Tag Archives: Meghan Cox Curdon
My ‘Reprehensible’ Take on Teen Literature
By Meghan Cox Curdon, Wall Street Journal
Raise questions about self-mutilation and incest as a young-adult theme and all hell breaks loose.
If the American Library Association were inclined to burn people in effigy, I might well have gone up in smoke these past few days. ALA members, mostly librarians and other book-industry folk, are concluding their annual conference today in New Orleans, and it’s a fair bet that some of them are still fuming about an article of mine that appeared in these pages earlier this month.
The essay, titled “Darkness Too Visible,” discussed the way in which young-adult …
Posted in Education
Tagged ALA, American Library Association, Darkness Too Visible, Emily Dickinson, Janice Harayda, Judy Blume, Lauren Myracle, Libba Bray, Meghan Cox Curdon, Sharon Slaney, Sherman Alexie, Why the Best Kids Books Are Written in Blood", WSJ.com
Comments Off on My ‘Reprehensible’ Take on Teen Literature