[Each of the last
few years, I’ve helped kick
off summer with a series on AmericanStudies
Beach Reads. If it ain’t broke and all, so here’s this year’s edition!
Please share your responses and beach read nominees for a weekend post that’ll
put its toes in the sand!]
On three salient
facts about Sherman
Alexie’s The Absolutely True Diary of a
Part-Time Indian (2007).
1)
It’s Alexie’s best book: And that’s high praise
indeed. I can’t quite believe I’ve never written about Alexie in this space before, but a quick
search of the blog reveals that indeed I have not. Which is an outrage, as he’s
one of our most talented and compelling contemporary voices—equally adept at fiction
and poetry, as well as
a prolific Tweeter and a pretty great interview
to boot. So I’m sure this won’t be the last time I’ll write about Alexie—but as
of this moment in mid-2015, Diary
stands out as the best book in this great author’s impressive career.
2)
It’s a Young Adult novel: To some, those
who dismiss Young Adult books as something less than
Literature-with-a-capital-L, this fact might seem contradictory to my first
one. But indeed, Alexie’s Diary
provides a compelling case for exactly the opposite position, as it is both a
Young Adult book and one of the great American novels of the last decade (and
beyond). Which is an important and good thing on two interconnected counts: it
reminds us that great art defies categorization or limitation, demanding that
we engage with rather than circumscribe it; and it likewise highlights the
ability of great art to reach many different audiences, including if not especially
younger ones.
3)
It’s one of our most “challenged”
books: Perhaps because they recognize and are frightened by that last point,
the ability of great art to reach and impact young audiences, many parents and
other community members have “challenged” the place of Alexie’s book on educational
syllabi and curricula, seeking to keep it out of the hands of our young
readers. As
I’ve written before, challenging a book’s place in school isn’t exactly the
same as banning or censoring it; not all books should be read by all age groups
or in classroom settings, after all. But to my mind Alexie’s book is precisely one that should be read by
young readers, in educational settings where they can discuss and respond to it
communally. So first things first: read it on a beach this summer, and then
share it with your local middle school if you agree with me!
Next Beach Read
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Other Beach
Reads you’d share?
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