-

The current Diversity Roll Call addresses the problem novel as inspired by a Justine Larbalestier post. More specifically:
Did you read these kinds of works when you were an adolescent? Did you think they were silly or did you gain something from them? Do you enjoy them as an adult? Do you recommend them to students or other teens you’re in contact with? Which titles and to whom would you recommend them? What issues or circumstances would like to see address in YA? What are your recommended best reads and which would you honestly say are poor examples in this genre?
First things first. I think it’s important to define what a problem novel is to me. Someone in the comments section over at Color Online said they would call it realistic fiction, but I honestly kind of like the Wikipedia definition of an adolescent’s first confrontation with a social or personal ill. Which, yes, realistic fiction. But I would take it a little further. Since most realistic fiction deals with problems, I’m thinking more specifically of novels I would describe by the social or personal ill first as opposed to, say, the quest the character is on. Like Monster is about a boy in jail or Out of the Dust is about a girl surviving the Dust Bowl. Because most books require characters to have personal ills on whatever level for the sake of conflict, a problem novel would be more about a social ill than anything. Meaning that when I think about the novel, I think about it first in terms of that social ill and recognize the ill as a social problem. (I’m trying to think of realistic fiction, I don’t define as a problem novel, and so far I have True Confessions of a Hollywood Starlet [her sobriety is a big part of the novel, but I first think of it as her leaving her old life behind for a small town], Story of a Girl [double standards, family issues, teen pregnancy, but I first think of it as about a girl who did something and now is trying to figure out what that means for her--maybe the title has something to do with that], and A Northern Light [which, I know, murdered pregnant woman, but I think of it more as about Maddie trying to decide if she should go away to school or not].)
At Color Online, Susan says:
The problem novel isn’t designed to fix life’s ills, but it can help a young person realize they are not alone and possibly find the courage to seek help or gain understanding. The problem novel is sometimes the first time a young person finds identification.
I would go a step further and say that it’s also to help teens gain understanding of people who are not like them that may have stories they don’t understand. So if you know someone in jail or who has been raped or has an abusive parent, these kinds of books would benefit you. And if you don’t personally know anyone facing these issues, you’ve probably heard about them on the news or whatever, so the books can personalize the story.
As a teen/adolescent, I read pretty voraciously, but I often don’t remember the books I read back then. The only novels I remember that dealt with problems, honestly, are the SVH Very Special Topic books: the one where Regina o.d.’s, the one where Robin is anorexic, when Ken goes blind, etc.
Those, and Jacob Have I Loved by Katherine Paterson, which is one of my favorite books ever of all time. I would count it as a problem novel because it’s all about how Wheeze feels slighted by her family, and Catherine is the preferred sister: she’s prettier and more talented, and more importantly, she almost died at birth. I haven’t read the book in years, but Louise’s pain is just as palpable to me now as it was then. Also, I never forgot the ending where Louise makes sure both twins she helps deliver receive equal attention so those babies won’t go through life the way she and her sister did. OH MY HEART.
It’s only now as an adult that I can identify that most of the books I read now are problem novels–or realistic fiction. And for me, the gold standard of problem novels is Monster by Walter Dean Myers. Not only is it about a boy in the system, it’s also about the problems with the system. It also addresses all of the issues in a non-didactic way. Everything is just put on the page for you to decide what to do with it. (I wrote a whole paper on the book, so I’m trying to be concise. Basically, the heteroglossia of the novel lends itself to the reader making up his/her own mind about the issues in the book.) I also love that, in any of the classes I’ve taught on the book, there is never any agreement about whether Steve is innocent or guilty, but everybody can agree that the system is messed up.In fact, I’d classify most of WDM’s books as problem novels: Shooter (school shootings), The Beast (heroin), etc. His most didactic book is the one on recidivism (A Handbook for Boys), and while I like it, I can imagine it’d be pretty annoying to a teen (as evidenced by the reaction of my students when I taught it). The topic is still well handled, but, yeah, didactic.
Anyway, there are lots and lots of books I’ve read and like that fit this topic, but I’m going to narrow it down to five other books I’d recommend that all deal with different societal ills.

The Queen of Everything by Deb Caletti is about a girl whose dad kills his girlfriend’s husband.
Make Lemonade by Virginia Euwer Wolff is about a girl who babysits for a teen mom in their impoverished neighborhood.
Living Dead Girl by Elizabeth Scott is about a girl who is held captive by a pedophile.
Inexcusable by Chris Lynch is about a boy who rapes a girl.
Hope Was Here by Joan Bauer is about a teen who joins a campaign to fight political corruption in her town.
I’ll be honest. I don’t exactly like Living Dead Girl or Inexcusable but I think they’re doing something different and are worth a read. LDG is extremely disturbing (so very disturbing, so very VERY disturbing), but I seriously could not stop reading it once I started. Inexcusable is not even a very good book, and it left me with a feeling of incompleteness at the end (needed more something), but it’d make a good companion to Speak. As for the other books, I’ve taught them, and my students have liked them. Hope Was Here is probably the least depressing of the books just because it’s so gosh darned upbeat and uplifting even when it’s dealing with heavy issues, which is why I’ve included it on the list.
I also feel that any list of books about problem novels without a mention of Chris Crutcher, and specifically, Whale Talk is incomplete. All of his books are, on some level, about abuse and its effects.And then there are all of the other books that I’m not going to spotlight, but that I think fit this category. So, a list:
- The First Part Last by Angela Johnson (teen pregnancy/parenthood)
- Shattering Glass by Gail Giles (bullying)
- The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things by Carolyn Mackler (fat acceptance)
- Looking for Alaska by John Green(death–although, as my students pointed out in one class, it is rare not to have death in YA lit)
- Big Mouth & Ugly Girl by Joyce Carol Oates (media hysteria)
- Just Listen by Sarah Dessen (rape)
- Dreamland by Sarah Dessen (partner violence)
- Don’t You Dare Read This, Mrs. Dumphrey by Margaret Peterson Haddix (neglect)
- North of Beautiful by Justina Chen Headley (disfigurement/emotional abuse)
- Don’t Think Twice by Ruth Pennebaker (teen pregnancy)
-

I was going to do a big intro post, but instead I am just going to jump right in. At some point, I will update my About page to talk about the purpose of this website, but the short of it is that I’m a person who has been an English major my whole life and that affects the way I see the world.
Okay, so first things first is responding to this Diversity Roll Call on gender. Specifically, I’m responding to Topic B, prompt #1.
Talk about a book (or offer a list of books) that you think has appeal to both genders. Or, books with a female lead that would appeal to guys, or vice versa. It doesn’t have to be a kids’ book–choose whatever genre you’d like.
I am going to talk first about books with female leads that appeal to guys and then a little bit about books featuring male protagonists that my female and male students responded well to. My lists both come from the American Lit classes I’ve taught in the past (to college freshmen and sophomores with a junior or senior sometimes thrown in) on young adult fiction. I try to pick an even number of books by/about males and females except for the one semester that I taught an all female-authored book list. Over the past three years, these are the books that my male students have responded favorably to that have female protagonists.
- Hope Was Here by Joan Bauer
- A Northern Light by Jennifer Donnelly
- This Lullaby by Sarah Dessen
- Teen Idol by Meg Cabot
- The Boyfriend List by E. Lockhart
- A Great and Terrible Beauty by Libba Bray
- Elsewhere by Gabrielle Zevin
- A Certain Slant of Light by Laura Whitcomb
- Heir Apparent by Vivian Vande Velde
Also I know a teenage boy who said he really liked The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants by Ann Brashares, but he wasn’t in my class, so I didn’t think it should necessarily go on the list.
What I have discovered from my students is that they don’t like girls that are particularly girly. That is, books that focus on boobs and shopping and the girl wanting a boy to like them. They tend to hate, collectively, overly emo books (featuring male or female protagonists) all about how their parents don’t love them or how they have problems connecting with people. Their reactions to both of those types of books is that the protag should get over him/herself and find something else to do.
One of the reasons Hope Was Here and Teen Idol went over so well is that the books were about “normal” teens interacting with their communities and figuring out what to do. The girls weren’t whiny or mopey and were a lot more proactive. Note, though, that books about relationships were well received, but tone had a lot to do with it. Ruby in The Boyfriend List is extremely neurotic but also funny, and all of my students were kind of appalled at her friends and boyfriends. One of my male students said This Lullaby was typical romantic fare but well written and with really good characters. They like A Northern Light because Mattie has “real problems” (figuring out how to take care of her family, trying to get into school) and isn’t consumed by boys and shopping and bra size. The other books are all fantasy, so even though they deal with particularly female issues (A Great and Terrible Beauty and A Certain Slant of Light in particular), they enjoyed the stories and the quest aspect of the narrative.
Honestly, the biggest issue the guys had with the books about girls is that the covers are all so PINK. So even if they marginally liked or disliked the book, reading it in front of their friends would sometimes result in comments they’d rather avoid. Most of the books on the list, by the way, do not have pink or lavender colors–only Teen Idol and This Lullaby.
I won’t spend a lot of time on books about boys that appeal to girls because it has been shown through lots of studies that girls have no problem in general reading about boys. But a lot of the books about boys tend to skew emo, and my male students hate that, so here are books with male protagonists that males and females in my classes have enjoyed.
- Monster by Walter Dean Myers
- American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang
- Whale Talk by Chris Crutcher
- Looking for Alaska by John Green
- Love Among the Walnuts by Jean Ferris
- Holes by Louis Sachar
- Son of the Mob by Gordon Korman
- Peeps by Scott Westerfeld
- The First Part Last by Angela Johnson
One of my male students said Son of the Mob was one of the only books we read that semester that seemed to be about a real boy–meaning one he could readily identify with. Which makes sense because the protag in that book is not emo, has a girlfriend or is all about trying to get one, and is trying to get along with his family. I should also point out that heavy issues do not turn the students off. What gets to them is really how the narrator or protagonist deals with the issue, which is why Whale Talk is so popular with my students.
I feel like both lists should be longer, but I also know that I have repeated books that have gone over well or cover issues that I want to discuss. There are books I have read with female protagonist that I think should appeal to male students, but I am not teaching literature this upcoming semester, so I can’t test them out. Would that I could, though. Would that I could.
Tags: book recs, diversity roll call, teaching
-
© 2010 The Englishist All Rights Reserved -- Copyright notice by Blog Copyright


Recent Comments