Wednesday, January 21, 2009
From Alice To Zen and Everyone In Between
by Elizabeth Atkinson
Alice isn't very "girly." She likes soccer, and working on her go-kart. When her family moves to the suburbs, her first friend is a boy, Zen.
Zen isn't very "boy-y." He likes fashion magazine quizzes and singing like a diva...
So now, Alice is starting at her new middle school, and neither she nor Zen fit in. At all.
Why is it so hard to just be yourself?
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4 comments:
I wish they'd had books like this when I was a kid.
You said Zen isn't very "boy-y", I think for the parallel to Alice not being "girly."
My first thought was that this choice was since there wasn't an existing word, but then I realized...
Um, how 'bout "manly"?
*apologies to all for nit-picking*
Hi Anonymous June 14,
I hear you about "manly" vs. "boy-y." but then I think I'd need to use "womanly" which has a different, more adult connotation. I think it's interesting that there are holes in our language in many places where we have cultural blind-spots - and gender roles is a huge blind-spot.
There's "girly" and "womanly," but only "manly?" Isn't that odd? Hence my invented word, "boy-y."
Certainly a little clumsy, especially with the hyphen, but it led to this interesting discussion, and for that I'm grateful.
Namaste,
Lee
I just reviewed this book. While I did like Zen and his un-manly qualities I didn't have empathy for the characters.
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