ALAN Picks (June & July 2023)

ALAN Picks: A Variety of Contemporary & Fantasy YA Lit

This monthโ€™s ALAN Picks features reviews of young adult books both fantasy and contemporary that expose topics of LGBTQ+, religion, power, family and identity. The books include The Chandler Legacies by Abdi Nazemian set at an elite boarding school; dystopian horror novel, Hell Followed With Us by Andrew Joseph White; Lesbianaโ€™s Guide to Catholic School by Sonora Reyes about a girl looking to control her own narrative; a fantasy romance with dragons Together We Burn by Isabel Ibaรฑez; a daughter battling perfectionism and family expectations Twice as Perfect by Louisa Onomรฉ; and another teaching perspective on the novel Bitter by Akwaeke Emezi. (Educators looking for more resources on Bitter can check out the March 2023 edition of ALAN Picks.)

ALAN Picks Update: ALAN Picks is now accepting reviews of books published as far back as spring 2020. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions.

โ€“  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.


Teens Find Family Through Writing Group

The Chandler Legacies by Abdi Nazemian

Book Details
Publisher:ย โ€ŽBalzer + Brayย 
Publish Date: February 15, 2022
Page Count: 330
ISBN: 9780063039322ย 
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Set in 1999 at an elite east coast boarding school full of secrets and privilege, the story is told from the perspectives of five very different teenagers from diverse backgrounds who come together after being accepted into โ€œthe circle,โ€ an exclusive writing group at the school. Despite their differences they become an unlikely group of friends and a found family as they learn to support one another through difficult situations including bullying, coming out, past trauma, and assault.ย 

Review:

The Chandler Legacies does an amazing job of telling a story of a found family. It presents a variety of diverse narratives that are interesting and informative to read about. While I do have my personal critiques of the novel, I do believe the overarching theme of the book is well presented. It navigates several heavy topics in a thoughtful manner and does a great job telling the story from the perspectives of the five main characters. There is character growth and lessons learned throughout the story that I think readers can take a lot away from when reading this book.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis

  • Found familyย 
  • Friendship
  • Oppression
  • Privilege
  • Race/racismย 
  • Sexualityย 
  • Coming of age

Teaching Engagement Strategies:

  • Informative readings and discussion of anti-LGBTQ+ laws and cultures in Iran, USA, and other countries
  • Read about the #OwnVoices movement and discuss how the authorโ€™s experience as a gay Iranian-American impacts the writing of a character from the same background.
Formative/Summative Assessments
  • Do one of the assignments with the class that โ€œthe circleโ€ does in the book
  • Personal responses on how one of the challenges the character faces made them think about something they hadnโ€™t before and/or changed their perspective 
  • Have small group discussions about what they think happened in the gap between where the story ends and the epilogue and share with the class

Reviewed by: Anna Klasell, Purdue University Student, West Lafayette, IN


A Trans Teen Tries To Survive The Apocalypse

Hell Followed With Us by Andrew Joseph White

Book Details
Publisher: Peachtree Teen
Publish Date: June 7, 2022
Page Count: 416
ISBN: 1682633241
Genre: YA/ LGBT/ Dystopian/ Apocalyptic/ Horror
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Benji is a sixteen year old trans boy who was raised amongst the fundamentalist religious cult that started the apocalypse by unleashing the flood virus that eradicated most of humanity, turning them into mutated victims. Benji attempts to flee the fundamentalists, after they turn him into a secret bio weapon to destroy the remaining survivors. He joins the ragtag group of teens from the local Acheson LGBTQ+ Center as they attempt to fight the fundamentalists, stay safe from the virus, and endure with their dwindling resources. They accept him with open arms as long as Benji can manage to hide the growing monster inside of him and keep the group safe at all costs.

Review

Hell Followed with Us is the debut novel of Andrew Joseph White and though a work with this much craft and talent is a truly marvelous feat, the signs of it being his first book are present within the text. Certain scenes seem to cut against each other rather than flowing into one another and although tropes are a staple in every writerโ€™s work they seem more pronounced in the text at times. However, despite it being a debut, this work is immensely ambitious with both plot and characters and it pulls through. Apocalyptic religious cults that are trying to destroy the world through the usage of a trans teenager is one of the most creative plots to ever come out of young adult literature. The writing is also well stylized and there are amazing descriptions of action, gore, and this creative world. The world building in this book is so phenomenal as the reader is given sprinkled bits of knowledge and history throughout the plot which makes it feel much more real and immersive. In addition to the immense gore and imagery as well as the intense homophobia and transphobia that Benji and other characters face throughout the novel, these aspects could have been too much for the novel; however it is clear that these characters are treated with love and respect through the writing and that the carnage comes from a place of deep anger about societyโ€™s treatment of people like the characters. Ultimately, this novel makes a great critique of abuse of power and unfair treatment in this fictional world as much as the real world and clearly comes from a place of great passion and heart from the author.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Themes Connections:

  • Sexuality 
  • Gender
  • Religion
  • Power and corruption
  • Survival 
  • Faith
  • Body dysmorphia 
  • Loyalty

Essential Questions:

  • How does organized society perpetuate abuses of power? 
  • When should an individual put themself before a community or vice versa? 
  • How does one form an identity that remains true and authentic for themselves in the world?

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative:

  • Have students create what they think the mutations look like and/or what they think theyโ€™d look like as a mutation. 
  • Personal response journals in relation to the themes of the novel.

Summative:

  • Have each student research and do a report on a specific cult and their effect on its members and society.
    • Some possible examples: the Church of Scientology and its effects on the entertainment industry & QAnon and its effects on United States politics.

Reviewed by: Audrey Pink, student at Purdue University


Queerness, Faith, and reckoning the two for love

Lesbianaโ€™s Guide to Catholic School by Sonora Reyes

Book Details
Publisher: Balzer + Bray, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers
Publish Date: May 17th, 2022
Page Count: 385
ISBN: 978-0-06306023-4
Genre: Fiction
Find on IndieBound

Synopsis: The novel follows Yamilet, a sixteen year old first generation Mexican girl as she and her brother, Cesar, transfer from a low income school to a fancy, expensive Catholic school across town from them after Cesar is granted an academic scholarship. While Yamilet does not receive a scholarship and must pay the tuition herself, she does it to protect Cesar and herself after she is outed as a lesbian by her former friend at their previous school. At Slayton Catholic, Yamilet is determined to keep to herself and stay closeted as a fresh slate, but everything is challenged when she meets an out and proud girl named Bo. Her relationships with family, friends, and God are all at question while Yamilet determines how to best protect and love herself while doing the same for the people around her.

Review

Lesbianaโ€™s Guide is a novel that pairs difficult topics with relatable experiences and loving relationships that make the challenging parts of coming out more manageable. Sonora Reyes does an excellent job at telling a story of family, faith, and queer love in a way that ties them together in joy rather than sadness. The representation and discussion of deportation of a parent, adoption, queerness, microaggressions, and fraught family ties are extremely important and very well done in this novel.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections:

Through Yamilet and the people around her, the novel explores themes such as:

  • LGBTQ+
  • Self acceptance
  • Religion
  • Immigration
  • Suicide
  • Queer Relationships
  • Adoption
  • Familial Identity

Essential Questions

  • How does our faith change how we see ourselves and others?
  • Is self-acceptance easy?

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use:

  • Completing an identity wheel of both Yamilet and themselves
  • Discussing LGBTQ+ representation in the classroom

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative: Students would write journal entries from the perspective of a different character besides Yamilet for the chapter they had finished reading as they progressed through the semester. These journals would help them understand perspective and how Yamilet may be viewed by the people closest to her or those who may be struggling with their own identities.ย 

Summative: After completing the reading, students would create before and afters of Yamiletโ€™s facebook page. The before would be representative of how she was before coming out on her own and how she wanted herself to be viewed versus after she came out. Ten posts would be required for each page and would need to have textual evidence for each post. This project would help students understand how self-acceptance can change how you present yourself to the outside world as well as show an understanding of the novel and how Yamilet and other characters change.

Reviewed by: Lily Scaggs, English Education Student at Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado


Fantasy, Dragons and Romance

Together We Burn by Isabel Ibaรฑez

Book Details
Publisher: Macmillan
Publish Date: May 31, 2022
Page Count: 368
ISBN: 9781250803351
Genre: Fantasy, Young Adult, Romance, Contemporary Fiction
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Eighteen-year-old dancer Zarela Zalvidar is the daughter of the most famous Dragonador in Hispalia and will one day inherit the same arena that her father fights in. However, when he is horribly injured in a disaster, Zarela is forced to take his place as the next Dragonador. She has to keep the Dragon Guild from stealing the arena, her ancestral home, from her and receives no help from the handsome dragon hunter, Arturo Dรญaz de Montserrat. Zarela will have to do everything in her power to protect her birthright, even when thereโ€™s something out to get her family.

Review

Inspired by medieval Spain, this novel is thrilling, action-packed, and will keep readers young and old entertained throughout. Together We Burn is a wonderful and refreshing representation of Spanish culture in a new light and through a new lens. Thematic topics include love, loss, honor, and family duty. These topics make this novel relatable and exciting for high school students (recommended ages 13-18).

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections:

  • Family
  • Love
  • Loss
  • Tragedy
  • Romance
  • Dragons
  • Justice
  • Sacrifice
  • Chasing dreams
  • Family duty

Possible Essential Questions:

  • How far would one go to protect their family?
  • Should one give up their own dream to uplift someone elseโ€™s?
  • When is it necessary to challenge authority? Who decides?

Teaching Strategies/Activities:

  • One major way to incorporate this book into the classroom is to draw connections between real life in medieval Spain and the world within the novel. Students can compare and contrast the two worlds using primary sources or other sources and the novel itself. Compare/contrasting activities could also draw connections between dragon fighting in the book and bullfighting in past and present Spain.

Formative/Summative Assessments:

  • Summative:
    • Essay
      • Students can write an essay discussing sacrifice, dreams, and destiny. Students could discuss what it might take for them to give up their own dream for someone elseโ€™s or what sacrifices they are willing to make for their family, friends, etc.
    • Social Media Profile
      • Students can choose a character and make a social media profile for them, showcasing important moments from the novel, themes, and characterization.
  • Formative:
    • One-pager
      • Students can make a one pager that identifies themes, important concepts, quotes, and give a review of the book.
    • Compare/contrast activity
      • Students can compare and contrast different cultural elements from the book like dragon fighting vs. bullfighting, government structure, etc.

Reviewed by: Hadleigh Pierce, West Lafayette, Indiana


A Young Girl That Feels the Pressure to be the Perfect Daughter

Twice as Perfect by Louisa Onomรฉ

Book Details
Publisher: Feiwel & Friends
Publish Date: July 26, 2022
Page Count: 416
ISBN: 9781250823502
Genre: Young Adult/Fiction
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Adanna Nkwachi is a seventeen year old girl that has her life all planned out. She is good at school and her Nigerian parents have high expectations for her. She plans on going to law school after college. Her older brother had a fight a few years prior and he left. He was set to be an engineer, but now he is a poet. Adanna reconnects with her older brother and starts questioning if she really wants to be a lawyer or if she is just trying to make her parents happy.ย  While Adanna questions her life she helps plan her cousinโ€™s wedding to a Nigerian rapper. Adanna never really understood why her brother left, but her answers will soon be answered.

Review

This book is a cute story about identity and finding out who you are. It does an excellent job of telling a story about what life is like for kids with parents who immigrated to the US. Seeing Nigerian culture through Adannaโ€™s cousinโ€™s wedding was cool to see. It is nice to read a story and learn about other traditions. There is a little bit of a love interest, but it doesn’t take away from the plot.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

This book has several themes and topics within it:

  • Family
  • Self identity
  • Authenticity
  • Parental pressure
  • Happiness

Essential Questions:

  • Should parents have such high expectations for their kids that the kids sacrifice their happiness?
  • Why do parents have such high expectations for their kids?
  • How much influence should parents have on their kidsโ€™ careers?

Teaching Activities and Activities to Use:

  • Discussion about expectations from parents and families
  • Discussion about dream jobs and a happy future
  • An overview of immigration and questions students may have

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative: After every chapter write a reflection in notebooks. Ask questions, write down important info you learned and quotes you liked. Then meet with a book group and discuss your questions and share your favorite scenes.

Summative: Take a character test, the test will have questions about characters and certain scenes. This test will show who actually read and who didn’t. This will also make sure that students are paying attention while they read. It will also encourage students to read because they know they will have a test.

Reviewed by: Lily Ortega


Reflecting on Emotional Responses to Trauma

Bitter by Akwaeke Emezi

Book Details
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint or Random House Childrenโ€™s Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC
Publish Date: February 15, 2022
Page Count: 207
ISBN: 9780593309032
Genre: YA Literature
Find on Bookshop


Synopsis: From Akwaeke Emeziโ€™s Pet comes the prologue story of the town of Lucille, set in a dystopian society. Bitter follows the tale of a young, artistic, and fiery teenage girl living in a community of disarray and protest. Fighting against the hatred and evil in the community, Bitter and her friends discover the key to stopping the bloodshed and violence, a creature known as an โ€œangelโ€, created through Bitter’s gift of art with the sole purpose of creating harmony in Lucille. Together with the students in her boarding school and protesters known as Assata, Bitter fights against the monsters in her town as she slowly reconstructs her ideas of passion, hope, and community. It is in their determination and sacrifice that the young adults of Lucille find what it means to change their reality for a better future.ย ย ย ย ย ย 

Review

Akwaeke Emeziโ€™s multifaceted novel allows readers the opportunity to empathize with the main character, Bitter, in her internal battle grappling with identifying her role in the movement. A powerful novel that portrays the necessity of diverse responsibilities within revolutions, while also prompting readers to evaluate the incorporation of strong support networks and self-care into major endeavors. Both urgent and timely, Emezi infuses her novel with compelling themes pertaining to radical inclusion, proving to be pertinent in shaping our next generation of citizens.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections:

Thematic Topics Explored in the Novel:

  • Right vs. Wrong 
  • Power of Friendship 
  • How Fear Incites Change 
  • Hope vs. Action
  • Corruption in Communities

Essential Questions:

  • How can we evaluate our morals as we develop as individuals?
  • When we feel helpless, what emotions do we turn to? How can we better explain the reasoning behind these emotions?
  • How can we solve the โ€œmonstersโ€ in our own world? What types of people do we typically consider โ€œmonstersโ€? 
  • Would you categorize Bitter as a stagnant or dynamic character? Why?

Teaching Activities and Activities:

As students make their way through the novel, they should use a color to describe the mood of each chapter. Some may feel lonely, angry, or hopeful. Have students keep track of each corresponding color and at the end, they can create a picture using only the colors they chose from each chapter. This can be of Bitter herself, a Monster, or a scene in Lucille they have imagined. This sparks creativity while also recognizing emotional responses to the storyline.

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative:

Teachers can create a chart depicting each character and their inner thoughts, emotional response, and outward action for the events of the novel. This would give students the opportunity to depict the difference in how we respond to trauma and obstacles as individuals as well as how we can properly pinpoint emotions evoked by these events.

CharacterEventInner ThoughtEmotional ResponseOutward Action
Bitter
Aloe
Blessing
Eddie

Summative:

After students complete the chart, teachers can hand out questions to further engage:

  • How does this chart show the overall tone of the novel?
  • How can we use each charactersโ€™ feelings to describe the ways in which a particular environment or social climate can alter ways of thinking and feeling? 
  • Based on a current issue, discuss your particular role within that issue and your feelings regarding it. How do your inner thoughts translate to your emotions and outward actions?  

Reviewed by: Maggie Doran and Elise Lubs, Students, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

Summer Reading Recommendations and Curriculum Ideas

Summer Reading Recommendations and Curriculum Ideas

Check out ALAN Picks for Summer Reading Recommendations and Curriculum Ideas!

Looking to infuse your curriculum with some fresh new diverse YA Lit energy? Need some good book recommendations to review for your courses next year? Check out the ALAN Picks column for ideas on how to use Young Adult and Middle Grade literature with students. In the first half of 2023, ALAN Picks has featured books that touch on topics such as: 

Also, stay tuned for the June ALAN Picks column coming in mid-June!

ALAN Picks (May 2023)

ALAN Picks: Two Retellings and a Basketball

This monthโ€™s ALAN Picks features reviews of a mix of young adult and middle grade books that explore the topics of the power of voice, family & friendship and identity. The young adult books include: fantasy retelling Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim and contemporary sports-centered novel Wrong Side of the Court by H.N. Khan. The middle grade book is: the modern retelling The Secret Garden on 81st Street by Ivy Noelle Weir. Check out these reviews for ideas on how to engage students with these books and topics in the classroom.ย 

ALAN Picks Update: ALAN Picks is now accepting reviews of books published as far back as spring 2020. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions.

โ€“  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.


A Retelling of the Hans Christian Andersen story โ€œThe Wild Swansโ€ Combined With East Asian Folklore

Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim

Book Details
Publisher: Ember
Publish Date: July 26, 2022
Page Count: 480 pages
ISBN: 9780593300947
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: When Princess Shioriโ€™anma is on her way to her betrothal ceremony, she meets a dragon who changes the course of her destiny forever. Shiori soon discovers not only her own magical powersโ€” something that is strictly forbidden in her fatherโ€™s land of Kiataโ€” but also discovers the dark magic that runs through her stepmotherโ€™s veins. Upon her discovery, her stepmother curses Shiori and her brothers. Her brothers are fated to change into cranes by day, but retain their human form at night. Shiori, on the other hand, is forced to conceal her appearance and never speak a word, for a single word could cost her the life of one of her brothers. Alone in a foreign land with magic she has yet to understand, Shiori teams up with her betrothed to take down her stepmother. Along the way, she discovers a far deeper plot that involves not just her own fate, but the fate of Kiata as a whole.

Review:

Six Crimson Cranes by Elizabeth Lim starts out slow, with much of the first quarter of the novel establishing the lore of Kiata and allowing Shiori to discover the power she harnesses. After her discovery of her stepmotherโ€™s secret, the novel really starts to pick up. Lim takes the audience with Shiori throughout Kiata, and the visual descriptions the author provides makes the audience feel as if they are with Shiori the entire time. While the characters of Shioriโ€™s brothers were not as well developed, the development of Shiori and her betrothed, Takkan were quite interesting, as the two are quite different but somehow seem perfectly matched. While the examination into Asian culture is richly blended with fantasy elements that create such an interesting world that keeps the audience entranced, the specificity of which culture in Asia is never explicitly described. The complexity of the main villain of the story is thought-provoking and is an interesting look at the dynamic ways that women are treated within this society. A possible criticism could be the cliffhanger/lack of ending within the last chapter. While the novel leaves the audience with a cliffhanger, this book could have easily been a stand-alone novel.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis
Themes of the importance of family and sacrifice are highlighted throughout the novel, but some other themes Lim explores are:

  • Womenโ€™s Roles in Society
  • The Power of a Voice
  • Self Discovery and Acceptance
  • The Act of Growing Up
  • Dealing with Trauma and Loss
  • The Influence of Family
  • Celebration of All Creatures

Essential Questions

  • How can the act of growing up affect a person mentally and emotionally?
  • How can family provide support? How can they be an impediment?
  • How can one find their voice when society takes it away from them?
  • How can modern science fiction/fantasy portray more diversity?

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use:

  • Background of Hans Christian Andersenโ€™s The Wild Swans and the connection between the themes of that text and Six Crimson Cranes.
  • Discuss the genre of fantasy and the formula the Six Crimson Cranes does/does not follow. 
  • Discuss the importance of representation in fantasy and how some groups are underrepresented. 

This lesson from TeachingBooks.net examines the ways in which cultural representation is explored in the text and how that representation can be reflected onto modern society.

Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Students can make connections between different locations Shiori visits that follow the development of her character. Students can provide an analysis of the growth Shiori experiences over the course of the novel. Further reflection and analysis can occur by incorporating the writing of journal reflections at the beginning of class that can then lead into a discussion, or mini-group projects that the students do together to find excerpts from the text that show examples of growth.

Summative: A summative assessment for students after reading this text could be a presentation on how this text compares or differs from another fantasy novel. Possible points of discussion that should be included are the roles of race, gender, family dynamics, character development (as was discussed during the reading of the text), and overall plot shape that are similar/different from Six Crimson Cranes. This project would require students to take excerpts from one other YA fantasy novel to compare to Limโ€™s Six Crimson Cranes.

Review by: Caitlin Leonard, senior at Colorado State University, English Creative Writing undergraduate, Fort Collins, Colorado.


A Modern Retelling of the Classic Story

The Secret Garden on 81st Street by Ivy Noelle Weir Illustrated by Amber Padilla

Book Details
Publisher: Hachette Book Group
Publish Date: September 2021
Page Count: 247
ISBN: 978-0-316-45970-9
Genre: Graphic Novel, Fiction, Retelling
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis:

Young Mary Lennox had never had a close relationship with anything in her life, but that all changes when her parents die in a tragic accident and she is whisked away from her Silicon Valley home and all is technological luxuries to live with her mysterious uncle in his modern day low-tech New York City home. A very different setting than the original story, The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett , that takes place in 1900โ€™s England. 

At first it seems that she is still without a close relationship to anyone in the world, but all that soon changes when she discovers a key that leads her to the secret rooftop garden of her uncleโ€™s late husband. Now, with the help of her new friend Dickon and her reclusive cousin Collin, Mary takes on the incredible task of bringing the garden back to life, while also bringing her family and herself back to life in ways she could never imagine. 

Review

A very fun retelling of the classic story The Secret Garden on 81st Street stays true to the original story while also adding more representation, such as anxiety, same sex and inter-racial couples, and featuring a young Black girl as the main character. This is a great story to teach to children who may be off-put by the age of the original story and for students who may need to see more of themselves represented in literature. The modern day city setting will also make it easier for modern children to connect to the story as they will be able to see things that they recognize within the pages. The beautiful artwork and well done story helps to keep the story fun and light while also informing kids of different real world issues.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis:
Educators may wish to use this text as an alternative to teaching the classic as it stays true to the original story, but with a modern twist added. The story can offer students an age appropriate insight to grief, anxiety, and hardwork. Some of the thematic topics included within the text include:ย 

  • Coming of age
  • Life and death
  • Family
  • Change vs Tradition
  • Friendship 
  • The power of words
  • The power of actions

Essential Questions:ย 

  • How can we help our friends when they are having a hard time?
  • How can our actions affect the moods of others? 
  • Does everyone experience everything in the same way?

Teaching strategies and activities to use:ย 

  • An overview of the original story and a side-by-side comparison
  • Discussion on the power of emotions and how it relates to the novel
    • Ex. How we see characters like Mary, Colin, and Uncle Archie deal with their complicated emotions in the text and what it teaches us about our own emotions in the real world. 
  • Reflect on the hard work and the payoff
    • Ex. Look at the many phases of Mary, Dickon, and Colin rebuilding the secret garden. All the research that went into recreating the garden, all the times Mary was so discouraged she almost gave up, and the period of time when all they could do was be patient. Then look at the payoff that came from all the hard work, a beautiful rooftop garden, Colin feeling reconnected with his dad, Uncle Archie feeling reconnected to his late husband, and Mary finally making a connection with her Uncle Archie and making the first true friends of her life.ย 
Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Once the lesson/reading of the book for the day has wrapped up the teacher will pass out mini whiteboards and markers to the students and have them draw or write what they understand about the reading on the whiteboard. This is a low stakes non-graded activity that will allow kids some time to creatively show what they understand. While students are doing this the teacher should walk amongst the room and chat individually with students about what they do and do not understand about the story. 

Summative: Once the class has finished the novel the teacher will introduce a group project assignment. Students will gather in groups of 2-3 and create their own short graphic novel strip focusing on hard work, as seen in the novel, or focusing on helping someone with hard emotions, as also seen in the novel. 

Review by: Brooke Miller


A Young Pakistani overcoming trials and tribulations for his dreams of the NBA.

Wrong Side of the Court by H.N. Khan

Book Details
Publisher: Penguin Teen Canada
Publish Date: March 15, 2022
Page Count: 312
ISBN: 9780735270879
Genre: Young Adult fiction, Sports fiction
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: The story revolves around Fawad Chaudhry, a fifteen-year-old Pakistani American. He lives in Regent Park, a low income community. He dreams to be the first Pakistani player in the NBA and luckily he has a great set of friends that root him on. However, he is under constant stress from his mother wanting an arranged marriage with his cousin, his neighborhood bully, Omar, and the vicious, violent cycle that resides in Regent Park. Fawad overcomes each obstacle with his chin up as her pursues his dream of professional basketball.

Review

This story of Fawad and his struggles to become not only a better basketball player, but to be a better person for his family and friends, is nothing short of charming and inspiring. Themes of forgiveness, revenge, and loyalty resound throughout the book. Fawad is young and uncensored in his thoughts and he is always striving to protect his friends and family. Unlike other stories about immigrant families, Fawad doesnโ€™t deal with racism at all in this novel. In fact, his community is compared to the United Nations with how much culture and language is spread throughout, whether that be Vietnamese, Chinese, or Bangladeshi. Regent Park is not only multinational, but holds the ties of Fawadโ€™s friends through their beliefs, holding prayer and lessons together. The story is focused around Fawadโ€™s heart, how much he persists despite being answered with violence. His understanding that revenge is how violence perpetuates, keeps him anchored to his passion and his family. Though, he will defend his friends to the bitter end if provoked. The story is sprinkled with romance as Fawad falls in love with a girl from the richer side of town. As a Korean American, who watched basketball growing up, I have an understanding of Fawadโ€™s dream. In basketball and even just mainstream sports, Asian Americans can only really look up to Jeremy Lin. Thereโ€™s just an abysmal amount of representation there, and it makes Fawadโ€™s dream and surely millions of other kidsโ€™ dreams feel unachievable. Itโ€™s especially difficult for Fawad because of such an abrasive situation in his neighborhood. Nonetheless, Fawad ambition never fails him despite the tragedy that falls on his shoulders, whether it be his family or his friends. Despite not personally knowing a lot of the vernacular or young slang in the book, I believe readers of all ages can find Fawadโ€™s resolution gratifying and encouraging.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections

  • Identity
  • Family/relationships
  • Grief
  • Forgiveness
  • Poverty
  • Violence

Essential Questions

  • How do you overcome labels given to you by society and/or family?ย 
  • How do the themes of violence, vengeance and dreaming engage with each other?

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use

  • An overview of different practices of Muslims such as prayer, fasting, and calligraphy
  • Pair with texts that address racism, Islamophobia, especially in wealthy communities
  • Discussion and research the impact of single parent families in low income communities/how that affects children growing up.
Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Students should keep a reading journal to document the events that take place in the story. Each chapter should have a paragraph, describing what took place and how that could affect our main characterโ€™s attitude and perception or even how the student feels if those events took place in their shoes. The journals should be discussed with the class after every few chapters to obtain a larger perspective.

Summative: Students should be split into groups and tackle one of Fawadโ€™s relationships in the story, whether that be his mother, his sister, his girlfriend, his friends, or his coach. Each group will analyze their relationship and how it evolves from the beginning to end. The groups should also take note of how each character changed or didnโ€™t change. Students should use textual evidence from the book and cite their journals from the formative assessment for certain events that took place in the story.

Review by: David Lee, junior at Colorado State University, majoring in Graphic Design and a minor in English, Fort Collins, Colorado.

ALAN Picks (April 2023)

ALAN Picks: Mysteries Around Every Corner

This monthโ€™s ALAN Picks highlights the mystery genre with five books representing both middle grade and young adult. They include: a middle grade historical mystery, Ripped Away by Shirley Reva Vernick; three contemporary young adults mysteries The Black Girls Left Standing by Juliana Goodman, Horror Hotel by Victoria Fulton and Faith McClaren, and We Werenโ€™t Looking to Be Found by Stephanie Kuehn; and one fantasy young adult mystery Gallant by V.E. Schwab. These books address topics such as police brutality, mental health, disability, grief, and friendship. Check out these reviews for ideas on how to engage students with these books and topics in the classroom. You might even find an opportunity to pair two or more titles from this list for a comparison study!

ALAN Picks Update: ALAN Picks is now accepting reviews of books published as far back as spring 2020. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions.

โ€“  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.


Navigating Grief and Violence

The Black Girls Left Standing by Juliana Goodman

Book Details
Publisher: Feiwel & Friends
Publish Date: June 28, 2022
Page Count: 336 pages
ISBN: 9781250792815
Genre: Young Adult/Mystery/Contemporary
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Beau Willet, sixteen-year-old art student in the Chicago Projects, is looking for her older sisterโ€™s missing boyfriend Jordan. After Katia, Beauโ€™s sister, gets shot and killed by a police officer with the wrong idea, Jordan is the only person who knows what really happened the night Katia died. As Beau tries to navigate her grief and heartbreak over losing her beloved sister, she starts to discover how to grow up without that role model she once had by starting a relationship with a boy named Champion. With new discoveries of Jordanโ€™s life, Beau wonders if Katia knew about all the terrible things Jordan was involved in and starts to doubt if she even knew her sister anymore. The more danger Beau gets in, the more her relationship with Champion, her family, and her friends struggle.

Review:

This book really understands the grief and overwhelming anger that someone in Beauโ€™s position can face. In light of the Black Lives Matter Movement, this book is an inspiration to recognizing the fears and traumas that Black lives face coming from not only just police officers, but society as well. Readers will enjoy the authorโ€™s use of flashbacks to provide the reader some context into the relationship that Beau had with Katia and how her absence is affecting her. This book will be a page-turner with the mysteries, relationships, and drama that occurs throughout the story. 

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

The themes in this novel are suitable for both young readers as well as adult readers. This book also deals with heavy topics, so instructors should make their students aware of trigger warnings before reading.

  • Dealing with grief
  • Friendship
  • Coming of age
  • Identity
  • Altered relationships
  • Empowerment
  • Revenge
  • Police brutality

Essential Questions

  • How do we deal with grief?
  • How do we discover our own identities?
  • How might we deal with strained parental/friend relationships?

Suggested Teaching Strategies/Activities to Use:

  • An overview and/or class discussion of police brutality and its effects, specifically on people of color.
  • Write a letter to any character in the book. Students must be understanding of the characterโ€™s situation and are free to express emotions, frustrations, compliments, and advice to the characters through these letters.
  • Make a playlist of at least 10 songs that match scenes in the book. Students will also provide an explanation for each song of why it matches the story.
Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Students will have a journal dedicated to their reading throughout the book. They will provide a comprehensive understanding for each chapter with a summary of what occurred, the themes, and how they may feel about the story so far. Students are free to write about whatever they may choose in these writings, as long as itโ€™s limited to their most previously read chapter and demonstrates understanding of the plot.

Summative: Students can design a creative poster that conveys things theyโ€™ve learned about the book or through the book (examples to include are: racial literacy connections, drawings, reviews, and quotes). The goal for this poster is to prove understanding of the story while allowing them to have time to express their creativity. The guidelines are limited in order for the student to freely express their ideas through creation of this poster.

Reviewed by: Chloe Honn, Junior at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.


Disability, Magic & Fantastical Worlds

Gallant by V.E. Schwab

Book Details
Publisher: Titan Books
Publish Date: March 8, 2022
Page Count: 352
ISBN: 1785658697, 9781785658693
Genre: Fantasy/ Young Adult
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Fourteen-year-old Olivia Prior has grown up mute in an orphanage reading the remnants of her late motherโ€™s inky, ambiguous journal while purposefully not acknowledging the ghouls in the shadows. One day, she receives a letter from her uncle calling her to live with the Prior family in Gallant, an estate her motherโ€™s journal unambiguously warns to stay away from. When Olivia arrives at Gallant, she discovers the place mostly empty and her uncle, who supposedly sent the letter, long dead. She remains at the estate under the conditions that she not go out at night and that she not go on the other side of the garden wall, from which a dark and magical world beckons. 

Review

Gallant is a creepily magical story with a wonderfully frustrated yet powerful protagonist. Readers can find themselves relating to or sympathizing with Oliviaโ€™s struggle to communicate in a society that refuses to learn her language or has the aggravating tendency to take away her opportunity to convey her thoughts. Schwabโ€™s writing in Gallant is gripping and ominous and does well to convey a unique system of magic and parallel universes. The plot progression is interesting yet not overly complicated in favor of middle grade or young adult audiences.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Themes Connections:

  • Disability in fantasy 
  • Familial duty
  • Family and found-family relationships
  • Belonging

Possible Essential Questions:

  • How does the feeling of belonging affect identity? 
  • What does it mean to communicate? What are the obstacles to communication Olivia faces, and what effect do these hindrances have on a person and on society? 

Possible Teaching Strategies and Activities:

Regarding the technical abilities of the novel, Schwab does well to create a gothic and ominous magic system. Students can learn about tone and figurative language by being tasked to pick out specific sentences that describe the gothic objects like ghouls or the world on the other side of the wall and analyze which diction or rhetorical devices lend to the overall tone of the novel and why. For example, students can pick this passage: โ€œI slept in your ashes last night. It was like you laid your shadow down before you left. It smelled like hearth smoke and winter air.โ€ Then, students can write about how grim imagery like sleeping in ashes interacts with the whimsical smells of โ€œhearth smoke and winter.โ€ 

To cultivate the cultural awareness of disability in fantasy, students can be involved in critical disability discussion relating to Oliviaโ€™s mutism. Students can engage in a socratic-like discussion of how Olivia interacts with the abled society around her and compare the text to the society of the real world to form any possible critiques of the novel and of real society. 

Formative and Summative Assessment Suggestions:

Formative: While reading, students can be tasked with creating comprehensive and thoughtful annotations of the text. In the annotations, the students are asked to take note of characterization, rhetorical devices like evocative diction or figurative language, thematic devices, and thematic questions. The students will create a short summary and response directly on the text at the end of each chapter. 

Summative: Students can be tasked with writing a short essay, 500-750 words, about a chosen theme in the novel and how the textโ€™s rhetorical devices convey or support this theme. This essay should be thesis-based, and students should be able to workshop their thesis statement in class with peers and with the teacher.

Reviewed by: Ayden Rails, Purdue University 


A Multi-Perspective Haunted Mystery

Horror Hotel by Victoria Fulton and Faith McClaren

Book Details
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publish Date: February 01, 2022
Page Count: 256
ISBN: 9780593483480
Genre: Teen and Young Adult fiction/Teen and Young Adult mystery and Suspense
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Synopsis: Horror Hotel is a young adult mystery and suspense novel that follows a group of teens that makes paranormal/ghost hunting videos.  The Ghost Gang, made up by Chrissy, Chase, Emma, and Kiki, set out on an expedition into the unknown of the dead at Hearst Hotel, one of the most notorious haunted hotels and ghost sighting places in Los Angeles, with hopes that what they see, and record will be able to launch their YouTube channel past one million subscribers. Chrissy, a psychic with insight into the dead, is thrown into chaos as she and her friends explore the haunted hotel. The team comes together in a ghost murder mystery to get to the bottom of their troubling findings within the building, while coming together and finding out things about themselves. 

Review

The story is told in staggered perspectives which incorporates each of the Ghost Gang members, offering deep perspectives into how each one thinks and acts. With tensions rising within the group as paranormal activity increases, the plot grips the reader and forces them to turn to the next page and find out what happens. Themes surrounding friendship, discovering oneself, and fate emerge throughout the text, giving middle to high school readers a book that they can not only connect with, but can learn about diverse peoples, specifically people who are learning about their sexuality and bisexuality. The audience stays wrapped in the story, biting their nails with each page flip.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections:

  • Friendship
  • Discovering oneself
  • Fate
  • Coming of age
  • Love
  • Online identity

Questions about how these themes are covered within the text and what this means for each character within the story. Taking apart the readerโ€™s own lens for viewing and then attempting to understand what each character says and does helps to illuminate these themes.

Student Engagement:

  • Outlining an activity for students to learn about potentially haunted areas of the United States or around the area in which the students live. 
  • Discussions about gender and sexuality, and how that can be different for people who maybe havenโ€™t fully come to terms that they are gay or bisexual.
  • Doing a close reading of similar texts (โ€œ1408โ€ by Stephen King and โ€œMrs. Clendonโ€™s Placeโ€ by Joseph Payne Brennan) and comparing and contrasting themes and ideas that present themselves in each.

Formative and Summative Assessments:

  • Create a podcast or YouTube video of the studentโ€™s choice of haunted location.
  • Write a personal response about a time where the student came face to face with a realization about themselves.
  • Short or long research about how the internet has changed social interactions, both positively and negatively, and then using critical thinking skills elaborate on what that potentially means for society.
  • Create a visual that the Ghost Gang would use in some fashion (whether to promote, post, or update viewers).

Reviewed by: Ross Brummet, student at Purdue University studying English Education


A Time Traveling Middle Grade Mystery

Ripped Away by Shirley Reva Vernick

Book Details
Publisher: Fitzroy Books
Publish Date: February 8, 2022
Page Count: 118 Pages
ISBN: 9781646032037
Genre: Contemporary Fiction, Historical Fiction, Magical Realism
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: After being ignored by his crush, Mitzy Singer, Abe Pearlman passes a sign in a window: โ€œFortunes and Futures, $8โ€”OPEN.โ€ With nothing to lose but no belief in such practices, he follows. Abe receives his fortune, and his world goes black; he wakes up in 1888 London with a new identity: Asher. He meets his neighbor, Maya, and soon realizes that Maya is actually Mitzy. In their new lives, Asher and Maya are Jewish and get caught in riots and hatred, as Londoners believe the Ripper must be a Jew. Trapped in another time and place together, the two become close as they try to complete the challenges given to them by the fortune teller, meanwhile dodging the hate spewing toward them, the Ripperโ€™s murders, and no idea if they will ever get back to their normal lives in Fort Pippin.

Review

Shirley Reva Vernickโ€™s ability to weave together a centuries old, unsolved murder case, clairvoyance, antisemitism, and a teenage friendship is something most readers have probably never seen. This book explores each of these topics in depth while still being easily digestible and understandable for young readers. It brings to light the issue of Jews being used as a scapegoat throughout history, with a focus on events that are generally not familiar. The novel is a quick read, easy to follow, and enjoyable all the way through.ย 

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis: With its various components comes a variety of themes throughout the book. Some of the most prominent include:

  • Peer support
  • Historical literacy
  • Being careful what you wish for
  • Class struggle
  • Anti Semitism
  • The power of friendship

Essential Questions:

  • How does having peer support affect your ability to overcome obstacles?
  • How does prejudice play a role in society during major events?
  • How does an unpredicted event affect your perspective on life?

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use:

  • Have students research the Jack the Ripper case and Victorian London
  • Track time travel throughout the novel 
  • Discuss antisemitism throughout history with connection to present day

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative: Students participate in class, partner, or group discussions to answer a set of questions pertaining to each chapter or section. Questions can involve critical thinking and deep diving, historical events, events in the novel, or personal connections.

Summative: Students can create a poster or presentation in which they explore themes, historical events, the bookโ€™s elements of fantasy, a timeline of events and/or exploration of antisemitism throughout history.

Reviewed by: Porsha J. Wolfrum | Purdue University


Dealing with Mental Illness and Building Unlikely Friendships

We Werenโ€™t Looking to Be Found by Stephanie Kuehn

Book Details
Publisher: Disney Book Group
Publish Date: June 21, 2022ย 
Page Count: 320
ISBN: 9781368066747, 1368066747
Genre: Young adult fiction, Realistic Fiction, Mysteryย 
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: We Werenโ€™t Looking to Be Found follows two teen girls, Dani and Camila, through their disparate recoveries of substance abuse, self harm, and attempted suicide. Dani comes from the wealthiest, most well-known Black family in Texas and seems to have everything a girl could want, but she keeps using and engaging in other self-destructive behaviors for the sake of an escape, but also for the attention of her parents. Camilaโ€™s Colombian-American family doesnโ€™t come from much, but she knows exactly what she wants from life and works hard to get it, but she keeps failing and goes straight to self-harm every time she does. When Dani and Camila end up rooming at the Peach Tree Hills facility in Georgia, they are convinced they wonโ€™t ever get along — and theyโ€™ll never get better. But then they find a mysterious music box filled with letters from a former resident and together they set out to solve the mystery.

Review

Bringing empathy to people whose trials in life may not mirror your own is the lot many creators take seriously. In her latest release, author Stephanie Kuehn delivers on this objective in more ways than one. There are many great qualities including differing perspectives and the insight to new friendships. Throughout the book, the chapters switch between Dani and Camila giving readers an insight into both stories and how those intertwine. This is great for younger readers when they are trying to follow longer stories because it gives a descriptive and chronologically ordered story. The story is a heartwarming experience that details the struggles and triumphs of recovery. Though I have never been in the shoes that either character embodies, I found a lot of similarities in my reasoning as a teenager with how Dani and Camila are overwhelmed by the stress in their lives. Seeing them work through their struggles by considering the otherโ€™s needs reminded me of how much becoming engrossed in someone elseโ€™s story also helps me to work through issues Iโ€™m facing. Once I learned that Kuehn is a trained psychological professional, the motions and message behind this novel struck me as a work with several levels of intentionality put into it for readers of several different age categories.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

The themes in this book can be used for not only young readers, but also for adults as well. This text is enjoyable and easy to use in a classroom. Some themes found in the novel:

  • Mental Illness 
  • Recovery
  • Unlikely friendships 
  • Beauty found in the unknown
  • Coming of age

Essential Questions:

  • How can friendships help people during a recovery period?
  • How do the people we surround ourselves with affect our mental health?
  • How can race affect the way people view mental illness?

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative: Once students are halfway through the book, ask them to pick out one theme from the book and explain its role throughout the story. Make sure to add textual evidence that best justifies the reasoning in order to defend the choice. Have them submit a document with their response.ย 

Summative: Create a one pager about We Werenโ€™t Looking to be Found. Must include the following:

On the frontโ€ฆย 

  1.  Title of novel and authorโ€™s name 
  2.  A list of characters from the novel 
  3.  When and where the novel took place  
  4. One important quotation (A sentence or two from the novel)
    1. Write the quotation in quotation marks – Include the page number – Next to the quotation, explain why this is significant (i.e. โ€œThis quotation expressesโ€ฆโ€) 
  5.  At least 3 drawings, symbols, and/or images that represent aspects of the story – Use color, be creative, be neat, and fill the page 

On the backโ€ฆ 

  1. A one paragraph summary of the selection that includes details about the plot, setting, characters, main ideas and conflicts, and the ending 
  2. Your name and class period

Reviewed by: Avery Schieber, Student, Normal, Illinois

ALAN Picks (March 2023)

ALAN Picks: Self-Discovery, Power and Oppression

This monthโ€™s ALAN Picks features reviews of four books that delve into the vast experiences of girls and women with oppression, power and everyday life. These young adult books include: two fantasy/science fiction books, Bitter by Akwaeke Emezi and Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao; a contemporary verse novel Chlorine Sky by Mahogany L. Browne; and a memoir You Sound Like a White Girl: The Case for Rejecting Assimilation by Julissa Arce. These books explore rebellion against structural power, relationships and self-identity. Check out these reviews for ideas on how to engage students with these books and topics in the classroom.

ALAN Picks Update: ALAN Picks is now accepting reviews of books published as far back as spring 2020. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions.

โ€“  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.


A Social Revolution Led by Youth and Angels

Bitter by Akwaeke Emezi

Book Details
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf Books for Young Readers
Publish Date: February 15, 2022
Page Count: 272 pages
ISBN: 9780593309032
Genre: Fantasy Fiction
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Bitter, a Black and queer seventeen-year-old girl, who spent most of her life in foster care, has just been accepted into Eucalyptus, a private school that focuses on providing a creative outlet for students in the Arts. She has finally found her โ€œhomeโ€; however, the world outside of Eucalyptus isnโ€™t as safe and nurturing. With protests and demonstrations happening within the city limits of Lucille, it is hard to believe that the Eucalyptus kids can remain protected from whatโ€™s happening. While some of her friends are out on the battlefields, Bitter keeps tucked away in her art studio, her sanctuary, the only place Bitter feels in control and sometimes finds herself getting carried away and a little too connected with her paintings.

Review:

This novel does a beautiful job of raising awareness of cultural and societal issues present in the world today within the Black community.ย  Akwaeke Emezi is brilliant in challenging the terms such as โ€œmonstersโ€ and โ€œangelsโ€, and what it means to be either brings into focus how society chooses to view certain communities. Bitterโ€™s character offers a โ€˜telescopeโ€™ (Toliver 2021) view into the life of an extraordinary young Black girl who battles with self-identity and the struggle of emotions that affect us all. The other characters throughout the novel are also well-developed and have their own strong voices, which helps captivate readers. Although this is the prequel to Pet, published in 2019, Bitter could be a stand-alone book.ย  Readers are taken on a new journey that unveils the truths behind what the history books and the adults wouldnโ€™t share with the newer generations in Pet. This enchanted and enlightening book is a treat to devour!ย 

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis
Bitter covers a variety of themes that educators can explore, based on the maturity of their classroom, of course. Here is a non-exhaustive list:ย 

  • โ€œMonstersโ€ vs. โ€œAngelsโ€
  • Self-Discovery
  • Rebellion Against the Power & Corruption of the Government and Other Authority Figures
  • Hope for Peace and Liberation
  • Empowerment of Youth

Essential Questions

  • What does โ€œhomeโ€ look or feel like?
  • What are the implications of untold or misrepresented stories?
  • How can different roles come together to create empowerment & change?

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use:

  • Discuss and research moments in Black History that align with the book: Black Lives Matter, Black Power and the Black Panthers for Self Defense
  • Close readings of paired texts (especially Pet) that relate to Black culture, acts of rebellion and coming together.
  • Exploration of different art forms such as visual, literature, and performance that act as tools of resistance 
  • Study different social movements and historical rebellions such as the Civil Rights Movement, the Watts Riots, Rodney King Riots, and the Black Lives Matter uprisings 
Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Students should keep a reading journal to reflect on passages, scenes, and/or how they feel while reading the novel. Studentsโ€™ journals should be a space where they can process emotions and areas of resistance or relate to characters within the story. Entries can be inspired and alternate between teacher-led discussion prompts and free write responses by students. Reflections can be shared among small groups, in a Socratic seminar, or in a philosophical chair class discussion.

Summative: Students can work on an Engaged Activism Project that supports student engagement in practices such as personal/social responsibility and integrative/applied learning. Students will need to find a social justice issue or movement they are interested in, compile data and research their topic. They can choose from local engagement or events, an op-ed/public history piece, or teaching/outreach as the container of showcasing their knowledge and research. This is completely student-led, allowing students autonomy over their own learning and how they want to display it.

Reviewed by: Marquita Woods, Preservice Teacher studying at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado.


A Battle Against Patriarchy

Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao

Book Details
Publisher: Penguin Teen Canada
Publish Date: September 21, 2021
Page Count: 391 pages
ISBN: 0735269939
Genre: Young Adult
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: Set in a dystopian future where the male-dominated society of Huaxia relies on giant Chrysalises to break a bitter stalemate in a war against the hordes of monstrous Hundun, this is a story that incorporates elements of the spiritual world, ancient Chinese myths, and Gundam/Pacific-Rim-style giant robots. Each Chrysalis is piloted by a dominant man and a female concubine, with the male using his copilot as a one-time power source. The protagonist of this story, Zetian Wu, is a teenage girl whose primary motivation is revengeโ€”she wants to slit the throat of the Chrysalis pilot responsible for her sisterโ€™s death.ย  However, a sudden turn of events leads to Zetian being chosen to accompany her sisterโ€™s murderer into battle against the Hundun. She mentally overpowers her copilot and is recognized as an Iron Widowโ€”a female who can use the life force of a male to power a Chrysalis.ย 

Review

Xiran Jay Zhao crafts a beautiful story that takes pride in its chaotic identity and unfiltered dialogue. The concept of futuristic robots fighting monsters from ancient myths is fascinatingโ€”Zhaoโ€™s worldbuilding is immaculateโ€”and the social commentary of this story enhances the reading experience massively. The definitive theme of this book is the deep entrenchment of misogyny in Huaxia, and Zetianโ€™s struggle against this systematic prejudice makes the backbone of this story. Zetian is a stoic character whose steadfast commitment to her values is easily observable. A lot of readers will relate to her upbringing in a conservative, unsupportive household and the internal strife that develops as a result. 

Zhao cleverly bypasses the inevitable love-triangle between Zetian and the other two central characters of this storyโ€”Yizhi, the son of a rich media mogul, and Li Shimin, the strongest pilot in Huaxiaโ€”by involving them in a polyamorous relationship. This allows for emotional growth and healing from past traumas in every member of this triumvirate at a pace that corresponds with the other two. Zetian is a great protagonist and is very easy to root forโ€”she is essentially patriarchyโ€™s reckoning. However, though this creates a fascinating main character, it also results in situations where Zetian feels like a video-game protagonistโ€”a bad-to-the-bone, belligerent heroine whoโ€™s always down for a fightโ€”but a character whoโ€™s not very dynamic. All things considered, this book is a great crossover between science fiction and ancient mythology, and I believe that it is an enjoyable read if one chooses to approach it as they would a summer blockbuster movieโ€”enjoy the action, donโ€™t question the logic.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Themes:

  • Patriarchy
  • Misogyny
  • Womenโ€™s rights
  • Growth
  • Oppression
  • Empowerment

Discussion Topics:

  • Introduce and define the concept of patriarchy. Explain the long-term damage of patriarchy by talking about Huaxiaโ€™s struggling war effort (the military simply sacrifices all capable women and consequently, theyโ€™re losing the war).  
  • The objectification and horrific treatment of women in domestic Huaxian households is a great example of defamiliarization. Introducing the concept of defamiliarization and its utility in unlocking fresh perspectives can help show students how the authorโ€™s social commentary on Huaxia is also directed towards the real world.  
  • Zetianโ€™s rise to power and the subsequent backlash she faces from inside the military draws parallels to the struggles faced by women in male-dominated societies. Using examples from this book to demonstrate how to overcome these obstacles is a great way to generate discussion.

Formative and Summative Assessments:

  • Encourage students to sketch specific scenes from the story and/or generate one pagers. 
  • An extended case-study on certain terms in the book related to Chinese philosophy and their importance to the plot/theme/characters.

Reviewed by: Abhiram Saran, student at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.


Friendship, Growth and Self-Love

Chlorine Sky by Mahogany L. Browne

Book Details
Publisher: Crown Books for Young Readers
Publish Date: January 12, 2021
Page Count: 192
ISBN: 0593176391
Genre: Young Adult Fiction, Bildungsroman, Verse
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Synopsis: The novel in verse follows Sky, as she goes through friendship breakups, relationship breakups, sibling rivalry, lies and betrayal by those around her. Sky loves to swim, play basketball, and spend time with her best friend, Lay Li. Sky lives in the shadow of her best friend, who is the notable โ€œpopular girlโ€. However, as they enter high school, Sky and Lay Liโ€™s friendship becomes strained due to the difference in how people treat the two young girls. Throughout the novel, Sky discovers that while Lay Li may be the sun that she used to orbit around, she has the ability to be her own sun.

Review

This novel was a book that was surprisingly hard to put down. Chlorine Sky leaves the reader wanting to learn more about Sky and the supporting characters of the novel, including Inga, Essa, and Lay Li. Mahogany L. Browneโ€™s writing allows the readers to see the depth of Sky and how she views herself and those around her. While the novel is a relatively fast read due to its verse style, it still leaves its mark on those reading it in how the Sky finds her self-love and her worth outside of how her friends view her.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections:
The themes in the novel are relatable to all people, but young girls can especially relate to Sky through her development as a woman and how she is treated by those around her.ย 

Some themes represented:

  • Self-love
  • Sisterhood
  • Teen angst
  • Friendship
  • Race
  • Family

Essential Questions:

  • How does Skyโ€™s self-esteem transform throughout the novel?
  • How does Skyโ€™s and Lay Liโ€™s friendship develop and how does this make friendship a relevant theme?
  • How do you grow from your past and present friendships?

Teaching Strategies & Activities:

  • Write your own poem with โ€œrulesโ€. These could be unspoken and unwritten rules. Some options for a poem on rules are:
    • Your guardians have for you
    • Your friendships abide by
    • Your romantic relationships follow
    • Schools operate by 
    • Sports teams follow
  • Write Around:
    • Have multiple pages of papers with questions listed at the top. Some possible questions and/or writing prompts are:
      • What themes do you think are the most prevalent in the novel so far? How is the author developing the theme?
      • What has been your favorite scene, moment, or poem thus far? Why?
      • How would you characterize Sky? What textual evidence can support your opinion?
      • Write a quick review of the book so far. The review should include a brief summary, praise or criticism of the book, recommendation of whether or not to read it, and how many stars you would give it.
    • Start writing on your paper for 2 minutes.
    • Pass your paper to the left. 
    • Read what the person before you read and then either start to respond either to them, the prompt, or both for 3 minutes.
    • Repeat until you have your paper back. 
    • Read the original paper and debrief with the class. 

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative: Students can respond with their own poem after each section of reading, or respond to what Sky is saying in the form of a journal.ย 

Summative: Students write an โ€œepilogueโ€ to the book. They can either write it in verse so it follows the rest of the novel or in normal speech so that it is reflective of each of the studentsโ€™ mindsets after reading the novel.

Reviewed by: Eleanor (Ellie) Arrowood, English Education Student, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.


An honest look into the oppression of assimilation and what it means to reject the white gaze

You Sound Like a White Girl: The Case for Rejecting Assimilation by Julissa Arce

Book Details
Publisher: Flatiron Books
Publish Date: March 22, 2022ย 
Page Count: 208
ISBN: 1250787017ย 
Genre: Non-fiction/Memoirย 
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Synopsis: The book follows Julissa Natzely Arce Raya as she breaks down her experiences living as a Latina in the United States. She explains her backstory and why learning English and trying desperately to fit in with white society was doing harm to her and her community. Julissa combines cultural commentary, unshared history, and personal narrative to show how the system is designed to oppress Brown and Black immigrants. You Sound Like a White Girl takes a deep look into how the Latine community internalizes oppression while encouraging the next generation to turn away from the white gaze.

Review

This book is a bold promise that paves a new path forward for people of color in the United States. It offers a new way to embrace identity for the young readers it is sure to reach and gives a glimpse into the oppression and ostracization Arce has faced in a personal narrative style set to the tone of the racist ideation set in American culture. Julissa Arce beautifully weaves together all the intricate moments of white supremacy that have led us to where we are today, from the erasure of Latine history to the Black Lives Matter movement. This is a must read for anyone looking to embrace their identity by turning away from the white supremacist ideals rooted in assimilation and the idea of belonging in America.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis: This memoir is told through a social and reformative justice lens that focuses on:

  • Race
  • Intersectional Feminismย 
  • History
  • Self Discoveryย 
  • Identityย 
  • Microaggressionsย 

Essential Questions:

  • How can people of color embrace their culture and how can white people support them?ย 
  • What are the social consequences of the erasure of latine history?

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use:

  • A close reading of a complimentary text about microaggressions and how people of color internalize them.ย 
  • A jigsaw activity where each student researches a figure in Latine history and then shares with the people in their group the history and why the figure worked against white supremacism.

Formative and Summative Assessments:

Formative: Students participate in a discussion board each week to expand their understanding and share their experiences while reading the book. Each student must engage with one other peer. The goal would be to gauge the pace in which the student is reading and encourage them to position themselves next to their peersโ€™ and the authorโ€™s experiences.ย 

Summative: Have students write a personal narrative where they take the content and examples from the formative assessment and have students position themselves next to Arce while explaining the themes and ideas of the book.

Reviewed by: Madison Jett, sophomore at Colorado State University, Secondary English Education major, Denver, Colorado.

ALAN Picks (February 2023)

ALAN Picks: The Challenges of First Love

This monthโ€™s ALAN Picks features reviews of three books that will engage teens in the complicated aspects of romantic teen relationships and self-love. These young adult books include the first book in a contemporary graphic novel series, Heartstopper, Volume 1, by Alice Oseman, and two verse novels Nothing Burns as Bright as You by Ashley Woodfolk and Vinyl Moon by Mahogany L. Browne. These books explore LGBTQIA+ relationships and issues; struggles associated with teens in their first romantic relationship; and the exploration of recovering from trauma. Check out these reviews for ideas on how to engage students with these books and topics in the classroom. 

ALAN Picks Update: ALAN Picks is now accepting reviews of books published as far back as spring 2020. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions.

โ€“  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.


A Romance That Challenges Stereotypes

Heartstopper, Volume 1, by Alice Oseman

Book Details
Publisher: Scholastic, Inc.
Publish Date: May 5, 2020
Page Count: 288
ISBN: 9781338617436
Genre: Graphic Novel, Fiction, LGBT Romance
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Synopsis: After being bullied for coming out as gay in the last school year, Charlie Spring begins the new year by making a new friend and developing a crush on Year 11 student, Nick Nelson. As the two become closer friends and Charlie joins Nickโ€™s rugby team, they both learn to navigate and break down homophobic stereotypes surrounding them. The first volumeโ€™s narrative peaks as Nick realizes he too has a crush on Charlie and begins questioning his sexuality. The book concludes with Nick and Charlie kissing at a party, and Charlie worrying that he has made the move too soon.

Review:

Oseman uses Nick and Charlieโ€™s budding romance to critique, challenge and break down homophobic stereotypes that can sometimes be found in secondary and tertiary school settings. This graphic novel highlights and explores issues such as cyberbullying, assault, peer pressure, discovering oneโ€™s own sexuality and speculating about othersโ€™ identities. Being a graphic novel, the amount of text available to read aloud is reduced, but the illustrations effectively illuminate Nick and Charlieโ€™s inner thoughts and emotions. Bringing Osemanโ€™s graphic novel into the classroom would encourage LGBTQIA+ acceptance and equality, through narrating very real experiences of queer adolescents. As the novel does include some strong language, this book may be most suited to students in grade six and upwards.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis
Many of the themes explored throughout this graphic novel are crucial for students to be aware of and understand their implications. Teachers can either discuss the themes sequentially as a class, and/or split students into groups to โ€˜zoom inโ€™ on one specific issue and analyze how it affects the characters in the novel.

  • Bullying (cyber/physical)
  • Peer pressure
  • Speculating about another personโ€™s sexuality
  • Homophobia and LGBTQ+ stereotypes
  • The power of friendship
  • Budding romance
  • The importance of consent
  • Power imbalances

Essential Questions

  • Why should we always promote and practice acceptance and equality, both inside and outside of school?
  • How important is trust in friendships and relationships?
  • How can we overcome stereotypes to be our authentic selves?
  • In what ways can we give room for consent?
Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Students can create a timeline and track how one of the themes listed above develops throughout the novel, highlighting how both the text and illustrations address the theme/issue. Students could also pinpoint the illustrations that help them see into the charactersโ€™ hidden thoughts and emotions that are sparked by each theme.

Summative: Students can compose a letter to their State Department of Education to propose that teaching and promoting LGBTQIA+ acceptance is made a compulsory module in all schools. They can refer to their theme timelines to highlight how studentsโ€™ wellbeing and emotional development will be positively impacted by this.

Other Creative Components:

The Heartstopper series has now been adapted into a Netflix show. Students may be encouraged to watch it, either during class for extra discussion or in their own time.

Review by: Lauren Woodall, English Education student at Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana.


A heart-wrenching exploration of the fickleness of first love

Nothing Burns as Bright as You by Ashley Woodfolk

Book Details
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publish Date: 04/05/2022
Page Count: 288
ISBN: 9780358655350
Genre: Fiction, Queer Romance
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Synopsis: Narrated in first-person, Nothing Burns as Bright as You is the story of two unnamed, Black queer girls crossing the line between best friends and lovers, beginning with the coupleโ€™s decision to set fire to a dumpster behind their high school. Loosely tied to the repercussions of this fateful day, the novel jumps in time and space as we journey through their relationship from friends to lovers. The story is about the trials of queer love and how to cope when the person you were drawn to like a moth to a flame, ends up burning your wings. 

Review

I hope this book can hold you as you cry the way writing it held me – Ashley Woodfolk

A story that rips your heartstrings as you fall headfirst into the narratorโ€™s tumultuous relationship, Nothing Burns as Bright as You is a tragedy about destructive love. Woodfolkโ€™s writing is lyrical, her free verse as emotionally charged as the story she details. Her verse novella will enrapture audiences of all ages. Nothing Burns as Bright as You is a unique tale about an abusive queer relationship. Woodfolk writes, โ€œWe are told, as young girls, to be wary of boys and to guard our hearts around them. Yet we are not warned about girls, about how their love, too, can destroy us.โ€ Woodfolk breaks the mold of a typical young adult coming of age love story โ€” there is no knight in shining armor, no happily ever after. There are only two girls, intricately intertwined โ€”  too loose to be considered lovers, but tight enough to suffocate each other. 

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections:
Educators can introduce the concept of a verse novel and teach students about poetic elements. Educators can also talk about examples of how poetry conveys intricate emotions like love. Some thematic elements in the text are:

  • Love
  • Identity
  • Loyalty
  • Infatuation
  • Self-love
  • Sexuality
  • Race

Culturally Responsive Teaching Strategies: Poem Analysis
The story is full of literary devices and techniques. Students can be asked to pick their favorite poem, identify these devices and explain how they contribute to the writerโ€™s effect, creating a model for literary analysis. An example of this is dental alliteration and the anaphora in the poem โ€œA lieโ€. The poem reads: โ€œOpposites distract. Opposites destroy. Opposites decimate. Opposites detonate.โ€ This creates a sense of doom, foreshadowing the abusive nature of their relationship. 

Students can also talk about how their chosen poem ties into the overall narrative. Alternatively, they can read other love poems and contrast the romance in those poems with that of the novel. 

Culturally responsive formative and/or summative assessments

  • The novel is divided into two parts  โ€”โ€A Truthโ€ and โ€œA Lieโ€. Students can form two reading groups and discuss the form, structure, devices, and diction and make a mind map. Groups can then compare their mind maps and talk about the difference between the two parts. How does the writing compare in each section? What is the intention behind the choices Woodfolk makes? How do they reflect the emotions of the protagonist?
  • Students can make a visual one-pager, following a rubric set by the teacher, to summarize the novel and identify key ideas and themes.
  • To complement their literary analysis, middle grade/ high school students can also attempt to write their own poem in the same style as the novel with two or more of the same underlying themes. This would make them analyze how poetic style complements the themes of the poem. How would the style change if their poem was about a dreamy movie romance? What if it was about a rivalry?

Review by: Manasi Rajan, Student at Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN.


A Book that Could Serve as a Mentor Text for Both Teacher and Student

Vinyl Moon by Mahogany L. Browne

Book Details
Publisher: January 11, 2022
Publish Date: Crown Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Random House Childrenโ€™s Books, a division of Penguin Random House
Page Count: 176
ISBN: 978-0-593-17643-6
Genre: Realistic Fiction; Novel in Verse; Coming-of-Age
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Synopsis: After a fight with her boyfriend, Angel is forced to leave her mom and four siblings in California to move in with her uncle in New York City. Besides figuring out her new neighborhood in Brooklyn, Angel is navigating her past experiences, guilt, and insecurities. At her new school, Angel joins an advisory group and English class that connects her with others through reading, poetry, and music. In the process, she explores herself and begins healing. With encouragement from her new community, Angel starts creating playlists as a way to express herselfโ€”both who she was before and who she is working to become.

Review

Told through poetry and prose detailing Angelโ€™s present and recent past, Vinyl Moon by Mahogany L. Browne offers much to readers in just 176 pages. Angelโ€™s story of finding hope and self-compassion will resonate with many readers who have experienced challenges related to coming of age, including love, family, and self-acceptance. This novel will also appeal to readers who appreciate music, poetry, and literature. In a sense, the novel functions as a type of recommended reading and listening list of Black writers and artists and thus offers many possibilities for paired texts. 

Finally, Vinyl Moon presents a teacher character, Ms. G, whose praxis can serve as a mentor for culturally sustaining teaching, particularly with Black girls. Vinyl Moon could be read by preservice teachers as a professional mentor text in addition to supplemental resources, such as Cultivating Genius: An Equity Framework for Culturally and Historically Responsive Literacy by Gholdy Muhammad and/or Literacy Is Liberation: Working Toward Justice Through Culturally Relevant Teaching by Kimberly N. Parker. 

The novel does touch on challenging topics, including abusive relationships and homophobia, and thus should be approached thoughtfully and through intentional, humanizing pedagogies.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections and Essential Questions
While many connections can be made to Vinyl Moon depending on a courseโ€™s needs and studentsโ€™ interests, the novel especially supports generative conversations about coming-of-age experiences and speaking truth through self-expression. A focus on coming-of-age stories could include questions such as, What experiences define growing up (or coming-of-age), and how do those experiences influence perspectives, identities, and adulthood? Readers will find possibilities by examining Angelโ€™s story as well as the stories of her mom, Elena, and her Uncle Spence. 

Alternatively, a unit of study exploring self-expression and the power of telling our truths could investigate questions such as, How do the arts (e.g., poetry, music) help us to connect to ourselves and others? In what ways can the arts be used to express ourselves, particularly with regard to various genres, mediums, and technology? These questions would help readers to make connections to Angelโ€™s creative process toward reckoning with and sharing her truth and in turn, discover new pathways for their own unique processes of self-actualization.

Teaching Strategies and Activities
As mentioned previously, Angelโ€™s teacher, Ms. G, utilizes culturally responsive and sustaining practices with her students. Teachers could incorporate Ms. Gโ€™s approach through the following ideas that help students make connections between the novel and their own lives: 

  • Safe Space: Beginning class with community check-ins and a protected space for students to share their lived experiences is one way to connect to the text. 
  • Community: Additionally, asking students to listen to or read excerpts from some of the artists and writers referenced in the novel could provide a deep understanding of Angelโ€™s experiences of finding community through words. 
  • Arts Culture: Providing opportunities for students to share the texts that make up the bookshelves and soundtrack of their lives would also facilitate conversations around Angelโ€™s experiences being transplanted to Brooklyn. 
  • Geography: Studying excerpts where Angel discusses the new music, literature, and food she finds in Brooklyn could provide opportunities for community-based writing in your contexts.

Assessment Possibilities
Because readers will certainly find inspiration in the artistry shared within Vinyl Moon, offering students options for engaging with the text through the various genres presentedโ€”poetry, prose, rap, playlistsโ€”would be a powerful way for students to make connections to the characters while finding their own forms of self-expression. Students could reflect on their own growth by speaking their truth in a spoken word piece. Taking Angelโ€™s approach, others might decide to curate a playlist of music that illustrates a pivotal experience in their lives. Like in the novel, classroom or community open mics could serve as possibilities for assessing student work inspired by their reading of Vinyl Moon.

Review by: Shelby Boehm, Doctoral Candidate in English Education and Literacy at the University of Florida, Gainesville, FL

ALAN Picks (January 2023)

ALAN Picks: Feminism, Friendship & Beauty

This monthโ€™s ALAN Picks features reviews of three books that encounter the themes of feminism, friendship and conflict with societyโ€™s standards and rules for girls and women. These books include a contemporary coming of age story Does My Body Offend You? by Mayra Cuevas and Marie Marquard, a magical fantasy How to Succeed in Witchcraft by Aislinn Brophy, and a memoir A Face for Picasso by Ariel Henley. The books explore ideas of how girls and young women are affected by societal standards, how they stand up to those standards and how they support each other in the process. Check out these reviews for ideas on how to use these books with students in the classroom. 

ALAN Picks Update: ALAN Picks is now accepting reviews of books published as far back as spring 2020. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions. 

โ€“  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.


Friendship, Feminism, and Fighting the Power

Does My Body Offend You? by Mayra Cuevas and Marie Marquardt

Book Details
Publisher: Knopf Books for Young Readers
Publish Date: April 5th, 2022
Page Count: 432 pages
ISBN: 9780593425855
Genre:  YA fiction, Coming of Age
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Synopsis: After hurricane Marรญa destroys her home in Puerto Rico, Malena Rosaurio must start a new life at a new school in Florida. When she starts off on the wrong foot with administration for coming to school without a bra, they refuse to understand she has a bad sunburn and shame her for her body. As she fumbles with the panty liners that the Assistant Principal and Nurse insist she use to cover her nipples, Ruby McCallister, the schoolโ€™s biggest feminist, swoops in to make her aware of her rights. Ruby and Malena learn more about themselves and each other as they work together to fight the dress code and navigate their complicated relationship with the world around them as young women.

Review:

Told in chapters by alternating by character perspective, readers can easily relate to and internalize the tensions between Malena and Ruby throughout the intensity and authenticity of the friendship. The way each character perceives the novelโ€™s interactions and situations offers an important insight on the value of perspective and how aspects of identity contribute to the way one experiences the world. The story reexamines common young adult experiences of relationships (platonic and romantic), parties, and activism through the lenses of gender, race, and class. By giving equal time and space for each characterโ€™s thoughts and feelings, the novel beautifully demonstrates to readers the value of knowing when to speak out and when to step back.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Connections:

  • Feminism
  • Gender and sexuality
  • Race and racism
  • Family structures

Essential Questions

  • How can one make others feel heard?
  • What components make up oneโ€™s identity?
  • What does it mean to recognize your own privilege?
Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use:
  • Research into the histories of liberation and empowerment through fashion/clothing
  • Examination of different schoolโ€™s dress codes, using a critical lens to analyze what kinds of power dynamics they enforce
  • Close listening, reading, and comparison of the text to poems about intersectionality like โ€œSuggestions from a White Feminist Poetsโ€ by Tova Charles and โ€œDress Codeโ€ by Liza Banzaca
  • Discussion about authorโ€™s intention and how reading is a gendered act based on insights from Chapter 5, The Social Construction of Gender: A Lens of Oneโ€™s Own, of Deborah Applemanโ€™s Critical Encounters in Secondary English: Teaching Literary Theory to Adolescents.
Formative/Summative Assessments:
  • Choose a section of dress code from a school of your choice and revise it the way Malena and Ruby would. Use textual evidence to justify your modifications.
  • Complete short or extended research into other aspects of fashion as a component of identity/experience (topics of exploration may include but are not limited to school dress codes, religious dress, defying gender/beauty standards in the fashion industry, victim blaming, etc.).
  • Create a protest poster with a slogan and an image that one might see at the protests depicted in the novel. Students can hang the posters up around the room and do a gallery walk where they provide feedback with sticky notes of compliments and/or constructive criticisms.
  • Keep chapter journal responses with personal reactions to Malena and Rubyโ€™s respective interpretations of their experiences. Use journals to later create a chart/graphic organizer that shows how different elements of their identities contribute to their experiences of the plot.
  • Open class discussion about what kinds of gender stereotypes the novel enforces and/or challenges.

Reviewed by: Arden Woodall, Undergraduate English Education student studying at Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana.


A Magical World With Contemporary Issues for BIPOC & Queer Young Women

How to Succeed in Witchcraft by Aislinn Brophy

Book Details
Publisher: G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers
Publish Date: September 27, 2022
Page Count: 416 pages
ISBN: 978-0593354520
Genre: Young Adult Fantasy
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Synopsis: Shay Johnson is a junior at T.K. Anderson Magical Magnet School who has been fighting for the scholarship given to one senior that would secure her a spot in her dream university. When she and her greatest rival, Ana Alvarez, both get star leads in the school theater production, led by the head of the scholarship committee, Mr. B, Shay has to balance a hectic junior year: dedicating herself to her academics and the intensely-inclusive play. But as she finds herself trapped between a rivalry romance with Ana through the play, she discovers a much deeper, darker secretโ€”Mr. B isnโ€™t what he seems, and Shay must uncover the truth of how previous scholarship recipients were selected, putting her own dream in jeopardy.

Review

How to Succeed in Witchcraft is a witchy contemporary fantasy based on the concept of if our modern-day society was established through magic. For a story with a light-hearted voice, deeper themes underlie the textโ€™s story revolving around racism, microaggressions, grooming, and homophobia. With an all-BIPOC cast, Brophy addresses racial issues for young women, especially young queer women, through a beautifully-crafted magical history. This book features girls standing up for other girls to protect future women, and tackles real-world issues that young BIPOC and queer women face in an American public high school setting.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Thematic Analysis:

  • This story features numerous themes revolving around the concepts of social justice and female empowerment. Some of the themes explored include:
  • Microaggressions
  • Grooming and predatory behavior in male figures with power
  • Racism
  • White performatism โ€œinclusivityโ€
  • #MeToo movement
  • Girls standing up for girls
  • Female empowerment
  • Homophobia, specifically lesbophobia

Essential Questions

  • How does white performatism affect young women of color?
  • How can women work together to take the power away from white men?
  • How does identity affect academic opportunity?

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use:

  • Discussion and research of the #MeToo movement, especially how the movement affected women of color
  • Discussion on microaggressions  and microaggressions observed in the novel
  • Examination of intersectionality between a queer identity and being a woman of color
  • A close reading with themes from The Firekeeperโ€™s Daughter by Angeline Boulley to develop a greater understanding of the problems women of color face in their adolescence

Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Students are each assigned to a single character, and are to keep a journal throughout each chapter of how that characterโ€™s identity affects the character, within the greater themes of racism, homophobia, and power. Journal entries begin with a quote featuring the characterโ€™s identity, and analysis contains the studentโ€™s perspective of how the identity may relate to the studentโ€™s own social setting. By quoting and analyzing identity, the teacher can examine the studentโ€™s reading comprehension and understanding of the novel.

Summative: Students each individually research an article surrounding a microaggression they observed within the novel, write a summary on how it influenced the plot, then meet in groups to discuss. The goal is for the students to understand both how a microaggression affects plot and theme, and how it relates to the world around them. Examples of reliable sources for research include the University of Minnesotaโ€™s table on microaggressions, BMC Psychologyโ€™s study on microaggressions, or Columbia Universityโ€™s study on microaggressions.

Reviewed by: Sarah Prather, sophomore at Colorado State University majoring in restoration ecology and minoring in creative writing, Fort Collins, Colorado


A Memoir About Beauty, Bullying & Crouzon Syndrome

A Face for Picasso by Ariel Henley

Book Details
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publish Date: November 2, 2021
Page Count: 400
ISBN: 0374314071
Genre: Memoir
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Synopsis: A Face for Picasso is a memoir by Ariel Henley that tells her personal stories of growing up with Crouzon Syndrome, a deformity of the skull in which the bones prematurely fuse together leaving no room for the brain to grow within. Because of this syndrome, Arielโ€™s face is left looking not quite like the people around her. Ariel recounts the different traumatic surgeries and school experiences she went through with her identical twin sister, Zan, who also suffers the bullying of Crouzon Syndrome. The book begins with some of her earliest memories and comes to a conclusion about where she is now in her adult life. Ariel also does a beautiful job of tying in a narrative about Pablo Picasso and how people she and her sister feel as if they were just cubist paintings by the problematic artist. 

Review

A Face for Picasso is an astounding look into the experience of growing up with Crouzon Syndrome in a world where traditional beauty โ€“ what mainstream media tells us is correct โ€“ is highly valued. Arielโ€™s story is compelling and necessary to read, giving the reader a way to consider how it feels to be an outcast in society. This topic is necessary for young adults to read because of the constant stigma around beauty standards, especially at a young adult age. The language of the book was easy to follow but did not feel too immature for an adult to read as well. This book most definitely promotes empathy. Ariel gives many instances where the reader would be able to walk in her shoes. Empathy is something young students need to be aware of and this novel could definitely help students to become more empathetic individuals. When I was between 12 and 18 I definitely would have benefited from reading a book of this nature.

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

Essential Questions

An essential question for this memoir could be: โ€œDoes society โ€˜otherโ€™ people who do not fit within prescribed beauty standards?โ€ Throughout the work, Ariel goes through and inserts situations where she was judged for her looks. She talks about a situation on the cheerleading team that specifically outlines how she was deprived of opportunities simply because her face does not look like others.

Teaching Strategies and Activities to Use

For a whole class study of this book, I would facilitate a discussion about the book regarding beauty standards. I would start by just asking the students about what kind of beauty standards they feel pressured to live up to. Some specific questions could be: โ€œWhat beauty standards do you see in society?โ€ and โ€œDo you feel the need to live up to these standards?โ€. I would then have the students connect it back to the book and the different struggles Arielโ€™s experiences. Another way these questions could be posed would be in an online discussion board post. This way students could cite specific points in the book and show how the book deals with beauty standards and emotions because of them as they read. 

Summative Assessment

Students can write their own shortened memoirs and use Arielโ€™s memoir as a mentor text. In the book, Ariel talks about how she was inspired to write this memoir based on a memoir assignment that she did in one of her college classes. Another idea for younger grades would be to take the idea of a memoir and make a storyboard. The students would pick one memory they would like to write about and create a visual poster or project whether it be a comic strip, a PowerPoint, or pictures from their real life. This book is great to use when teaching memoirs to students. Memoirs can be so powerful for students to understand otherโ€™s stories, and this book is an example of that.

Reviewed by: Claire Shenker, Student, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN

ALAN Picks (October 2022)

ALAN Picks: A Verse Novel About Survival & Loneliness

This monthโ€™s ALAN Picks features a review of a January 2021 verse novel, Alone by Megan E. Freeman. A story that features a young girl trying to survive on her own in a dystopian world. 

ALAN Picks Update: ALAN Picks is now accepting reviews of books published as far back as spring 2020. This gives ALAN members who are interested in reviewing books more great titles to choose from, as well as accommodate some great books released during the beginning of the pandemic that deserve highlighting. If you have some books in mind that you would like to review, please reach out to me!

If you read an ALAN Picks review and end up using the book with your students, let us know! We want to hear all of your great stories and engaging ways you are using young adult and middle grades literature in your classrooms. Remember, ALAN Picks are book reviews by educators for educators! Click on the archives to see previous editions.ย 

โ€“ย  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline.


A Verse Novel About Survival

Alone by Megan E. Freeman

Book Details
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Publish Date: Jan. 12, 2021
Page Count: 401
ISBN: 978-1-5344-6756-9
Genre: Survival/ Dystopia/ Novel in Verse/ YA Litย 
Find on Bookshop

Synopsis: 12-year-old Maddie is the only person left in her townโ€ฆor any neighboring towns. She wakes up one morning after a failed attempt at a secret sleepover, and her entire town has been evacuated. Her mom thinks she is with her dad. Her dad thinks she is with her mom, and their cell phones have been discarded by the same government that forced them to leave their homes. Maddie is left to forage to survive as weeks turn to months and then months turn to years. Her biggest battle isnโ€™t the looters or the wild animals who threaten her existence, it is the loneliness that she battles after so much time spent in isolation.

Review

Reading a novel written in verse is an enjoyable experience for young readers due to the quick pace and limited narration, but when that novel is a survival story, those elements are heightened. The pacing of this book is quick due to the sparse text, which heightens the emotions of the main character and also allows the reader to immerse themselves in the world that is being crafted. It also eliminates the large blocks of text that would not be broken up by dialogueโ€ฆsince there is nobody for Maddie to talk to. 

Beyond this being an engaging read, this book helps to highlight mental health and how important it is to have not just physical safety but a safe mental space as well. When loneliness becomes almost as big a burden as a snow storm or a group of looters, it places the highlight on self-awareness and survival in every sense of the word.

Many of the poems that make up this novel could stand on their own, delving deep into what it means to be human. But some poems lighten the mood with the exploits of Maddie and her adopted/rescued dog as they traverse the town and celebrate triumphs. Maddieโ€™s relationship with her family, despite their absence for a majority of the novel, is a special focus in this novel that will be relatable to student readers. 

Young readers will enjoy this book and the harrowing feats Maddie endures, but they will also enjoy the beautiful language on its own, as this book melds lyrical text with fast-paced action. 

Suggestions for Curriculum & Classroom Use

The themes in this novel are relatable for both young readers and adult readers, making this text not only enjoyable, but teachable. Some thematic topics explored in this novel include:

  • Survival in the face of natural disaster
  • Corruption of government
  • The loyalty of family
  • Beauty found in nature
  • Surviving loneliness
  • Recovery from trauma
  • The power of community
  • Power and corruption

Essential Questions

  • Is survival enough, or do we need more than mere survival as humans?
  • How do our families and communities help shape us as people?
  • What should we do when loneliness threatens to overwhelm us?

Student Engagement Activities: Favorite Poems

Before reading, give each student five post-it notes of one color and five post-it notes of another color with the following task: 

โ€œAs you read, place a post-it note (choose one color specifically) marking the five poems where Maddie seems to be at her emotional lowest. With the other color of post-it notes, mark the poems where Maddie is at an emotional high point. You may need to move your post-it notes as you read and make some decisions about which are the highest highs and the lowest lows.โ€

This activity encourages students to focus their energy on exploring Maddieโ€™s emotional journey as she survives this familiar territory in an unfamiliar way.

Formative/Summative Assessments

Formative: Once students finish reading the book, they should have marked their 10 poems as having the highest highs and the lowest lows for Maddieโ€™s emotional state.ย 

Now, ask students to revisit each of those 10 poems, on a post-it note, and write a sentence defending this particular poem as their choice. They should include textual evidence for why this poem demonstrates the lowest lows or the highest highs.ย 

Summative Activity: Once students have explained on their post-it notes why they chose each poem, have them work with a partner to compare poem selections. Have them work together to determine which single poem demonstrates Maddieโ€™s lowest emotional point in the novel and which demonstrates her highest emotional point in the book. 

The partners can now analyze the language in the poems to determine what writing decisions the author made in each of these poems to demonstrate to readers Maddieโ€™s emotional state. Perhaps the author used powerful diction or vivid imagery or particularly powerful metaphors. Whatever the students find, they should capture on two posters similar to the format below.ย 

Poem Title for Highest Point

Label the writing decision the author made
โ€œTextual exampleโ€

Label the writing decision the author made
โ€œTextual exampleโ€

Label the writing decision the author made
โ€œTextual exampleโ€
Poem Title for Lowest Point

Label the writing decision the author made
โ€œTextual exampleโ€

Label the writing decision the author made
โ€œTextual exampleโ€

Label the writing decision the author made
โ€œTextual exampleโ€

Once students complete the posters, they should hang them up around the room (or in a hallway) and students should do a gallery walk. This works nicely if you give every student in the class four small stickers and they can put their stickers on the posters they agree with most strongly.ย 

Reviewed by: Heather Garcia, Curriculum and Instruction Specialist for Secondary ELA and Media, Charlotte County, Florida.

ALAN Picks (August 2022)

ALAN Picks: Call for Reviewers

Attention College Educators & Instructors

You can support ALAN Picks by sharing this Call for Reviewers with your current and future Education students. As a new semester approaches, please consider sharing this column and submission instructions with your students and encourage them to submit to ALAN Picks. Itโ€™s a great way for future educators to gain exposure to Young Adult and Middle Grade books as well as work on ideas of how they could use those books in the classroom. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to reach out to me at richetta.tooley@gmail.com.ย 

Become a Reviewer

Have you thought about becoming a book reviewer for ALAN Picks? Now is the time to take that step! Have you read a really great book this summer? If it is a newly released or soon-to-be released middle grade or young adult novel or nonfiction book that you think would work in the classroom, contact ALAN Picks to submit your review! 

We are always looking for book reviews to feature in the monthly ALAN Picks column. If there is a title you are interested in reviewing, just send an email to richetta.tooley@gmail.com. You can submit reviews as often as you like. You can even partner with another educator and write a review together! Itโ€™s up to you!

Need ideas on what books to read and review? Here are a few: 

How to Submit A Review

Itโ€™s pretty straightforward. 

  1. Check out the format for past reviews written in 2022.ย  ALAN Picks Submission Guidelinesย 
  2. Let Richetta know what title you are interested in reviewing.ย 
  3. Write your review.
  4. Email it to ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com. Rolling deadline: Submit by the 15th of the month for inclusion in the next monthโ€™s issue.

ALAN Picks (July 2022)

ALAN Picks: Midyear Highlights and Call for Reviewers

2022 Book Review Highlights

This month ALAN Picks is highlighting the books reviewed so far in 2022 by ALAN members. As you take time to rejuvenate yourself this summer, check out these unique reviews written by your fellow educators that include lesson and assessment ideas. They might be a nice fit in your own classroom with your students. Click on the link embedded in the month to read the reviews. 

Become a Reviewer

Have you thought about becoming a reviewer for ALAN Picks? Now is the time to take that step! If your summer reading TBR (To Be Read) list has a newly released or soon-to-be released middle grades or young adult novel or nonfiction book on it that you think would work in the classroom, contact ALAN Picks to submit your review! 

We are always looking for book reviews to feature in the monthly ALAN Picks column. If there is a title you are interested in reviewing, just send an email to richetta.tooley@gmail.com. You can submit reviews once a year or once a month. You can even partner with another educator and write a review together! Itโ€™s up to you!

Need ideas on what books to read and review? Here are a few: 

If you are looking for new books for your classroom and engaging ways to use them with students, then check out the new ALAN Picks! Book reviews by educators for educators! 

โ€“  Richetta Tooley, ALAN Picks Editor

Submit a Review: Would you like to submit a review? Check out ALAN Picks for submission guidelines and email ALAN Picks Editor, Richetta Tooley at richetta.tooley@gmail.com with the book title you are interested in reviewing. Rolling deadline: Submit by the 15th of the month for inclusion in the next monthโ€™s issue.


June 2022

Revolution in Our Time: The Black Panther Partyโ€™s Promise to the People by Kekla Magoon.ย 
Reviewed by: Chaslyn Waldrop, Student Teacher studying at University of Tennessee Knoxville

Legendborn by Tracy Deonn
Reviewed by: Marissa Inman, senior at The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Secondary Education graduate candidate, Knoxville, Tennessee.

Forging Silver into Stars by Brigid Kemmerer
Reviewed by: Heather Garcia, Curriculum and Instruction Specialist for Secondary ELA and Media, Charlotte County, Florida.


May 2022

Donโ€™t Call Me a Hurricane by Ellen Hagan
Reviewed by: Heather Garcia, Curriculum and Instruction Specialist for Secondary ELA and Media, Charlotte County, Florida.


April 2022

Defy the Night by Brigid Kemmerer
Reviewed by: Heather Garcia, Curriculum and Instruction Specialist for Secondary ELA and Media, Charlotte County, Florida.ย 

Little Killers: The Ferocious Lives of Puny Predators by Sneed B. Collard III
Reviewed by: Rick (Richard A) Williams, Youngstown State University, Youngstown, OH


March 2022

Pony by R.J. Palacio
Reviewed by: Heather Garcia, Curriculum and Instruction Specialist for Secondary ELA and Media, Charlotte County, Florida.ย 


February 2022

I Must Betray You by Ruta Sepetys
Reviewed by: Heather Garcia, Curriculum and Instruction Specialist for Secondary ELA and Media, Charlotte County, Florida.

ย 

Last Night at the Telegraph Club by Malinda Loย 
Reviewed by: Daniel (Danny) Samelson, Student Teacher studying at Bradley University in Peoria, Illinois.

ย