Because Telling Teenagers “No” Always Works

The principal of Booker T Washington High has stepped in to cancel one of their school’s summer reading programs rather than let the students read Cory Doctorow’s Little Brother, which is all about teenagers challenging wrongheaded authority. (Seriously, read it — it rocks.) An English teacher and a librarian had set up the One-Book-One-School program, which exists side-by-side with a more standard Summer Reading program, developing a study guide/brochure for students and parents. It explains the program, and gives questions the students should answer after they read. Notice that it also encourages the parents to read the book so they can discuss it with their kids, and allows parents who object to the book to contact the coordinating English teacher to get an alternate book for their kid to read.

Apparently giving the parents final authority over what their kids read isn’t enough for the BTW principal, though. When the program coordinators refused to choose a different book, the principal cancelled the whole program.

It was pointed out in comments to the Techdirt article, multiple times, that the principal could’ve done nothing to more effectively encourage all the students to eagerly read this book. [wry smile] A few people suggested that this might’ve been the hidden purpose behind the cancellation, but I think that’s giving too much credit where it’s probably not due.

In response, Cory Doctorow and his publisher, Tor, have donated 200 copies of the book to the school. I’d be interested in hearing what the school does with them, considering the principal’s actions so far.

Oh, and note that the school’s more standard summer reading program already includes Little Brother. o_O So apparently the principal is okay with the eleventh graders reading the book, but thinks it would be harmful for the ninth, tenth and twelfth graders…?

If you’re interested in reading Little Brother, which I highly recommend, Cory offers the e-book on his site for free, in pretty much any file format you might want. Check it out.

Angie

Give-Away on ARe

ARe (All Romance e-Books) is releasing a set of eleven novellas this month, all “bad boy” romances by a variety of writers. A few of them are even m/m, which is great — ARe is very supportive of GLBT romances.

They’re doing a big promotion/give-away thing, too — the top prize is a $50 gift certificate for ARe, which is enough to buy all eleven e-books with some cash left over. I get most of my romance e-books from ARe (I’m still Neanderthal enough to prefer PDFs, and that’s one of the formats they offer) so this is pretty cool. Anyone else who’s into romances, head over to the Bad Boys Giveaway page and check it out.

Angie

Review and Giveaway

Pattycake at Mrs. Condit Reads Books reviewed an ARC of Captive Magic and seemed to like it a lot:

Captive Magic by Angela Benedetti is a wild ride of a story that starts out with a touch of the paranormal, then takes a left turn into the Twilight Zone! The blurb covers the bare bones of the tale, but to really appreciate the unique and original twists that this story takes, you need to check it out for yourself.

Click through for the rest.

There’s also an interview where I ramble on for a while about such things as how I got into writing fantasy romance, which had to do with the early mainstream fantasy and “futuristic” romances falling so far short of the mark, in my opinion as a long-time SF and fantasy fan.

If you leave a comment on the review post, you’ll be entered in a drawing for a complete set of the Sentinels books — three novels and a short story.

Thanks to Pattycake — I’m so glad she liked the book! — and to Mrs. Condit for hosting the review and giveaway.

Captive Magic will be release on 4 September.

Angie

Free Art

The Getty Museum has released 4600 pieces of art to be freely used — including commercial use — so long as the museum is credited. Whee, book covers! If you’re indie pubbing and doing your own cover art, this can be a great resource.

Angie