Scarecrow Press
Pages: 190
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-0-8108-5808-4 • Hardback • July 2007 • $83.00 • (£64.00)
978-0-8108-6685-0 • eBook • July 2007 • $78.50 • (£60.00)
Alleen Pace Nilsen and Don L. F. Nilsen are professors of English at Arizona State University, where Alleen specializes in English education and Don specializes in linguistics. They are longtime members of the American Name Society and are co-presidents of the organization through 2008. Alleen is a founding member of ALAN (Assembly on Literature for Adolescents of the National Council of Teachers of English).
Part 1 Introduction: Names and Naming in Young Adult Literature
Part 2 Chapter 1: Names for Fun: M. E. Kerr, Gary Paulsen, Louis Sachar, and Polly Horvath
Part 3 Chapter 2: Names to Establish Tone and Mode: Robert Cormier and Francesca Lia Block
Part 4 Chapter 3: Names to Establish Time Periods: Karen Cushman and Her Historical Fiction
Part 5 Chapter 4: Names to Establish Realistic Settings: Gary Soto, Adam Rapp, Meg Rosoff, and Nancy Farmer
Part 6 Chapter 5: Names to Establish Imagined Settings: Yann Martel, Orson Scott Card, and Ursula K. Le Guin
Part 7 Chapter 6: Names to Reveal Ethnic Values: Amy Tan, Sandra Cisernos, Maya Angelou, Cynthia Kadohata, Sherman Alexie, and Others
Part 8 Chapter 7: Names to Build a Dual Audience: Daniel Handler and the Lemony Snicket Books
Part 9 Chapter 8: Names as Memory Hooks: J. K. Rowling and the Harry Potter Books
Part 10 Bibliography
Part 11 Index
Part 12 About the Authors
This book encourages critically reading a book to focus on the names and naming. Something else that makes this book valuable is the use of various text features. The bibliography at the end provides a listing of works by all of the authors cited, thereby giving the reader a useful guide. The chapter titles that include the names of the authors featured in the chapter help to insure focus. The bolded divisions within each chapter provide clarity. This book would be useful for anyone who is a fan of young adult or children’s literature and anyone who teaches young adult or children’s literature. Note that many of the authors and their books included by Nilsen and Nilsen are familiar and read by those younger than twelve- to eighteen-year-olds labeled here as young adults. Children who are ten and eleven read some of the books discussed, including A Series of Unfortunate Events, Catherine, Called Birdy, and certainly the entire Harry Potter series. Thus, the books cited in these eight chapters have a broad range. There is much to commend this book as a reference and as a pleasurable read.
— Names: A Journal of Onomastics
School, public, and academic libraries will find this title an asset.
— Booklist
This resource is an excellent tool for teachers and facilitators of book discussion groups....The Nilsens make a valuable contribution to the study of young adult literature with this well-researched, readable, and insightful study.
— VOYA
This book offers an accessible, engaging, expansive overview of young adult fiction....Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
The test is written in a scholarly style....This volume offers an interesting exploration of the use of this literary device for teachers of teen literature and for librarians who share books with teens.
— Rebecca Sheridan, Easttown Library & Information Center
Nilsen and Nilsen (English education and linguistics, Arizona State U.) examine how authors of young adult literature use naming as a literary technique. They discuss how names are used for fun and humor; to establish tone and mode, time periods, or realistic and imagined settings; to reveal ethnic values; to build an audience made up of different age groups; or as memory hooks. They present examples of books by authors such as J.K. Rowling, Maya Angelou, Amy Tan, Gary Paulsen, Karen Cushman, Gary Soto, Francesca Lia Block, Orson Scott Card, and Daniel Handler.
— Reference and Research Book News
A well-paced discussion...Valuable.
— American Reference Books Annual