Showing posts with label picture books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label picture books. Show all posts

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Underground - Reading into the Subterranean Metaphor

source
There was time in my young adulthood when underground definitely meant nonconformist; challenging society; outside the mainstream, in hiding.  There was the Underground Railroad, the Weather Underground, the Urban Underground, the underground of poetry, music, and art.  It still means this.  There are, for example, many sites where underground eBooks can be downloaded and there are real dark coffee houses where underground artists can found.

It also means hidden but worthy of exposure. The urban underground holds the clues to restaurants, bargains, and the best of hip life. Underground guides tell the real truth about Google, universities, interviewing, travel destinations, standardized tests, and just about everything else - well over 1,000 titles are listed by Amazon alone.

And underground is still and always has been a place.  The nature of this place is the focus of my interest today.  Essential Questions:  What are the persistent elements of The Underground in k-12 texts and media?  Why are we attracted to this metaphor?  How and why do we get Underground?

Picture Books and Early Childhood - It is difficult to find underground spaces in picture books - they are too scary. The nearest thing is the abundant otherplaces that are found. These range from the very close and real (under the bed, in the closet or attic) to the fanciful (faraway islands, imaginary lands). To a child, all is imagination - so otherplace and realplace are allowed to intersect. Readers of the MS and YA books on this list will find the same, or similar, places. Older students should discuss this. In general, it is enough to point out to younger students the other places and what they do/do not contain, to discuss the emotions connected to them (inference exercise, often), and to discuss how the protagonist responds to the experience of being or confronting in the other place.  The realization of the reader is often personal because of this connection.  Older students will remember these connections.
  • Babar and Zephir - Jean De Brunhoff
  • Where the Wild Things Are and In the Night Kitchen - Maurice Sendak
  • The Berenstain Bears and the Spooky Old Tree - Stan and Jan Berenstain
  • The Dark at the Top of the Stairs - Sam McBratney
  • There's a Monster Under My Bed - James Howe
  • There's a Nightmare in My Closet - Mercer Mayer
  • Chris Van Allsburg - The Garden of Abdul Gagazi, Jumanji, The Polar Express, Zathura
  • fairy tales: Hansel and Gretel, Bluebird (might be too scary), Jack and the Beanstalk, Snow Queen
  • Rainbow Fish and the Sea Monster's Cave - Marcus Pfister - early reader, read aloud
  • The Minipins - Roald Dahl - forest - early reader, read aloud
  • The Secret Shortcut - Mark Teague - jungle - early reader, read aloud
  • Very Last First Time - Jan Andrews - bottom of the sea - early reader, read aloud
  • Alistair Underwater - Marilyn Sadler - a very deep pond - early reader, read aloud
  • James and the Giant Peach - Roald Dahl - inside a giant peach - read aloud and on-your-own after grade 3 or so
  • Film: Finding Nemo, Alice in Wonderland (animated)
As is true of zombie texts and metafiction texts, the critical teacher will find that there is a spiraling change in the meanings and interpretations of the metaphor as the texts become more advanced and complex.  Student readers above the elementary level should definitely read up and across the spiral.  That is to say, all readers should read and process at least one text from the lower reading level(s) and examine at least one form each of media and informational text at each of the level(s) (sometimes not possible for film).


Upper Elementary - Middle - At this level, underground begins to have metaphorical significance; setting often becomes itself an antagonist.  Look for mazes, dark happenings, confusion, threat - all of which are associated with a world that the protagonist must "work through" and ultimately "rise above" or, a wonderful exception, accept and join.
  • Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll - a must read
  • Tunnels (series) - Roderick Gordon - SF, with classical allusions - patience is necessary with Book 1's beginning, but after that the subterranean fantasy fun begins 
  • Journey to the Center of the Earth - H. G. Wells
  • The Dark Portal (series) - Robin Jarvis - mice, rats, cats, good and evil
  • The City of Ember (series) - Jeanne DuPrau - the 1st book is especially significant for this metaphor, as the child protagonists escape an underground world
  • The Girl Who Fell Beneath Fairyland and Led the Revels There - Catherynne Valente - there is Fairyland and then there is Fairyland Below... - sequel
  • Slake's Limbo - Felice Holman - orphaned run-away lives underground in NYC - metaphorical and lyrical, so it challenges today's MS readers, which is unfortunate
  • "Orpheus" and "Theseus and the Minotaur" - the myths are available in many forms - must reads
  • The Shadow Thieves (Cronus Chronicles) - Anne Ursu - like Percy Jackson, the protagonists travel into the mythic underground - this book is the better by far
  • The Graveyard Book - Neil Gaiman
  • Book of Lost Things - John Connolly
  • Kit's Wilderness - David Almond
  • The Underland Chronicles - Suzanne Collins - Middle to YA - series of 5 fantasies about a boy hero named Gregor, a world under NYC, and dark happenings
  • The Infernal Devices (series) - Cassandra Claire - Victorian London underground
  • also underground elements in: The Lord of the Rings, The Time Machine, Ship Breaker, Mockingjay, Maze Runner
YA - although YA readers can read and enjoy the above books, the titles below move into the dark underground of the soul and the mazes of fear and awareness that almost-adults can and should be confronting.
  • Neverwhere - Neil Gaiman
  • A Star Called Henry - Roddy Doyle - Irish uprising - survival means learning to travel underground
  • Everneath (series) - Brodi Ashton - young woman stolen by a steamy immortal (sound familiar?)
  • Enclave - Anne Aguirre - April 2012 - YA update of The City of Ember
  • Notes from the Underground - Fyodor Dostoevsky - freely download one ebook translation here - another from Project Gutenberg - Schmoop's guide is useful for HS students reading this challenging metaphorical text
  • Plato's allegory of The Cave
  • Invisible Man - Ralph Ellison - metaphorically and also literally underground, this black narrator reflects on his life and how he chooses to live it - Schmoop's Guide
  • This Side of Brightness - Colum McCann - subway society in NYC
  • The Woman in the Dunes - Kobo Abe - Japanese surreal
  • Inferno - Dante - painted images of this descent into Hell are also great text
  • The Underground Man - Mick Jackson
  • Subterranean - James Rollins - not deep literature, but a good modern read of the SF adventure variety
  • The Great Stink - Clare Clarke - Victorian England sewer construction, but also a murder mystery 
  • King Rat - China Mieville - wonderful fantasy, but only for persistent readers
  • Level 7 - Mordecai Roshwald - dystopian
  • The Descent - Jeff Long - cave
  • In the Skin of a Lion - Michael Ondaatje - literal tunnel-digger, metaphorical plunge - overlaps with characters in The English Patient
  • "The Defenders" - Philip K. Dick - free for Kindle - post-apocalypse

Film and other Media - Viewer/readers should ask: What is the purpose of the underground in this film?  How does it serve as allegory for or parallel to our world?  How does Underground in film compare to Underground in fiction and fact?  I have put the films in order of age-appropriateness, but teachers need to preview them before using.
  • Finding Nemo - corny, maybe, but the underground cave scenes are worth study
  • Journey to the Center of the Earth - multiple versions are available
  • The Time Machine - Morlock sequences
  • Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull - have to love those caverns
  • Metropolis - YA (boring to MS kids), but MS students should be able to get the message from selected clips
  • Tremors - pure SF - giant worms in the desert - PG 13
  • The Matrix - focus upon those scenes of the alternative underground society
  • Voices in the Tunnels: In Search of the Mole People - YA
  • Dark Days - YA
  • Saving Grace - the new Canadian film - YA
  • The Descent - cave (not the same as the novel) - YA
Informational text - for elementary students, there are lots of good informational skinny books about building subways and exploring caves. I recommend a trip to the library.  These titles are selected to support the MS and YA fiction titles. 
  • Graffiti Lives: Beyond the Tag in New York's Urban Underground  - Gregory J. Snyder
  • The City Beneath Us: Building the New York Subway - New York Transit Museum - wonderful photographs
  • The Mole People: Life in the Tunnels Beneath New York City - Jennifer Toth
  • "The Vertical Topography of the Science Fiction Film" - a serious and scholarly look at various underground spaces
  • "West Side Improvements"- a graphical iJournalism piece found in Synchopated: an Anthology of Nonfiction Picto-essays
  • Hollow Earth: A Long and Curious History of Imagining Strange Lands... - David Standish
Gaming
  • Tunnels and Trolls - a multi-player or solo-player role-play and problem-solving game similar to Dungeons and Dragons - all of the rule books and encounter/master guides can be freely downloaded at the site 
  • Steamscope HD - the ultimate tunnel experience - only for iPad 2  

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Graphic Novels

[Update: check out my Graphic Novels page for book lists.]

Below is a post I made today in response to a serious query on English Companion Ning about the validity of teaching graphic novels as "text."  I got so excited about the topic that I ordered three graphic novels while working on the comment.  My love of the graphic began with picture books - my own childhood books, many of which were saved by my mother and now live in my granddaughter Bea's bookcase.

I believe that my fascination with this genre is also connected to my reading history.  I learned to read in Nebraska and Wisconsin cemeteries, on long walks with my college professor dad.  From him I also learned early to love fantasy (Arthurian) and SF.  From my mother's collection of Horizon magazines I learned the power of myth and image.  Graphic novels, like the best iPad apps, are among today's best tactile and literary venues for showing students different paths to reading and learning.

Learning what?   
  • "The need to conduct research and to produce and consume media is embedded into every aspect of today’s curriculum."  (Common Core Standards, Key Design Considerations).
  • "Integrate and evaluate information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually, quantitatively, and orally." (Common Core Standards, Anchor Standards)
  • every single ELA analytical term and method can be visually demonstrated using selected graphic novels - the best of them cover most of the tested content
Comparing texts in different formats is not a new idea - I was doing that with 16mm film long ago - what a pain.  It is now much easier to integrate film media, thanks to YouTube, but graphic media has been more of a challenge to teachers.  The graphic novel, it seems to me, fits the bill for today's teachers, at all grade levels.

Matching graphic text to student in terms of appropriateness is important.  So read the books before giving them to students.

My post is in response to this query (the following discussion is going to be good as well - take note of the post by Karen LaBonte pointing teachers to Scoop.It, which in turn points us at this Book Shelf interview: Graphic storytelling and the new literacies and many more terrific resources for teaching with graphic novels.  Check it out.

You might also want to explore the concept of the picto-essaySyncopated: An Anthology of Nonfiction Picto-Essays is a starter collection. These short graphic pieces eyeball an experience (e.g. memoir), place, or time, crossing back and forth from history to "you are there" as only the visual world can.  I would use them along with the web to enrich visual literacy and visual history lessons. Students with drawing-disability can generally create a wonderful product with a digital camera.
[My response to Raef Earl Williams, who writes: "With the pressures of teaching all standards and standardized testing, can you rationalize teaching this type of text year in and year out? "] There is also new pressure to teach creative thinking and textual interpretation, and to have students work in purposeful discussion groups.  I think that the best graphic novels are a legitimate text source for developing higher order skills - including comprehension.  I also agree with you that the power of images is a literacy that should be taught.  One approach might be to compare graphic to text versions of literature.  I did this with Fahrenheit 451. The Gunslinger, The Martian Chronicles, Something Wicked This Way Comes, Twilight, The Odyssey, and Beowulf (several graphic and comic versions of this are available) are other possibilities  [and, I have since discovered, most of Shakespeare and Mark Twain, many great moments in US history... the concept of compare/contrast is HUGE using this format].

It is certainly possible to study any element of literature through its visual presentation in graphic novels - much as you might study a visual image (painting, photograph, etc.).  [in fact, some concepts might be best introduced or reinforced with graphic novels: irony, mood, point of view, contrast, parallelism - to name a few]

Here are some titles I would love to teach: American Vampire, Vol. 1 (because Stephen King was involved - but there are also a vol.2 and 3 is on the way), Persepolis, Trickster (Native American storytellers and graphic artists), American Born Chinese, Stitches - a Memoir, Shaun Tan (The Arrival, Lost and Found), and (of course - you would have to offer this) Maus.

American Library Association maintains lists of the best YA graphic novels published each year.  The number of titles alone is one reason to attend to them in the classroom.

Since I am having fun imagining this:
  • Hark a Vagrant and Wondermark are online sources of excellent, intelligent "shorts" - check out the Hark archives to show kids that graphic is not "dumb." Find a 1-panel short called "The Hole" at this unlikely source: ELL online resource Grammarman (also noted in my post Storytelling Spirit). Grammarman Comic also offers short graphic lessons: comics with errors, worksheets, answer sheets.  And another in the .pdf download from, of all places, spirit - the journal of Southwest Airlines, October 2011.
  • There are many comic apps - so your students should have no trouble finding DC and other titles for their smart phones. I use Comics, the reader for ComiXology.com.
  • I would probably begin with a study of wordless picture books: The Mysteries of Harris Burdick (there is a collection of short stories - one for each picture - due out this fall), Woolvs in the Sitee, Varmints, and Chalk are four of my favorites, but ask a children's librarian. 
  • Inanimate Alice is a terrific graphic puzzle story - a good problem-solving challenge for a visual reader. There will surely be more of these fully digital visual stories in the months to come.
  • It would be interesting to have students do some deep thinking about the mood, tone, and content of graphic novels - so little humor, so much violence and darkness (just a study of color across several titles would be fun).

On the "create" end of learning, you might want to have groups collaborate on a graphic story - apps like Comic Life and online tools like Make Beliefs Comix can support the non-artistic.  With middle schoolers, we did work on large pages as well as digital ones.   Have fun!

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Almost-Great Bad Guys for Almost-Adult Level Readers

Piggy Pie, Margie Palatini, illus. by Howard Fine
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My "iLearn Essay" - I have written in a form students should be practicing in middle school.  The essay is a record of a journey to learning and realization.

Yet another school year dedicated to bullying causes me to wonder why our kids are not getting the point. I have decided that the approach must be wrong. The focus of every program I have experienced or reviewed is What to do as a victim or onlooker.  Perhaps the focus should be on the bully - Why does she do it? What is she after?  [update 10/16/13: empathy for the bad guy is the topic of a recent scientific study, which suggests to me that the more literately drawn the bad guy is, the more complex the reading experience will be.]


I have not met in education or other life many adults who truly bullied me - exactly two. The things they did, to me and to others, were equivalently unpleasant.  Yet the two could not have been more different in method, in motive, in planning, in rationalization, in ethics, and in the nature of their actions.  The word bad does not begin to describe these bullies as individuals, but, from my perspective, the word Bad does provide an adequate encapsulation of their actions.  The important bold point is this: We do not understand individuals or their actions through plot lines. We learn about individuals and actions by studying people. 


But teachers know this.  So do good parents.  Understanding individuals requires effort, attention, patience, and - generally - creativity.  Which, in my mind, makes the study of the Bad Guy a perfect focus for addressing Common Core reading and writing skills at any level.  As characters, the Great and Almost-Great Bad are far more challenging than the good guys.

But the Bad Guy (by any name) is rarely studied in the classroom, dismissed as either shallow or too hard to handle.  Googling "bad guys in video games" yielded 330,000,000 hits, but "bad guys in literature" yielded only 1/5 of that. Sites such as BretiLinks and Schmoop ignore the Bad or, at best, give the Bad Guy cursory mention under the term Antagonist.

You will remember that the origin of Protagonist is in Greek theater. The term was used for the actor who played the chief part, often meaning he who literally entered the stage first. Not all protagonists were Good Guys. Consider Medea and Agamemnon - complex people whose actions are not good and who fit my definition of the Almost-Great Bad-Action Guy. When we study Medea, we study choices, morality and the nature of our relationship to life and death. We think and feel deeply. 

Generally, the protagonist's - hence the child/almost-adult/adult reader's - point of view clouds his perception of the complex nature of the fictional antagonist.  Siding with the piggies in Piggy Pie, we delight in the demise of Gritch the Witch.  But by stepping back to explore her (OK, relatively flat) character, we come to realize with this reviewer that she has "a comic audacity that makes her trouncing all the better" (Amazon).  How the middle school hallways would change if children delighted in the trouncing of bullies!

Bad Guys should be studied, and it is far safer for a middle school to study them in fiction than in fact.  This study should be an entry into The Race to Stop Bullying.  So I propose that there be, at least once in each year, a shift in focus - from the Good Guy to the Bad Guy.  As is true in any text selection process, only the best examples should be used for study.  So what follows is a guide to selecting texts with Great Bad Guys, with further argument for the importance of the proposed unit.

A Great Bad Guy is a round character - understood in motive, thought, feelings, and actions. He [of course She also] is multi-leveled and complex.  We develop a perverse sympathy for the Great Bad Guy, a push-pull attraction like that of a moth circling a candle.  This character's depth is less about his actions than about why he is bad and why he chooses to continue being bad.  We carefully consider his options as we read. We delight in his fall, and we remember it.

Or, as stated in The Top 100 Videogame Villains :   "So what makes a great villain? He or she not only has to pose a real threat to the hero, but they have to be memorable. It's a villain's destiny to be defeated. That's just how it goes. But when the villain lives on in our hearts rather than the hero, they've won in their own way." 

This is not the stuff of picture books and fairy tales; it is the stuff of analysis

Bringing Bad Guys to the attention of the Almost-Adult reader is important. Grade 7 or 8 is high time for students to begin meta-thinking about ethics and morality. Many 6's are ready as well.  The problem is that kids are learning a lot about what it means to be a bully-fighter, a successful protagonist, but learning little about what makes the antagonist tick.  All kids have in them the seeds of Bad.  We don't want to just hate those impulses - we want to understand them.


My husband and I have just finished reading a series of mysteries called Shardlake, by C.J. Sansom.  Because we were reading as a 2-person lit-circle (on iPad and Kindle), we talked. Much as the horrific England of Henry VIII's last years depressed us, the Bad Guys in the books enervated us.  There is no one slimy-badder than Richard Rich, no motives more unforgiving than those of the Duke of Norwich.  These were historically real people - what they do in the book they actually did do, in concept if not in actuality.  Great Bad People are plentiful in history, which is another reason students need to begin to think about them. But in made-up life it is not easy to find Great Bad Guys.  That is even more true in middle-level than in adult level fiction.

As John and I discussed Shardlakes's nemeses, all of whom were totally creepy but also all of whom fell short of the roundness of Great,  I asked John (also a retired ELA teacher), about  truly Great Bad Guys he has met in literature. Shakespeare's Richard III, Macbeth, Edmund, Claudius, Iago...  Dickens' Uriah Heep, Scrooge (before he is reformed), Madame Defarge...  We concluded that the list of Great Bad Guys in adult fiction is remarkably short, and largely confined to the works of the great pre-20th century writers and those modern novelists who set out to develop all major characters thoroughly and who do not shy away from deeply drawn, ambivalent Bad (Morrison, Knowles, and Penn Warren, McCarthy, King, and Larsson come to mind).  I did find online this list of the 50 Greatest Villains in Literature, but only 11 can possibly be considered YA and only two would be at all appealing to today's students. The list is a bit out of date, and I don't agree with its choices anyway. So I have decided to make my own list.

Villains are Bad, no doubt about that.  They are memorable for their actions. But to return to my definition, they are not Great unless their appeal lies more in their complexity than in their actions.  Villains, by and large, comprise the stereotype that students should learn to identify. It is, however, rare to find a complex villain in almost-adult level print fiction. There may, in fact, be more complexity in comic book, video game and film villains than there is in print. Why is this? Because these are powerful media for kids who want to face down Bad.  And media is built on stereotype. For the most part, print can go deeper.

Woolvs in the Sitee, Wild and Spudvilas
Elemental forces - emotions, weather, disease and Society/Culture - are often better bad guys than written-to-be-bad characters. Dystopian and survival fiction take advantage of this. But forces can not be Great Bad Guys, because they are by definition 1-dimensional and implacable.  The almost-adult reader can not begin to grapple with any underlying social or cosmic complexity, if it is even there. Elemental power is in the ways it acts upon a protagonist and in the after-effects of these actions - not in reason, feeling, or intellect.  Nonetheless, a few elemental forces titles should be on the reading list, simply because the best elemental bad guys grow in complexity over the span of a story, a novel, or a series.  A classic example is The Ring; a modern classic example is The Capital as a force in The Hunger Games trilogy.

What about Cruelty?

"Just as ants will bring down a slug and then carry it away (we saw it on TV), so the Spotty Bulorb is surrounded in its sleep, worn down and then killed. While its children watch! Or maybe you killed them first? OK, so it's just like nature. But nature is so cruel" (The Top 10 Game Bad Guys You Don't Want to Kill).

Cruel is the most common 1-word analysis of the Bad Guy. Cruel describes an action more accurately than it describes a person.  As the above quotation indicates, cruelty does not choose favorites: a protagonist will be cruel in order to win, in error, or in anger. Do we then label that (generally remorseful) character as Bad?  Cruel is the descriptor most basic to Bad stereotype, and therefore most to be avoided as a label. It is best to always discuss motive along with actions.

Ironically, the most powerfully drawn Bad Guys operate on the protagonists with the inevitability of elemental forces, making it easy to view them as such. This is not good enough.  These characters need to be clearly identified for what they are, in all the aspects of character.

Jabberwocky, illustrated by Christopher Myers
Men and Monsters are also often 1-dimensional, which is a simple explanation for the paucity of Great and Almost-Great Bad Guys in middle-level fiction. This is a result of the easy, often media-centric, stereotypes that shape the bad guys.  Pale, piercing-small-blue-eyed (or glowing red-eyed), tall, disfigured, sadistic, very smart, dark clothed, mysterious, shadowy, slithery, relentless, blood-thirsty... and powerful.  I love the bad guys in the Bourne movies, spy thrillers, X-men, TV shows, etc., and I love loving them. But they engender in me no feelings of curiosity, sympathy, or understanding. In contrast, the best Almost-Great Bad Guys arouse a questioning response in the reader. 

A note about parallel informational text: I don't find it at all surprising that YA fiction stops short of drawing the Bad Guy roundly.  Real bad guys do terrible things to millions of innocent people. I googled "bad guys list" and quickly found this list of the Top 10 Most Evil Men.   I suppose if you have to accommodate the Common Core by finding non-fiction text to parallel novels and stories, you might share this list with middle schoolers.  Most middle schoolers love to list gruesome facts, make timelines, t-shirts, vodcasts, and Keynotes about information.  There are also undoubtedly local news reports of murder, rape and abuse - a community connection to information - that can be read as parallel texts. 

What really would be gained by this parallel reading?  I have a brilliant friend who has spent much of his adult life trying to understand - to think around - Nazism and Fascism.  His writing is dense and psychological.  Not middle school stuff.  At best, a middle schooler researching Hitler would find the actions interesting in a push-pull way, but the person would be understood in as a 1-dimensional, stereotypical bad-guy. There is NO true learning in this type of interaction with text.  And I doubt that there can be at this level.  

This leads me to believe that a middle-level understanding of historical bad guys and real bad guys is best gained through fiction.  Exploration of a fictional Almost-Great Bad Guy, deeply discussed with peers, can lead to insights into the world of Bad, just as a toddler gains understanding of real-world fears by reading a "scary" book over and over again. Authors of books for children, after all, bring adult understandings of Bad to their creations.  In the best literature, the child reader, of any age, is given more information than he can process.  Intuitively, the reader returns again and again to the book, the picture, the Bad Guy in a series, to thresh out what this Badness is all about.  Pulling the resulting connections forward is what reading-for-understanding is all about.

So teachers must take the time to:
  1. select the best fiction and 
  2. talk about and focus upon the Bad Guys, not just their good-guy opponents (and, generally, conquerors).
Fiction can also be film.  It is not just accommodating the Common Core but also good practice to make a media connection to fiction.  There are some excellent Bad Guy models in films appropriate for middle-level readers and in "adult" films that can be safely clipped (YouTube clips are generally available). Here is a look at the top 50 Most Vile Movie Villains (too bad it does not go past 2008 - some great films are missing - and we only see 26 titles here).  Not many of these films are appropriate for the 12-15 year old crowd, so I have gathered my own list of Almost-Great and Great Bad Guys in films for middle-level viewers (some will require parent permission).

Is Bad different for girl readers?  Many almost-adult girl readers prefer romance or realistic fiction to fantasy/SF, historical fiction, or adventure (in my experience, it is about half and half).  Although my definition of the Almost-Great Bad Guy works across genre, it is interesting to note that there are patterns of Bad that are found almost totally in romance and "for girls" realistic fiction.
Polomoche - Babar and Zephir - a predator?
  1. The sexual predator.  I can not do a better job with this concept that that done in YA, Romance and Rape Culture.  This essay needs to be read, and its ideas discussed, with almost-adult girl readers of this genre.  I have put on my list a few titles mentioned in the post (and the linked-to post), but not Lovely Bones, which many of my girls would want to see included. 
  2. The queen bee. Boys are not interested in this very female type of bullying, but many girls thrive on the series devoted to Queens and Wannabe's.  I am putting only The Clique series on my list, judging others to be too vapid or too sexually charged (read more in Naomi Wolf's article), but any middle or high school library will carry many titles in this genre.  It is interesting to me that although the Queen Bee is a Bad Guy, and in at least one Clique book an Almost-Great Bad Guy, it is girl culture that is the true Bad Guy.  This is a realization for the adult reader, however, making The Clique a good litmus test for passage to almost-adult reading. 
Is Bad different for boy readers?  In my experience, girls can handle graphical violence and physical acts in literature on par with boys, although girls may not seek them out quite as avidly.  In general, boys want action in their reading. Boys want the Dark to be dealt with swiftly, in harsh small confrontations leading to a majestic final confrontation. Shades of grey are difficult for most middle-level boys, who will not often analyze character as deeply, or as readily, as girls. "Exactly what IS" is what boys want to talk about.  This points to the necessity of including Almost-Great Bad Guys in their reading, but also to including significant scaffolding through simplified models (analysis of 1-dimension antagonists and plots), visual models (comics, picture books, movies), and (new idea to me) even connections to the world of video games.  Please take the time to download this freely available curriculum, WoWinSchool - A Hero's Journey - written to make The World of Warcraft (along with The Hobbit) into a powerful, effective literacy experience.  Its authors speak to my point about connection, although they too undervalue the Bad Guys.  I am not a video game player, but I will ask the experts I know to give me advice about other game titles to include in my list. 

What are the important connections between the Almost-Great Bad Guy and the Protagonist?

Campbell
To the extent that the titles on my list are all versions of the Hero motif, the growth of/journey of the protagonist over time resulting from actions by the Bad Guy are a legitimate focus of analysis. Bad Guys enter in the initial stages of the cycle, but are also prominent in the Transformation and (sometimes) Atonement stages.

It is critically important for middle schoolers also to look at the nature of the antagonist independent from that of the hero.  As the hero grows and changes, so does the Almost-Bad Guy, the best of whom are remarkably adaptable. In fact, they may make a journey which is almost a mirror image of that taken by the hero.

As the perceptive adult reader knows, in the best literature bad is as complex as good, often more so. Understanding this complexity is the key to a successful completion of the hero's journey.  We see this element of Bad in the clues followed by Indiana Jones, in Gollum's teasings, in the riddles that must be solved in classic fantasies such as Over Sea, Under Stone, and in the many quests of Harry Potter. A successful hero must agree to battle complexity, or he will not win.  It is only through analysis leading to this conclusion that the developing-adult reader can buy into, or connect with, the importance of emulating the positive traits of the hero.  There is no heightened understanding to be had in reading fiction with a "just Cruel" or "just Evil" antagonist.

    What are the criteria for selection to my lists?  The Almost-Great Bad Guy:
    1. is gradually drawn or gradually introduced into the story, not a stereotype appearing suddenly in the plot as a complete creation. This is a major differentiation between "literary" characters and "fairy tale" or "picture book" characters - the reader should feel realization rather than surprise. Good writers will use many techniques of description, foreshadowing, metaphor, association, and symbolism to accomplish this character development;
    2. is unique in some way, compared to characters in other middle-level fiction. Although recognition of character patterns and models is an important challenge to the developing-adult reader,  defining unique characterization is even more important;
    3. has a least a modicum of complexity in and of himself. Often this takes the form of a character weakness, an error made, or another chink that the protagonist exploits. The more gradually this complexity is revealed the better. In the Almost-Great Bad Guy, this chink serves to replace true character complexity and arouses curiosity or questioning in the almost-adult reader;
    4. (related to #3) is not just Evil, and may not even contain elements of Evil. However, any discussion of Bad Guys must also be a discussion of Evil. Where is the line between good and evil drawn by the author? in life? in other books? This is a great use of a Concept Definition Map (see Teaching);
    5. is not a pure contrast to or opposite of the protagonist. That is a fairy-tale solution. Bad and Good should have a least one significant trait in common, which means that the Bad Guy does not have to be older, taller, smaller, smarter, stronger or anything more or less than the protagonist, just badder. 
    That, then, is my working definition.  If a student gains nothing more than an understanding of the above five points, he will enhance his ability to understand and appreciate Great Bad Guys in both fiction and fact later on.  I feel that without this early analysis the almost-adult reader will move forward with a fixed compass and rose-colored glasses.

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    My Lists

    Chalk
    Children's Literature (openers and background) that can have a focus on the Bad Guy not the good guys. Graphic novel versions are available as well for most of these titles, and I highly recommend them for the classroom. Back-connecting to these visuals, simple plots, and 1-demensional Bad Guys are important to the development of more sophisticated literary understandings. Flesh out the characteristics (physical and personality) and actions of these characters. I would keep a chart displayed in the classroom throughout the unit.




    • "Rumpelstiltskin"
    • "Hansel and Gretel"
    • "Jack and the Beanstalk"
    • "Rapunzel"
    • "The Snow Queen"
    • A retelling of Theseus and the Minotaur (check out this great Wondermark comic)
    • Alice in Wonderland - any format, even Disney, will show the Red Queen for the bad gal she is, but other characters should also be discussed 
    • Chalk - Thomson - picture book 
    • Babar and Zephir - de Brunhoff - picture book - Polomoche is a fascinating Bad Guy who nearly gains Almost-Great status.  The blogger of Vintage Kids' Books agrees with me. 
    • Terrible Things: an Allegory of the Holocaust - Bunting - picture book - connection to reality (Holocaust) - can students suggest other books that make connections to reality-Bad?
    • The Lion and the Mouse - Pickney - picture book - discuss POV and absence of Evil here, as well as the weakness chink
    • The Wolves in the Walls - Gaimen - picture book - another discussion of POV - nice for its humor
    • Piggie Pie - Palatini - picture book - a witch with a personality
    • Dhegdeer: A Scary Somali Folktale - Hassan - picture book
    • Woolvs in the Sitee Wild - picture book to take seriously - this one disappeared twice from my grade 7 classroom library
    • Jabberwocky - illustrated by Myers (get that one) - you might do an all-class read-aloud of the Lewis Carroll before introducing this picture book - preconceptions and stereotype must enter the discussion here
    • The Widow's Broom - van Allsburg - picture book - all van Allsburg has a deeper level
    • X-men and other comic books - leave this up to your kids - prices have gone up on comics, so you may only get a few contributions to the class library, but there is a free DC Comics app!
    Read A-loud Books - make connections - these help to bring home the concept of Bad Guy related to Setting - like many of the picture books above, the gradual introduction of Bad comes through clearly in these stories.
    • Beowulf - a graphic novel or comic book version is great for this unit - Grendel's mother is the focus, but the arrival of Grendel should not be ignored
    • Coraline - Gaimen - movie or read-aloud
    • Weasel (also below) - many students will have met this book in earlier grades
    The Novels and Stories - Group or Independent Reading


    Elemental Forces / Situations Beyond Protagonist's Control
     
    Fantasy/SF
    • "The Lottery" - Jackson - this is an excellent story for Reader's Theater - dystopian
    • "Harrison Bergeron" - Bradbury
    • Pod - Wallenfels - fear of faceless aliens - human Bad Guys also surface in one of the scenarios, providing the underlying irony in the novel
    • Ship Breaker - Bacigalupi - situational, societal Bad - also a few human Bad Guys
    • Unwind - Schusterman - Bad Guys surface eventually, but the societal Bad is really what drives the novel
    • The Declaration - Malley - government, but an interesting Headmistress character (close to being Almost-Great) 
    • How I Live Now - Rosoff - terrorists, war
    • Life as We Knew It - Pfeffer - astronomical disaster - I love the persistent optimism that rises above the Bad in this book - can be a read-aloud
    • Little Brother - Doctorow - societal, government - also one good individual Bad Gal
    • Fahrenheit 451 - Bradbury -  societal, government, but also a good Monster and an Almost-Great antagonist
    Realistic
    • "The Red Room" - Wells - fear itself (available online)
    • The Lord of the Flies - Golding - situation
    • The Chocolate War - Cormier - school society
    • Give a Boy a Gun - Strasser - society, peer pressure, bullying
    • End Game - Garden  [I suggest you read it first] - society, peer pressure, bullying
    • Wringer - Spinelli - peer pressure 
    • The Wave - Strasser - bullying
    • Witness - Hesse - KKK, racism 
    • Once - Gleitzman - Holocaust
    • Milkweed - Spinelli - Holocaust
    • Night - Wiesel - Holocaust 
    Monsters and Men: Almost-Great Bad Guys in Fiction
     
    SF/Fantasy
    easier:
    • Skeleton Man - Bruchac - creature - would be a good read-aloud
    • Candor - Bachorz - father
    • The Dark Portal - Jarvis - mysterious creature, bad rats (I love this book)
    • Rash - Hautman - prison guards - the Bad is realistic, even though this is SF - interesting paired with Holes
    • The Book Without Words - Avi - magician - wonderful somewhat humorous scenes with Bad Guy
    • The Mysterious Benedict Society - Stewart - human
    • H.I.V.E. (series - read 1st one first) - Warner - good model of genre - human
    • Shadow Thieves - Ursu - gods and forces
    more challenging:
    • The Knife of Never Letting Go (3 in the series) - Ness - human man - wonderful contrast of men/monsters throughout the series - the Bad definitely gets badder as the series progresses
    • The Hunger Games - Collins - human men & women - all 3 in series are good, but #3 has the best of everythng
    • Clay - Almond - kid - retelling of the Golem story, so pair it with a Golem picture book or graphic novel - are "monsters" always Bad?
    • Good Omens - Pratchett and Gaimen - agents of God and Devil - a real challenge
    • The Book of Lost Things - Connolly - creature
    • The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings - Tolkien (read for Gollum especially)
    • The House of the Scorpion - Farmer - humans, some old, some not so
    • Twilight - Meyer - creatures - not my choice, but I give in to pressure from my girls - movie tie-in
    • The Gunslinger  (Dark Tower, Book 1) - King - human - not a "kids' book" but probably the best book on this list at identifying a complex protaganist (who can be very Bad) as well as other Bad Guys - would be interesting paired with the excellent graphic novel version and with Graceling (Cashore) or Mockingjay (Hunger Games, Book 3), which also contain ambivalent heroism
    Realistic
    easier:
    • Holes - Sachar - guards, including a woman - what great bad guys!
    • The Clique - Lisi Harrison - mean girls, in series
    more challenging: 
    • Revolver - Sedgwick - adult man
    • Hush, Hush - Fitzpatrick - sexual predator - use with caution
    • I am the Cheese - Cormier - adult man - has a movie tie-in
    • A Separate Peace - Knowles (does anyone read this anymore?) - teen
    • Monster - Myers - teen, but also Society
    Film and Other Media 
    • Who Framed Roger Rabbit?
    • Snow White (Disney)
    • Star Wars (all are good, Darth Vader most interesting)
    • The Golden Compass
    • 101 Dalmatians
    • It - not for the faint of stomach
    • Carrie
    • Heathers 
    • Bat Man
    • Road to Perdition - excellent for advanced students when paired with King's The Gunslinger
    • Independence Day - interesting, light pairing with Knife of Never Letting Go
    • Video Games:  World of Warcraft (any - use with curriculum),  Legend of Zelda (any), Final Fantasy VII, LittleBigPlanet (because this is a community game, you might have to introduce the students to Collector as part of front-loading)
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    Teaching Ideas
    Essential Questions for Discussion/Writing
    • Are all Bad Guys Evil?  What are the differences between Evil and Bad?
    • What is the connection between Actions and the people who perform them?  
    • What are the UR, or common, traits of Bad Guys?  of Bad Forces?  Think of both physical and personality/character traits.  Do these traits  hold up in real life?   
    • How have stereotyped Bad Guys/Gals evolved in today's fiction, movies, TV, comics?
    • Why are Bad Guys bad?  (What are the motives of Bad Guys?)
    • How do Bad Guys/ Bad Forces in fiction have a relevance beyond building plot and contrasting to the hero's/protagonist's character?
    • What are the connections between Bad Guys and the Settings in which they operate?
    • What connections can be made between the most successful Bad Guys in fiction and real (living or historical) bad people?  How can reading fiction help you gain better insights into real bad people?  There is a great opportunity to connect to both history and current events in this unit.  A read-aloud of Yep's short classic Hiroshima or selections from They Poured Fire on Us From the Sky or Little Bee will provoke a cross-over discussion.
    • What are the major tools used by protagonists to battle Bad Guys?  Is there a priority list? Is this list applicable to your battles with everyday bad people?
    • What can be learned from the names given to Bad Guys?
    Related Activities (just suggestions for activities that middle schoolers might enjoy - this is part of the Engagement and Connection process - see also ideas embedded in the essay)
    • Begin with children's texts and video - embed stereotypes in this unit! Have students make suggestions for content and share personal favorites
    • Create a reader's wiki like Spleefmistress' Guide to Being Evil - but make it focus on Being Really Bad  - the Motives and Careers sections are especially important, and I would add Actions as a category (I would not show the model site to the kids, by the way - just create a similar format and have them build on it)
    • Brainstorm/Concept Definition Map BAD - divide the exercise into "related words" - "connected reality" - "words beginning with..." - "images that come to mind" - Do the same with Evil  - Do the same with Good or Hero
    • Journal BAD - in the middle-level grades, this can be a cross between a diary and a journal.  I would suggest writing for at least 5 minutes every class during the unit - You can jump start writing with a list of situations or places students can connect to (e.g. kindergarten, playground, lockers, revenge, bullying, Facebook...) and build up to journaling about the readings
    • Use the district/school handbook as a literacy source: what are Bad actions in terms of the rules? How do they mesh with actions in the reading? 
    • Comics - use paper or digital tools to generate comic retellings of novels from the Bad Guy POV
    • Other writing activities might include: advice columns, diaries/media pages, Facebook pages - assign anything generally done from the protagonist POV
    • Film shorts of climactic scenes/important scenes from the POV of or highlighting the Bad Guy
    • Video humorous or satirical "news reports" and documentaries
    • Have students diagram the Bad Guy's Journey, ala Campbell (above). An alternative diagram is found here.  Discuss the differences between this and the hero's journey
    • If you want to make the video games connection (which I highly suggest as a choice), also make use of online resources  - most games have character descriptions online, as well as discussion boards (example: Collector, from The LittleBigPlanet)
     More reading for Teachers