![]() ![]() Yet, I want the books to have value, so I try to add a learning component scattered about in the corners of the plot and dialog. ![]() If, in 100 or 200 pages, the protagonist in a book can solve the dark challenges that pervade society, what kind of impression does that leave on young readers who grapple with problems beyond their control? Is there a point at which books go beyond challenging and become oppressive?Īs I think of themes for the books I write, my goal is to supply readers with plenty of action in situations that are challenging, but arms-length from the dregs of real life. That strategy seems reasonable on face value, but is there a line past which we are burdening children with problems that may not have easy solutions? Perhaps we do well to encourage children to read books that encompass these challenges and show how they can be overcome. And so many children face real-life challenges a parent on deployment, a crumbling urban neighborhood, scary schools. And that is a point that troubles me about today’s dystopian reading trends.ĭolphins, of course, are quite sensible, but middle grades girls and boys are sensi tive. ![]() When I’m reading a well crafted book, it works like a soundtrack-a sort of underlying theme while I wend and weave through the day. ![]()
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