Books: February 2007 Archives
One of my least favorite phrases. Ever. So it is with some degree of interest that I've been following the recent brouhaha surrounding The Higher Power of Lucky, a recent Newbery Award winner with a precocious grasp of the male anatomy (er, no pun intended ...). Yes, it's the word "scrotum," and it's on the first page.
The real issue here? Squeamishness. To pull a quote from the New York Times piece on Sunday chronicling the outrage of parents, teachers, and librarians:
"Andrea Koch, the librarian at French Road Elementary School in Brighton, N.Y., said she anticipated angry calls from parents if she ordered it. 'I don’t think our teachers, or myself, want to do that vocabulary lesson.'"
Ah, vocab ... such a tricky subject. Perhaps it's better, after all, to simply allow kids to pick up the much more highly edifying bits of linguistic flotsam from billboards, magazines, tv shows, and movies. As anyone who has made it through middle school can attest, words such as "scrotum" are not exactly the first ones learned on the playground.
The question this "controversy" raises for me is not at what age a child should be able to correctly label the human anatomy, but rather when will we adults stop using our bodies as dirty words?
After the jump, this week's uncensored line-up of Subway Reads:
The Anthropological Lens, 2nd Edition
by James L. Peacock
The End of Faith: Religion, Terror, and the Future of Reason
by Sam Harris
Go Ask Alice
by Anonymous
Notes from the Underground
by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
The Last Detective
by Robert Crais
Categories:
It's been a few weeks since the last reportial book post. How any of you have been able to manage without your dose of F train scholarship is one of life's enduring mysteries I suppose. Below, this week's top five:
Rich Dad's Real Estate Advantages: Tax and Legal Secrets of Successful Real Estate Investors
by Sharon L. Lechtor and Garrett Sutton
The Fortress of Solitude: A Novel
by Jonathan Lethem
Why Are All the Black Kids Sitting Together in the Cafeteria?: A Psychologist Explains the Development of Racial Identity
by Beverly Daniel Tatum, Ph.D.
Tales of Passion Tales of Woe
by Sandra Gulland
Peace Like a River
by Lief Enger


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