Thursday, April 28, 2011

Marjane Satrapi's "Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood"




"Persepolis" is the memoir of Marjane Satrapi's life experiences, growing up in Iran during the Islamic Revolution. The story revolves around Marjane (an only child)'s growth from an ignorant girl at the age of 6 to a very knowledgeable and daring young woman at the age of 14. During those years, she is the unfortunate witness to even more traumatic events in her country's history including the overthrow of the Shah’s regime, the triumph of the Islamic Revolution, and the devastating effects of Iran's war with Iraq. Marjane is highly intelligent, outspoken, and gets most of her wisdom concerning her country's current events from her extreme Marxist parents who spare her no details when educating her about the dangerous world that surrounds them.

Not only does this book give an undeniable and realistic depiction of what life was really like at this time for the Iranian people but it's also an incredibly artistic graphic novel, which I think makes it that much more compelling to read. At first I wasn't so sure how well I would grasp the material due to the fact that the book is made of black and white comics, I figured I'd get lost in the pictures and pay no attention to the literary elements, but I soon realized that this genre might be the one for me after all. I found myself in suspense at times, laughing, and even in disbelief. Had it not been for the graphics, I don't think I would have been as able to envision what the story was really saying.

I can now see that this is an excellent genre that my future students would appreciate much to their benefit. Young readers I think would feel entertained by a novel such as "Persepolis." Other books might leave them questioning the content but with graphics to observe WHILE reading, there would be no doubt as to what the story's all about especially with a book like this one where there are so many names, so many details, and so many facts that face the potential of being misinterpreted and confused. Pictures minimize those chances.

Had it not been for the course I'm taking that required me to read this graphic novel, I probably would have never picked up such sort of book. I may not have been put off by the fact that it's a graphic novel but definitely would have been knowing that the book focuses on so much of a rich and meaningful history of one of the most unlucky country's I know of. I've never been a fan of historical non-fiction and I'm really not even now. However, this book brought new light to the idea that not all history is the same history we assume we already know. I believe that was one of Satrapi's main purposes when writing this novel. It's even mentioned in the story's introduction that she wrote the book so that the world could recognize the truth behind the country's hardships. Well I must say, she did a brilliant job of achieving that goal.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

"A Northern Light" by Jennifer Donnelly

"A Northern Light" is a historical fiction novel about a young girl, Mattie Gokey who possess a gift for writing, a love for books, and an ambitious hope to go to college. The story is set in a small town in the Adirondacks in 1906. Mattie is poor, motherless, and is the daughter of a farmer. She longs to leave the small town, to be free and independent, but is stuck feeling obligated to stay with her father and family due to a promise made to her dying mother, and a new relationship with a neighboring boy who doesn’t seem to understand or appreciate Mattie's joy of the written word. Intertwined with this is the story of letters left in Mattie’s care by Grace Brown, a guest of the hotel at which Mattie works, shortly before Grace’s body is discovered, drowned in the lake. Grace Brown’s tragic tale may sound familiar, because it is the true story told in Theodore Drieser’s "An American Tragedy."

At first, when reading reviews about this book by others and even on the back cover, you get the sense that this is a murder mystery story. But, after diving into this book, I soon realized that my first interpretation of what the novel would consist of was not correct. The book does include some letters from Grace Brown, a guest of the hotel where main character, Mattie, works but, the letters are so sparsely interspersed throughout the novel that there's not a whole lot of "mystery" or "suspense" in the story at all. Instead you're left wanting to know even more about the murder aspect that you end up resenting the rest of the story.

While the story is well told in the respect that it is wonderfully written, gives a realistic and imaginable depiction of what life was like during the turn of a century (from the types of chores one had to complete to the sexist expectations for a woman to take care of her family), nothing else about it really grabbed me. My biggest critique of the novel as a whole is that I wish it would have been focused more around Grace's story, or at least in equal proportion to Mattie's, and less about Mattie finding her way into the world as an aspiring writer/academic, supported by teacher, Mrs. Wilcox.

I think this book is definately worth reading at some point in your life, I would not say that this book is deserving of the awards in which it has received such as the Carnegie Medal, the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, and the Michael L. Printz Award Honor.

The one plus I give this book is its success in sharing with its audience different aspects of racism, sexism, poverty, and finding your way in the world around you.

Thursday, April 14, 2011

M.T. Anderson's "Feed"


I’ve never been the biggest fan of Science Fiction novels (novels that project the future of mankind based on scientifically described discoveries or changes in earth’s social or physical environment). Nor would I consider myself a fan of sci-fi TV, movies, or really anything that involves unrealistic and far-fetched ideas. But, M. T. Anderson’s sci-fi novel, Feed seemed more to me like an outreach to society as a whole in regards to our irresponsibility when it comes to protecting the environment and relying so much on technology rather than the social skills that God blessed us with in the first place. Rather than being a novel written solely to amuse and entertain the minds of many sci-fi obsessed teens, the same teens who follow Star Trek, Star Wars, Battle star…whatever it’s called, Feed aims to grab the attention of teen readers, get them to envision the possible repercussions of their careless actions, and to recognize their role in society. I find the purpose of this novel much more useful and even educational than other science fiction works I’ve happen to get my hands on, reluctantly that is.

In the dystopian world Anderson has created in Feed, human beings are thought of as consumers first and people second. The title “Feed” refers to a chip that is imbedded in people’s brains at a very young age which allows them to be constantly connected to a “FeedNet.” Everyone’s thoughts are monitored at all times through the Feed, that information is then used to build consumer profiles and to almost spam them with constant pop-up ads having to do with popular products, governmental updates, and other news. These Feeds becomes such an important component in everyone’s growth and lives that to remove it could be fatal.

The story told in Feed centers around a teenage boy, Titus, who goes to the moon for his spring break with some friends. He meets Violet there, a girl who’s not like anyone he’s ever met. Violet’s family isn’t as well of as his, which is partly the reason, along with her parents’ concerns, for her not having the Feed installed until she was seven years old. Because she received the Feed at such a late age, she still has the memory of a world without constant mental spam which prompts her to ask questions, think outside the box a little more than Titus and trendy friends, and challenge the Feed’s power over herself.
Feed is told in first person narrative style, by Titus himself, a character who doesn't question the system of the Feed and doesn't happen to be the most articulate character either. Because of this style, we readers are forced to pay that much more attention and to decipher the meaning behind the many characters' comments, relationships, and trends of the world they live in.
This novel cautions its readers, many of whom consist of adolescents brainwashed by the consumer driven world we live in today, "think for yourself," "resist the norm," and "respect the environment." If the adolescents of today's world don't stop to appreciate the roots of humankind soon, it might not be unimaginable for that world we live in to become one more like that of what the characters in Feed experience, a world that devalues the existence of human beings altogether.