Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am personally VERY affected by depressing literature.
I think they pick these books in part because they think the teens will like them—especially all the apocolyptic stuff. But I do worry about how they affect kids who are already prone to depression. I have been trying to find less depressing stuff for my kid as a counter-balance. Suggestions are welcome! So far we have tried jane Austen, Shakespeare, and Agatha Christie.
Less depressing stuff, like King Lear?
I was thinking more Romeo and Juliet.
oh yes, two teens commit suicide. so cheery
I was that poster. For whatever reason, reading Shakespeare doesn't get me that upset. Maybe because Shakespeare doesn't really focus in on the emotional lives of the teenagers? It's more of an action story, really? Unlike something like Handmaid's Tale, that just wrecked me for months. Or Poisonwood Bible, that had me pretty crushed for a while. Or Kite Runner....anyway, I don't think that they assign any of those in MCPS MS, but they do seem to be reading a TON of post-apocolyptic stuff. And now with COVID, it's basically all my MS-er can think about.
Anyway, I'd love more suggestions for stuff that doesn't bring you down -- either for me or my teen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am personally VERY affected by depressing literature.
I think they pick these books in part because they think the teens will like them—especially all the apocolyptic stuff. But I do worry about how they affect kids who are already prone to depression. I have been trying to find less depressing stuff for my kid as a counter-balance. Suggestions are welcome! So far we have tried jane Austen, Shakespeare, and Agatha Christie.
Less depressing stuff, like King Lear?
I was thinking more Romeo and Juliet.
oh yes, two teens commit suicide. so cheery
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My HS students complains they are all about race. She says she thinks it almost makes race a bigger issue than it would be otherwise.
Race actually is a big issue. And pretending it isn't, doesn't make it a smaller one, although a lot of people seem to wish that it did.
Of course it is a big issue but that does not mean that every single book for 4 years has to focus in it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My HS students complains they are all about race. She says she thinks it almost makes race a bigger issue than it would be otherwise.
Race actually is a big issue. And pretending it isn't, doesn't make it a smaller one, although a lot of people seem to wish that it did.
Anonymous wrote:My HS students complains they are all about race. She says she thinks it almost makes race a bigger issue than it would be otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:It is impossible to find a book that all 500 7th graders are going to like. Teachers/departments do the best they can to meet their standards while catering to the masses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Pearl is a classic. It's sad you don't see that.
Lots of books are classics, but that doesn't mean everyone has to read them, let alone like them.
I can't stand Steinbeck, myself. Not as a teenager, and not as an adult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am personally VERY affected by depressing literature.
I think they pick these books in part because they think the teens will like them—especially all the apocolyptic stuff. But I do worry about how they affect kids who are already prone to depression. I have been trying to find less depressing stuff for my kid as a counter-balance. Suggestions are welcome! So far we have tried jane Austen, Shakespeare, and Agatha Christie.
Less depressing stuff, like King Lear?
I was thinking more Romeo and Juliet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree, OP. I am sick of the dystopian literature trend for young adults and super depressing books.
But young adults aren't sick of the trend.
The 7th grader in 16:17 would beg to differ, as would all of my kids.
Sure. Not everybody likes the same thing. But a trendy thing is a trendy thing because lots of people do like it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am personally VERY affected by depressing literature.
I think they pick these books in part because they think the teens will like them—especially all the apocolyptic stuff. But I do worry about how they affect kids who are already prone to depression. I have been trying to find less depressing stuff for my kid as a counter-balance. Suggestions are welcome! So far we have tried jane Austen, Shakespeare, and Agatha Christie.
Less depressing stuff, like King Lear?