Tuesday, December 18, 2007

History Is A Nightmare From Which I Am Trying To Awake

Last year I bought my 12-year-old niece a novel. My sister-in-law says that as far as books goes, my niece likes memoirs and history, like The Diary of Anne Frank. I ended up buying my niece something other than a book. But I wonder what would be a good book to buy my niece.

I presented this to the salesperson at Barnes and Noble as, "Suggest a book like the Diary... about a girl growing up in troubled circumstances. She suggested Smashed: Story of a Drunken Girlhood. This does not seem a good answer to me. I haven't read Zailckas' book. From a review, I know she went to Syracuse University, and, for some reason, I think she may be a product of the Syracuse creative writing program. I have a vague impression that that program is quite good. The authors I associate with it write well about drunkenness and drugs.

I could always loan my niece a book from my collection. Perhaps my niece would like Eric Hobsbawm's The Age of Extremes: A History of the World, 1914-1991. I find the Russian names in Hope Against Hope confusing, even with the translator's or editor's appendix. Likewise, I think Antonio Gramsci's Letters from Prison is not understandable without quite a bit of knowledge of the historical setting. I seem to have mislaid my copy of Biko. I just bought The Mascot: Unraveling the Mystery of My Jewish Father's Nazi Boyhood and will not lend that away until I have read it.

I've loaned my copy of A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier to a young friend of mine. This was his choice in a selection I thought of after he told me about a somewhat autistic kid in his class: "He's even better at math than I am." I think I talked him out of The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night Time by trying to explain the concept of a unreliable narrator. I don't seem to be able to sell Life As We Know It: A Father, A Family, And An Exceptional Child, including to my sister, who has children and a degree from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

A salesperson at Borders suggested Zlata's Diary: A Child's Life in Wartime Sarajevo. A librarian in Rome, NY, suggested Four Girls From Berlin: A Ture Story of a Friendship That Defied the Holocause and two novels: The Devil's Arithmetic and The Diary of Pelly D. Come to think of it, isn't the Speilberg film, The Empire of the Sun, based on a memoir?

Does anybody have any comments on any of the above books or any further suggestions?

7 comments:

  1. Hey Robert,

    Empire of the Sun is based on J. G. Ballard's memoir. Haven't read it but I hear it's completely different to most Ballard stuff, but still good.

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  2. In the same vein as Hobsbawm, "A People's History of the United States. 1492-Present" by Howard Zinn is to advise. But aren't these books too hard for a 12-years old?

    What about "Friedrich" by Hans Peter Richter? I remember to have read this around the same age and loved it.

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  3. Thanks for the suggestion, blop. Based on the info at Amazon, Friedrich seems to fit. I agree many of these are too advanced for a 12-year-old. I don't know what my niece's attitude is, but I was always ready to read books too advanced for me and get what I can. Besides, I'm thinking to asking he to choose from a range of titles, with advice on each.

    Mike, I guess I should have looked up Empire of the Sun.

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  4. Well, anything by Ursula le Guin would be ideal -- she does lots for young adults, although The Dispossessed would be my personal recommendation. It is such a good book.

    In terms of comics, Watchmen or V for Vendetta by Alan Moore are both excellent.

    In terms of history books, Zinn's is a classic and also recommended.

    Iain
    An Anarchist FAQ

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  5. Thanks Iain. Le Guin is another author that I don't seem to be able to promote.

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  6. Klaus Kordon has written some excellent historical novels, aiming at young as well as adult readers. His characters are working class or marginalised people. It's about a microperspective on different chapters of German history (like the revolutions of 1848 and 1918 and the Weimar Republic and the Nazi time). But I guess the novels have not been translated :-/

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  7. I cannot read german. Trying to read children's book in French (i.e., Le Petit Prince) is good for my humility.

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