Tuesday, December 14, 2010

EDU 330- Book 10 Picture






I loved the young feeling of this book. I loved how, although it was so interesting and a great read, it was a personal read, not something I would use in the classroom, which gave the book a different feeling. So, for my pictures for this book, I choose fun and summer themed. Enjoy! (as this is my last independent reading book)

Picture Sources:
http://tinnaaa.deviantart.com/art/Young-love-95869863
http://citified.blogspot.com/2009/08/summer-love-icecream-watermelon.html
http://cottagedaily.com/2007/06/

EDU 330- Book 10 Info

Interesting enough, earlier on in the semester I found a website that is all about Jenny Han- its her website! There is a lot of information on here- so check it out!

Jenny Han- Dear Jenny Han

EDU 330- Book 10

This book was not one that was on my independent reading list. I had planned to read “Crooked” but something made me change my mind before I even read more than two pages of the novel. So I picked another book recommended to me by friends from home, “The summer I turned pretty” by Jenny Han.

This novel “begins” with Isabel, who has always been and always is referred to as Belly, going to the beach house for the summer. Her mom and her mom’s best friend Susannah, who owns the beach house, all travel to this quaint little place to spend their summers in the sun. Every year, Belly struggles to get through the school year, but manages to do so with the thought of summer ever present. Summer comes yet again, and Belly, her mom, and Susannah are off to the beach house, with a pool, the sun, and of course the beach waiting to give them another great summer experience. At the summer beach house Belly also has Steve, her older brother who continues to drive her crazy all summer long. Belly also reunites with Conrad and Jeremiah, Susannah’s two sons. She always feels left out, stuck in the middle of the three boys, wishing that she could be a part of their fun, but she manages, year after year to deal with it. Somehow, year after year, things never change from the first night meal, to her late, midnight, swims, and Belly continues the cycle.

But something changes this summer. Belly is seen differently, Conrad and Jeremiah don’t react the same to her, and she doesn’t react the same to seeing them either. The boys notice something unusual about Belly and invite her to a bonfire where she meets a new boy named Cam. Instantly things seem different and she is drawn to Cam who speaks multiple languages, doesn’t like the party scene, and really wants to be around her. But when the summer is coming to an end, Belly, and the reader, wonder if Cam will be the one to help Belly move on from the young girl, clinging to the “boy group” of Steve, Conrad, and Jeremiah that she once was and transform into something more. Belly, as the reader, sees wants so bad to be liked, to be a part of a group, especially with Conrad and Jeremiah. This story is one that most young girls could relate to, wanting a boy to like you, wanting to grow up faster, and trying to figure out who you are in relation to who you are in the eyes of others.

This was a different book from the ones on my reading list. Light-hearted and filled with teenage love, parties, and girl-emotional issues, the reader really can relate to Belly and her story. She continually tries to see the best in life, trying to be what others see her as being. But in the end Belly has to face not the boys she likes, or even ones that like her, but rather herself and who she is becoming. In this novel we see Belly transforming, at the age of 16 from a girl to a woman, as well as dealing with hardships that are thrown into your life. With some topics such as language, teenage drinking, divorce, even death the writing gives the novel a lift in spirit. I would recommend this book to many students. However, with more of a personal enjoyment, I wouldn’t consider using this in the classroom. It is geared towards a specific female audience and issues. Although I hope more read books by this author, this is not a classroom book for me. Although I can say that I would love to read more by Han.

Monday, December 13, 2010

Book 9- Picture Resources

These are the website from which I found my pictures, and they seem pretty interesting to take a look at:

http://aw2.armylive.dodlive.mil/index.php/tag/suicide-prevention-month/

http://eacreations.deviantart.com/art/The-suicide-note-84235314

http://www.flickriver.com/groups/reddit/pool/interesting/

EDU 330- Book 9 Picture






The book, with so many haunting depictions of emotion, left me with an inner feeling of some kind of hope, if you can call it that. This book ended with Clay giving another what Hannah wanted throughout her whole ordeal, someone to reach out and help her. I decided to use a couple different photos that would represent how I felt when reading the book.

EDU 330- Book 9

This novel by Jay Asher entitled Thirteen Reasons Why was my stretch book. Although I enjoy, for lack of a better word, reading issue books, I don’t particularly like reading books where I know the main character of the novel has committed suicide. I knew this book would be not only difficult to read but hard for me to consider using in the classroom not only because of the topic of suicide but other issues tackled in the book.

Hannah Baker, our “main character” has committed suicide. She has overdosed on pills. Several weeks later, one of her classmates and co-workers at the movie theater, Clay Jensen, finds a package from her, on his doorstep. This package contains audiotapes, all numbered, on each side, from one to thirteen. These tapes were created by Hannah before she killed herself, and were meant to be given to each person mentioned on the tapes. As Clay is the first he must give the tapes to each person thereafter, to listen to, and understand the reasons, as the tapes explain, why she took her life. The most chilling detail is that each person mentioned on the tapes, in Hannah’s words, contributed in some way to the reasons as to why she is dead. Each person, who may or may not even know how much they affected Hannah's life, is chilled to the core with her reliving moments of her life. This book follows the tragedies of high school students, the teenage lifestyle and the choices that come along with it. Hannah has left behind a message not only for these thirteen people but for those surrounding her life. These tapes, and the words/ life of Clay are what drive the story. We see that the actions of not just Hannah but everyone in her life, have consequences. As the story from Clay and the story of Hannah’s life unfolds we find many violent, shocking, and disturbing events. We find sexual events such as rape, drinking, identity, and emotions such as guilt, fear, and sadness contained in this book. All of these things give the novel itself a voice, a voice that can be heard through the tapes of Hannah, crying out to all those whom she needed and were not there. This novel brings a new and interesting light to topics that many have yet to face.

But it isn’t all of these teenage issues, which make the book what it is, or even the characters themselves. I feel it is the writing. As many others have agreed, this book is written in a way to bring not only a disturbing reality and subject which no one really wants to touch but a power to those who have had so similar a situation and had no way out. This book is chronicling not only Hannah’s life but the lives of other teenage girls or boys out there that need a story with shocking reality to read. I would not use this in my classroom not would I feel comfortable with recommending a book such as this to a student. But I do believe that a true reader, should read all genres and styles of books, this being one of them. Beyond an issue book, we have the crossing of reality and fiction. I think as my stretch book, it is not a book I would read again. It was definitely sad to read and even more disturbing at some points, but a book nonetheless I will ever forget.

In addition to this book, after I began reading some book reviews, which varied incredibly. But I also found book trailers that blew my mind. I wanted to share some websites and book trailers that would be good to view, not only in relation to the novel but for the topics.

Website 1- This website gave loads of information on the book, the author, the issues, the author's blog, a blog about Hannah and suicide prevention, and even the "tapes" from the novel that you can listen to.

Website 2- This website- in addition to the reading of the tapes- being so disturbing, it was even more disturbing to hear the tapes played out with a voice that someone has made.

Website 3- This website is a book trailer that I found most interesting. Although there has been no movie made from this book and there is not plans, as of yet, to make one, this trailer is from a fan for the book.

EDU 330- Book 8 Picture


This picture represents the idea that we need to take the world into our hands, to protect it, and stand up for those things, species, and animals which can not stand up for themselves.

And the website where I got this photo is a Green website for kids to explore. A blog called "The Green Guide for Kids" that helps children understand various environmental aspects.

Books For Real (a list of books I loved)

  • "Go Ask Alice"- Anonymous
  • "Green Glass Sea"- Ellen Klages
  • "Hoot"- Carl Hiaasen
  • "I am the Messenger"- Markus Zusak
  • "If I stay" - Gayle Forman
  • "Lush"- Natasha Friend
  • "Monster" - Walter Dean Myers
  • "Perfect"- Natasha Friend
  • "Send me down a miracle" - Han Nolan
  • "The Graveyard Book"- Neil Gaiman
  • "The Hunger Games"- Suzanne Collins
  • "Thirteen Reasons Why"- Jay Asher
  • "Whale Talk"- Chris Crutcher