Scarecrow Press
Pages: 336
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-4617-4204-3 • eBook • March 2006 • $63.50 • (£49.00)
Mary L. Warner has been teaching English to adolescents for almost thirty-one years. She currently teaches Young Adult and Children's Literature at San José State University, where she also works with the English Credential Programs and serves as Associate Director of the San José Area Writing Project. She has published numerous articles on Literature as a Source of Meaning for teens and adults and is the editor (and author of two chapters) of Winning Ways of Teaching Writing: A Practical Guide for Teaching Writing Grades 7-12.
Part 1 Foreword
Part 2 Preface: The Power of Story
Part 3 Acknowledgments
Part 4 Introduction: Contemporary Realities
Part 5 Part 1: Introduction
Chapter 6 1. Young Adults Sharing Their Perspectives
Chapter 7 2. Young Adults Sharing Reading Choices
Chapter 8 3. Young Adult Authors Describe Their Commitment to Adolescents
Part 9 Part 2: Recommendations
Chapter 10 4. Books about Real-Life Experiences
Chapter 11 5. Books about Facing Death and Loss
Chapter 12 6. Books about Identity, Discrimination, and Struggles with Decisions
Chapter 13 7. Books about Courage and Survival
Chapter 14 8. Books on Allegory, Fantasy, Myth, and Parable
Part 15 Appendix: Cross-Index of Books, Alphabetized by Author
Part 16 Bibliography
Part 17 Author and Title Index
Part 18 Subject Index
Part 19 About the Author
Bottom line: Recommended.
— Teacher Librarian
...Warner's research findings could inform and direct youth services librarians and teachers.
— School Library Journal
Warner offers an important study documenting the power of young adult literature to provide assistance to teens coping with the myriad issues related to adolescence.
— VOYA
Here Warner (adult and children's literature, San José State U.) offers both the results of a survey of 1400 teens and a list of over 120 books they say have been meaningful in their time of life. Along with a very interesting report on the readings teenagers said helped them Warner shares how much authors of young adult literature care about their readers and reviews of books about real-life experiences, facing death and loss, identity, discrimination, struggles with decisions, courage and survival, allegory, fantasy, myth and parable.
— Reference and Research Book News