
'Lovely Bones'
Here's a book teachers and parents
might want to avoid. It's called "Lovely Bones," and it's by Alice Sebold
(Little, Brown, 2002, 288 pp.).
It starts with the brutal abduction,
rape, murder and dismemberment of a 14-year-old girl, and continues with a form
of necromancy - communication with the dead - as the girl narrates what happens
to her family and friends after her death. Her family basically disintegrates
in grief, and there is content about sexuality and adultery, among other hot
topics.
The book had been approved for
reading at the high school level by the California Department of Education,
with a warning to educators about its content. It caused a controversy at
Malibu High School when a student committee selected that book for a campuswide
reading event for grades 9-12.
The book is a debut novel, meaning
that no other novels had been published by this author in the past. Parents and
the public who complained in Malibu asked for classic literature with rich
vocabulary and G-rated content which handled the big issues of life - including
what it's like to be a crime victim, and what happens to people after they've
been badly hurt - in a more uplifting style.