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Reading list for kids, teens visiting Boston for the first time
By adamg on Sun, 07/13/2014 - 12:46pm
La Bibliotequetress asks:
We want book suggestions for kids/YA coming to Boston for first time. History fiction or non fiction to read before trip?
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Comments
Some answers via Twitter
Common Ground
For older kids, I'd recommend "Common Ground." It's one of the best books ever written about Boston, Bostonians and Boston culture. Although surely not intended, it also gives great insight into the types of people who still don't want bridges in "their" city named after Jews. Also, "The Last Hurrah" and "The Friends of Eddie Coyle."
For younger kids, "Johnny Tremain" can't be beat.
Funny you'd mention Eddie
Funny you'd mention Eddie Coyle-- I have that on my list to reread to get the right age recommendation.
"The Last Hurrah" looks interesting. I remember the Huntington doing the play a while back but I didn't realize what it was about.
"The Last Hurrah"
"The Last Hurrah" is set in a fictional, Boston-like city but it's really about Boston, James Michael Curley, and the death of ward politics. I read it when I was a teenager but I don't know if any kid would enjoy it now.
The Spensers--especially, the earlier ones--are a lot of fun and there's always William Martin's "Back Bay" and "Harvard Yard." I'd say they're all page-turning guilty pleasures for older kids.
Second "The Last Hurrah"
So far as historical fiction, it's pretty hard to beat. Captures perfectly a changing face of Boston politics (even though Boston is never named.) Be sure to tell the kids that the main character is actually James Michael Curley.
Suldog
http://jimsuldog.blogspot.com
I will second Johnny Tremain
Much, much, more dry, but I first read Whitehill's Topographic History of Boston in 8th grade is a go to for a history of the city's development along with some interesting sidebars like muskrat hunting in the Charles and the rituals of Pope Day.
Whitehill's is great
I hadn't even thought about that though it would appeal to the type of kid who likes to read encyclopedias (I did). Good call!
For pre-teen girls --
Emma's Journal by Marissa Moss (author of the Amelia's Journal series)
"The year is 1774, and the British army has blockaded Boston. Ten-year-old Emma is stuck at Aunt Harmony's house in the city, far from her family. Emma desperately wants to help the American struggle for freedom. When Papa gives her a secret code the militia uses, she finally gets her chance to change the course of history."
Oh, good- glad to get
Oh, good- glad to get recommendations with girl main characters!
Never Too Young To Start The Classics
Pickman's Model, a short story by H.P. Lovecraft.
Lovecraft should appeal to
Lovecraft should appeal to the 14 up crowd. Thanks! I wasn't familiar with this story.
Johnny Tremaine! That brings back memories
read that as a kid, and loved it.
I will never, ever forget
his hand going into the...well, I shouldn't say it in case anyone hasn't read it.
The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing
was the most extraordinary book that I've read in ages--definitely for older kids or teens since it takes a pretty complex look at the goings-on in Boston before and during the Revolution. I definitely second Johnny Tremain for younger kids and the Jane Langton books set in Concord are wonderful.
A Subway Named Mobius
If the kids want to really understand the T.
A Subway Named Mobius
Suldog
http://jimsuldog.blogspot.com
I finally had a chance to
I finally had a chance to read it, Sully. That's a scream. Thanks!
Edward Rowe Snow
..has several books that focus on Boston.
I remember when he showed up at the Walter Parker Junior High School in 68 to do an assembly on ship history.
They all make a nice bridge between a teen book and a grown up book.
"The Romance of Boston Bay" is one. He wrote another about the Harbor Islands.
Read 'Universal Hub' To Learn Up-To-The-Minute History Of Boston
.
The Big U
The Big U by Neal Stephenson is required reading for anyone attending, living near, or otherwise involved with Boston University.
Great Author
I had forgotten about that book. Also by the same author, set around Boston, and a quite hilarious story about a "Greenpeace" type chemist: Zodiac.
But I guess the rampant drug use in it makes it not so suitable [in some people's minds] for YA. Then again at that age I had already read "A Scanner Darkly" by Philip K. Dick.
Sounds interesting, and I'll
Sounds interesting, and I'll check it out.
Some kids-- and more importantly, some parents-- can handle the drug content and others can't. One of the reasons I'm not a YA librarian is because I tend to assume teens can read adult material, like you did. My YA librarian colleagues are much better at making that judgment call than I, based on the reader. I grew up before YA ballooned to the market it now is. While the robust YA scene is a huge improvement, and the YA options entice many teens to read more than they would be otherwise, having some more adult options in the mix is good. By 15, I was reading adult books because that was the only option once I read To Kill A Mockingbird and The Once and Future King.
Here's a thought- ask a librarian!
Sorry to be harsh. I would have been nicer to a different screen name.
It depends on the age. Make Way For Ducklings for a toddler up to Bibles, Brahmins, and Bosses, which was required reading for U.S. history in high school.
These are excellent recommendations!
A number of books here I either had not considered for YA or didn't know. Thanks a lot & please keep them coming!
This was inspired by a question I received from a school librarian in Virginia who knows first hand how kids who live near historic sites grow up reading so much more on that history than kids elsewhere.
A Classic
"Hello Wally" by the literary genius Jerry Remy.
That's not even a question...
"History fiction or non fiction to read before trip?"
What's with people nowadays not being able to actually ask a question, and instead act stupid and write an incomplete sentence with a question mark at the end? Just another sign of our moronic times, I guess.
Wow
Anyone ever tell you you're a real ray of fucking sunshine?
A veritable
..sultry beach Cancun afternoon, I tell ya.
Oh horrors
The little people are writing stuff and it is soooo dreadful!
How dare they attempt to use informal speech that makes the point clear!
I guess it really makes me feel special and superior, though. That is a plus!
Twitter.
140 characters. That's how it works.
Reading
Buddy if that's your biggest problem today then I would say you are a lucky man. Honestly, are you really that miserable?
for the more mature YA reader...
Dennis Lehane's The Given Day and Live by Night are super historical fiction centered on a Boston family from the WW1 era to prohibition. Has lots of historical context that describes why Boston is how it is today, including Brahmin vs Irish, the cop strike, and the mob. Sensational to a point, but great reads. The second book ranges fairly far afield from Boston, but tracks the family.
Lehane is dropping a new novel this year and I can't wait.