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Having now read one of the books mentioned, Cheryl Rainfield's Scars... Larry Send a noteboard - 08/06/2011 02:18:23 AM
I can say with more conviction than before that Gurdon purposely distorted the book's themes. It's a fiction based on her own youth and struggles dealing with the traumas inflicted by childhood rape and how those traumas are expressed and it is quite clear that Rainfield did not write the novel to glorify cutting or to revel in the horrifying partial recall of the protagonist of her years of rape. Rather, it is one of those stories that allows those who have experienced such horrible things (and they are much more common than what most suspect, as I've learned during the past three years working in treatment centers) to read of one who underwent something similar and who not only fought to survive, but ended up finding love and acceptance from those around her. It also has a wealth of resource information at the back for those who might want to read more, "truer" accounts in order to figure out how to cope and to win against such pains.

Later this week, I'm going to give my copy of Scars to the girls' therapist at work and ask her to judge how best (if at all) this book should be made available for her clients. It is something that I think might be a good read for those who might have turned to drugs in order to deal with their pasts.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie

Je suis méchant.
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This WSJ article has kicked up a huge fuss on the internet - YA is "too dark". - 05/06/2011 03:46:50 PM 2113 Views
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If it were just vampires that would be just fine - 05/06/2011 08:03:02 PM 876 Views
People have been complaining about this since the novel was invented - 05/06/2011 11:02:58 PM 943 Views
This is different. - 06/06/2011 01:56:56 AM 950 Views
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Why waste time with "YA literature" at all? - 06/06/2011 02:14:03 PM 813 Views
Re: Why waste time with "YA literature" at all? - 06/06/2011 02:28:42 PM 768 Views
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Maybe. It's hard to separate, I think. - 07/06/2011 01:06:29 PM 1000 Views
Very good post. - 06/06/2011 08:52:22 PM 851 Views
You seem to be the only one who thinks so. *NM* - 07/06/2011 01:17:18 AM 303 Views
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Heh. - 08/06/2011 07:24:44 PM 1070 Views
you are having trouble finding cultural ideas that turned bad? - 08/06/2011 11:56:23 PM 993 Views
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Your response is about where I sit. - 06/06/2011 12:30:04 PM 926 Views
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Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading - 06/06/2011 03:41:22 AM 838 Views
Re: Parents have the right and resonsibility to know what their children are reading - 06/06/2011 12:40:24 PM 974 Views
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well so far you have failed to make the argument - 07/06/2011 04:22:00 AM 1029 Views
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Basically? Yes. - 07/06/2011 06:42:04 PM 1095 Views
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I am being an idiot? - 09/06/2011 04:10:28 PM 938 Views
I wasn't calling you an idiot for disagreeing with me. - 09/06/2011 04:44:37 PM 997 Views
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A+++ would read this reply again *NM* - 06/06/2011 10:23:11 PM 316 Views
+1 *NM* - 07/06/2011 01:12:16 AM 306 Views
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Indeed. Everything she said. *NM* - 07/06/2011 06:13:20 PM 284 Views
it does take a lot of work to keep track of your kids - 07/06/2011 05:02:55 AM 1008 Views
*I agree with this* *NM* - 07/06/2011 01:18:58 PM 375 Views
Having now read one of the books mentioned, Cheryl Rainfield's Scars... - 08/06/2011 02:18:23 AM 1097 Views

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