of the day, the prude in me was repulsed. There are only so many overtly sexual teachings one can bear–only so many violently detailed descriptions of submission, murder, and the lust for flesh this reader could take.

Of course, it's horror. It's goth. It's supposed to be graphic and vile. It's just doing its job. I appreciate that. In its defense–and my friend agreed–it was ultimately riveting and I could not put it down! I confess, Louis and his story of angst and duplicity as a vampire were totally believable to me and like one of his victims, I surrendered. I'm not saying I enjoyed it, or that I'm interested in reading more of Rice's 'Vampire Chronicles,' but I was enthralled.

As stated in this Observer article, it's clear vampires are back. Actually, some might argue they never went away (ask any "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" fan). The most recent and popular manifestation is the aforementioned Stephenie Meyer series, but there are others and no doubt there will be more. Why? What is it about vampires? The YA vampires of today are watered-down shadows of what they have traditionally been in folklore and in other literary arenas, but their essence lingers in our consciousness. We want them around for some reason. Do they satisfy our need to be scared? Do they represent a repressed human desire to witness the depraved? YA or not, let's not forget vampires suck blood, they live by feeding on others. Vampires are death, the paradox being they can't die.

I did a little research, (just a little) and when I started to think about it, teens' love affair with vampires makes total sense. In ancient times vampires were created in the minds of people to address death. We've been trying to understand death since we've been walking on two feet and the idea of escaping death, cheating death is irresistible to us. The "un-dead" are equally exciting to us. Not yet alive but unable to "cross-over." Ghosts, witches, zombies, and spirits from the "other-side" are part of our intricate relationship with the unknown. While the sympathetic, thoughtful vampire is relatively new to us, the idea of living forever is not. The interesting thing to me is the issue of what price is paid for living eternally and the internal conflict it causes. The modern vampire struggles with this and it sets him apart from the other ghouls in an elegant way.

I think reflective teens get this on some level and are struggling with some of the same existential dilemmas, albeit not eternal life, but the meaning of life in general. The idea of immortality is both exciting and scary for teens. Developmentally, they are right on the cusp of understanding their own humanity in a sophisticated way. I would argue that knowing vampires is one way they work out their understanding of death.

(And perhaps develop a life-long penchant for the forbidden fruit, the archetypal "bad-boy"… Ahhh, but that's another post isn't it.)