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[CCBC-Net] time frame in Criss Cross

From: Elliott BatTzedek <ebattzedek>
Date: Mon, 20 Feb 2006 13:26:55 -0500

I didn't think Criss Cross was set in the past, or at least not more than a few years, so this conversation has been very surprising to me. What elements led everyone to read it as set in the 80s or even 70s?

This book really spoke to me as someone who grew up in a tiny rural town in the midwest. At the end of each summer, if someone were to ask, "What happened this summer?" I could easily have answered, "Nothing." Yet, as in the novel, all kinds of internal changes were happening, and I was always learning more about the world and my place in it, within a life that even I considered plot-less and boring. That Perkins caught and pinned to the page the fragile connections of the internal life of teenagers is astounding to me, especially in a world where so many teen coming-of-age books are loud and confrontative, with drugs and violence and drastic, sometimes brutal, life changes. I think these books speak to a lot of tween and teens because their internal experience feels so big even when their external lives seem so boring, so to finally have a book where the internal life is more dramatic than the external is wonderful.

Maybe, just maybe, it doesn't need to be put on reading lists and taught to death, but offered as special jewel.

Elliott batTzedek Curriculum and Collections Development

-----Original Message----- From: Meg Robertson [mailto:mroberts at ramsey.lib.mn.us] Sent: Monday, February 20, 2006 1:11 PM To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu Subject: [CCBC-Net] time frame in Criss Cross


At our mock Newbery discussion, anachronistic elements in Criss Cross were also brought up. The older sister doing data entry for a computer company as a summer job was one, another was the mention of the casual poses of senior photos in the yearbook. We all agreed that if this were the 1970s as we thought it was, that senior yearbook photots were still very straightforward studio portraits.

--
Meg Lloyd Robertson
Assistant Branch Manager
Maplewood Library
mroberts at rclreads.org
(651)704-2033
--
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Received on Mon 20 Feb 2006 12:26:55 PM CST