
Bibliography
Sones, Sonya. 2001. What My Mother Doesn't Know.
New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers
ISBN 978-0-689-841-9
Summary
A novel in verse
Sophie is a 15 year old freshman in high school and describes her relationship with her mother, school, her best friends and boyfriends in a series of free verse poems.
Critical Analysis
What My Mother Doesn't Know is a novel written entirely in verse in the voice of a 15 year old girl named Sophie. Sones has captured the voice of a teenage girl so well. The poems flow together and tell a story from Sophie's first crush to her learning what true love is all about. The poems are short and capture all the thoughts, emotions and anxiety of most teenage girls. I remember having similiar thoughts and emotions at that age about my friends, mother and boys. Sharon Korebeck wrote in her review for School Library Journal "Sones's poems are glimpses through a peephole many teens may be peering through for the first time, unaware that others are seeing virtually the same new, scary, unfamiliar things (parents having nuclear meltdowns, meeting a boyfriend's parents, crying for no apparent reason)." It is like reading the personal diary of a teenage girl.
The back cover is a poem written by the protagonist herself describing what the book is about.
"My name is Sophie.
This book is about me.
It tells the heart-stoppingly riveting story
of my first love.
And also of my second.
And, okay, my third love, too."
Sophie falls in and out of love, has a little cyber romance and starts falling in love with a boy who not might not be socially acceptable to her friends. The heart of the novel are the poems Sophie writes about her loves but it is also about her relationship with her mother. Sophie is trying to assert her independence, trying to understand her mother and wants her mother to listen to her. The relationship between Sophie and her mother is one most teenage girls can relate to. The novel concludes with Sophie starting to understand her mother and her mother listening to her. Sophie also takes that leap and follows her heart. It was refreshing to read that despite her confusion and fears about her friends accepting her boyfriend Sophie chose to follow her heart. It is a sweet happy ending.
Awards and Honors
*listed by the American Library Association as one of the Top 100 Most Banned Books of the Decade (2000–2010)
*listed by the American Library Association as one of the Top Ten Most Challenged Books (2004 and 2005)
*winner of the Iowa Teen Book Award (2005–2006)
*Michigan Thumbs Up Award Honor Book (2002)
*unanimously chosen an American Library Association Best Book for Young Adults (2002)
*unanimously chosen an American Library Association Top Ten Quick Pick for Reluctant Young Adult Readers (2002)
*named an International Reading Association Young Adults' Choice (2003)
*named a Booklist Editor's Choice (2001)
*voted a VOYA Top Shelf for Middle School Readers (2003)
*Pennsylvania Young Reader’s Choice Award: YA Recommended Title (2003–2004)
*named a New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age (2002, 2003, and 2004)
*named a Texas Lone Star State Reading List Choice (2003–2004)
*named a Top Ten Editor's Choice by Teenreads.com (2001)
*named a Bookreporter.com Best of 2001 for Teens
*chosen a Junior Library Guild selection
*chosen a Scholastic Teen Age Book Club selection
*chosen a Scholastic Trumpet Book Club selection
*chosen a Scholastic Book Fair selection
*nominated for the following state awards:
-Volunteer State Book Award (TN) (2004–2005)
-Utah Children's Choice Beehive Award (2003–2004)
-Garden State Teen Book Award (NJ) (2003–2004)
-Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award (2004)
-Rhode Island Teen Book Award (2004)
-South Carolina Young Adult Book Award (2003–2004)
-Missouri Gateway Reader's Choice Award for Teens (2003–2004)
-Wyoming Library Association Soaring Eagle Book Award (2003–2004)
Review Reference
School Library Journal v. 47 no. 10 (October 2001) p. 171-2
Korbeck, Sharon, reviewer

Bibliography
Satrapi, Marjane. 2003. Perespolis: The Story of a Childhood. New York: Pantheon Books.
ISBN 0-375-71457-X
Summary
An autobiographical graphic novel about the childhood of Marjane Satrapi in Iran during the Iranian Revolution. The books begins when Satrapi was 10 years old in 1980 and ends when her parents make the difficult decision to send her to live in Vienna for her own safety in 1984.
Critical Analysis
Marjane Satrapi has written and illustrated a memoir of her life in comic strip format. The drawings are simple, the colors are black and white, yet the images are powerful. Her voice is strong, much like her personality. Her point of view of an important time in history for the country of Iran tells a story that is deeply personal and intriguing. " 'Persepolis' was first published to enormous success in Satrapi's adopted France, where adult comic books are a long-favored form. The English edition comes with an introduction expressing the author's desire to show Americans that Iran is not only a country of fanatics and terrorists. The book could hardly have come at a better moment." wrote Fernanda Eberstadt for The New York Times Book Review in 2003. It still rings true today. Satrapi and her family are people who most Americans don't think of as someone who comes from Iran.
There is a second part to Persepolis it is The Story of a Return and it tells about Satrapi's life in Europe and her eventual return to Iran. An animated film of both books was nominated for an Oscar for Best Animated film in 2007.
Review Reference
The New York Times Book Review v. 108 no. 19 (May 11 2003) p. 8
Eberstadt, Fernanda, reviewer

Bibliography
Yang, Gene Luen. 2006. American Born Chinese. New York: First Second.
ISBN 978-1-59643-152-2
Summary
There are three seperate stories told in this book that eventually come together as one. The first story is about the Monkey King and his quest to become a god. The second story is about Jin Wang is Chinese-American boy who wants to fit in and be accepted by his American classmates. The third story is about Danny a blond haired, blue eyed boy with a cousin who embodies a stereotypical Chinese character.
Critical Analysis
The theme of racism and assimilation into American culture is heavy in this graphic novel by Gene Luen Yang. Three seemingly seperate stories are told, which eventually come together to tell the moral of the tale, which is to accept yourself for who you are as well as your culture. Philip Charles Crawford wrote in his review for School Library Journal ".....this novel explores the impact of the American dream on those outside the dominant culture in a finely wrought story that is an effective combination of humor and drama." Yang has cleverly interwoven Chinese folklore, cultural stereotypes and American culture into one story.
The Monkey King tell Jin Wang "You know, Jin, I would have saved myself from five hundred years imprisonment beneath a moutain of rock had I only realized how good it is to be a monkey." In other words, accept who you are and where you come from and save yourself the heartache from trying to fit in and being someone you are not.
Awards
Winner of the Micheale L. Printz Award-2007
National book Award Finalist
Booklist Top Ten Graphic Novel for Youth
NPR Holiday Pick
Publishers Weekly Comics Week Best Comic of the Year
San Francisco Chronicle Best Book of the Year
The Reuben Award for Best Comic Book
The Chinese Americn Librarians Association 2006/2007 Best Book Award
Eisner Wards 2007-Best Graphic Album-New
Time Magzine Top Ten Comic of the Year
Amazon.com Best Graphic Novel/Comic of the Year
Review Reference
School Library Journal v. 52 no. 9 (September 2006) p. 240
reviewer: Crawford, Philip Charles















