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[CCBC-Net] Blume's continued appeal
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From: Anne Oelke <cflibrary>
Date: Mon, 06 Oct 2008 14:04:47 -0500
Judy Blume's books do not circulate heavily in my middle/high school library (gr. 6-12) Freckle Juice is popular, but quite frankly that is because it is one of the skinniest books the students can find. "Here's to you Rachel Robinson" criculates decently, but "Then again..", "It's not the end of the world", and "Are you there God..."" rarely get checked out. Speculation here: Could this be due to the popularity of the elementary Blume books such as Fudge etc? I wonder if then the students tend not to look at her books for older students.
Anne Oelke Library Media Specialist Cambria-Friesland School District Cambria, WI 53923 920 348-5135 x150 mailto:CFLibrary at cf.k12.wi.us
----- Original Message ----- From: Beth Wright Redford <bethreader at yahoo.com> Date: Friday, October 3, 2008 8:09 am Subject: [CCBC-Net] Blubber and Blume's continued appeal To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
> My fifth grade year (way back in the 1970's) was a nasty one in terms
> of cliquishness,
> exclusion, and mean girl behavior. But just as it
> was getting really bad, the teacher read Blubber
> aloud to the class. Some mean girl bullies in this story come out
> looking bad, and the real life bullying in my classroom scaled way back
> after
> that, at least for a while. I've been a
> fan of Judy Blume's books ever since.
>
> Here's a testament to the enduring appeal of Blume's books: with
> most other realistic fiction in my library, outdated fashion
> on the cover is enough to condemn a book to a sad life of shelf-sitting
> unless it's handsold by a librarian. However,
> the older copies of Blume's books in my library continue to circulate
> even though the girls in the cover art have the wrong hairdos.
> They seem to be books that young people handsell to each other. The
> characters remain appealing and the situations believable, even years
> after the books were first published.
>
> In another sign of Blume's
> enduring appeal, Forever still gets stolen off my library shelves and
> never returned, decades after its publication. In fact, that's how I
> can tell if a YA novel has really found its audience: when it gets
> stolen off my shelves, just like Forever.
>
> Beth Wright Redford
> Fletcher Free Library
> Burlington, Vermont
>
>
>
>
>
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> CCBC-Net mailing list
> CCBC-Net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
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Received on Mon 06 Oct 2008 02:04:47 PM CDT
Date: Mon, 06 Oct 2008 14:04:47 -0500
Judy Blume's books do not circulate heavily in my middle/high school library (gr. 6-12) Freckle Juice is popular, but quite frankly that is because it is one of the skinniest books the students can find. "Here's to you Rachel Robinson" criculates decently, but "Then again..", "It's not the end of the world", and "Are you there God..."" rarely get checked out. Speculation here: Could this be due to the popularity of the elementary Blume books such as Fudge etc? I wonder if then the students tend not to look at her books for older students.
Anne Oelke Library Media Specialist Cambria-Friesland School District Cambria, WI 53923 920 348-5135 x150 mailto:CFLibrary at cf.k12.wi.us
----- Original Message ----- From: Beth Wright Redford <bethreader at yahoo.com> Date: Friday, October 3, 2008 8:09 am Subject: [CCBC-Net] Blubber and Blume's continued appeal To: ccbc-net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
> My fifth grade year (way back in the 1970's) was a nasty one in terms
> of cliquishness,
> exclusion, and mean girl behavior. But just as it
> was getting really bad, the teacher read Blubber
> aloud to the class. Some mean girl bullies in this story come out
> looking bad, and the real life bullying in my classroom scaled way back
> after
> that, at least for a while. I've been a
> fan of Judy Blume's books ever since.
>
> Here's a testament to the enduring appeal of Blume's books: with
> most other realistic fiction in my library, outdated fashion
> on the cover is enough to condemn a book to a sad life of shelf-sitting
> unless it's handsold by a librarian. However,
> the older copies of Blume's books in my library continue to circulate
> even though the girls in the cover art have the wrong hairdos.
> They seem to be books that young people handsell to each other. The
> characters remain appealing and the situations believable, even years
> after the books were first published.
>
> In another sign of Blume's
> enduring appeal, Forever still gets stolen off my library shelves and
> never returned, decades after its publication. In fact, that's how I
> can tell if a YA novel has really found its audience: when it gets
> stolen off my shelves, just like Forever.
>
> Beth Wright Redford
> Fletcher Free Library
> Burlington, Vermont
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> CCBC-Net mailing list
> CCBC-Net at ccbc.education.wisc.edu
> Visit this link to read archives or to unsubscribe...
> http://ccbc.education.wisc.edu/mailman/listinfo/ccbc-net
Received on Mon 06 Oct 2008 02:04:47 PM CDT