1901: Music and Art

Music:
Richard Strauss: Feuersnot
Anton Dvorak: Rusalka
Scott Joplin: The Easy Winners Joplin had already had a hit in 1899 with the publication of the sheet music to his tune The Maple Leaf Rag. Over the next few years ragtime would become the most popular musical genre in the United States. Karate Kid, by the way, has been practicing The Maple Leaf Rag for a while, but he still doesn’t have it quite up to speed.

Art:
Nineteen year old Spanish artist Pablo Picasso presents his first exhibition in Paris in June, 1901.

Child with a Dove by Pablo Picasso, c.1901.

Child with a Dove, c.1901

1901: Books and Literature

Nobel Prize for Literature: Sully Prudhomme (Who?) French poet and essayist.

Fiction Bestsellers
1. Winston Churchill, The Crisis (not the British politician Winston Churchill)
2. Maurice Thompson, Alice of Old Vincennes
3. Bertha Runkle, The Helmet of Navarre
4. Gilbert Parker, The Right of Way
5. Irving Bacheller, Eben Holden
6. Elinor Glyn, The Visits of Elizabeth
7. Harold MacGrath, The Puppet Crown
8. Maurice Hewlett, Richard Yea-and-Nay
9. George Barr McCutcheon, Graustark
10. Irving Bacheller, D’ri and I

Critically Acclaimed and Historically Significant:
Frank Norris, The Octopus: A Story of California A fictional attack on the monopolistic stranglehold of American railroad tycoons over the business and life of the entire country.
E. A. Ross, Social Control. Ross was an American sociologist, eugenicist, political progressive, and supporter of the Bolshevik revolution in Russia.
Booker T. Washington, Up from Slavery
George Bernard Shaw, Man and Superman I read a lot of Shaw, including this play, back when I was in college, but I guess that I would find the humor and the ideas a lot more pernicious and at the same time superficial nowadays. I prefer Shaw’s arch nemesis and friendly combatant, Chesterton, these days.
George A. Gordon, New Epoch for Faith
Rudyard Kipling, Kim I tried to read this picaresque story of a British/Irish orphan boy who travels across India with a Tibetan mentor or guru, and eventually becomes involved in espionage as a small part of The Great Game. I just couldn’t make myself finish.
Anton Chekov, Uncle Vanya and The Three Sisters

Nonfiction set in 1901:
American Eve: Evelyn Nesbit, Stanford White, The Birth of the “It” Girl, and the Crime of the Century by Paula Ururburu. Recommended by Alyce at At Home With Books.

Fiction set in 1901:
Jocelyn, Marthe. Mable Riley: A Reliable Record of Humdrum, Peril, and Romance. (MG Fiction)
Turner, Nancy. These is My Words: The Diary of Sarah Agnes Prine, 1881-1901. (MG Fiction)
Death of Riley by Rhys Bowen. Recommended by Whimpulsive.

1901: Events and Inventions

January 10, 1901. Spindletop, the biggest oil well to date in the world, erupts, spewing a tower of oil nearly 200 feet into the air. The well will go on to produce 75,000 barrels of oil a day.

January 22, 1901. Queen Victoria of England dies at the age of 82. She was Queen of England and the British Empire from 1837 to the time of her death, for approximately sixty-four years. Her son Edward VIII becomes King of England.

January-July, 1901. Filipinos rebel against the U.S. occupation and annexation of the Philippine Islands, but on July 4th, William Howard Taft is installed as Civil Governor of the islands. General Arthur MacArthur, Military Governor since May 1900, sets sail for Japan.

Abraham Kuyper, b. 1837. Dutch pastor and theologian, he also becomes prime minister of the Netherlands in 1901: “Oh, no single piece of our mental world is to be hermetically sealed off from the rest, and there is not a square inch in the whole domain of our human existence over which Christ, who is Sovereign over all, does not cry: ‘Mine!’”

September 7, 1901. The Peking Treaty ends the Boxer Rebellion and gives huge commercial advantages to European and American interests.

September 14, 1901. William McKinley, the 25th President of the United States, dies eight days after being shot by anarchist Leon Czolgosz. His death was probably the direct result of a botched operation to remove the bullet(s) rather than being caused by the shooting itself. Vice-President Teddy Roosevelt becomes president.

December 10, 1901. The first Nobel prizes are awarded. Wilhelm Roentgen of Germany wins the Physics Prize for his discovery of X-rays.

December 12, 1901. Guglielmo Marconi sends the first ever telegraphic message across the Atlantic Ocean from the coast of England to Newfoundland, Canada.

Ping Pong fever swept Europe and the United States as families converted their tables into indoor tennis courts. The game, known as wiff-waff or Gossima at first, only caught on at about the same time that the name was changed by the manufacturer to Ping Pong. The first Ping Pong tournament was held in December, 1901.

PB&J: “The first located reference to the now immortal peanut butter and jelly sandwich was published by Julia Davis Chandler in 1901. This sandwich became a hit with America’s youth, who loved the double-sweet combination, and it has remained a favorite ever since…During the early 1900s peanut butter was considered a delicacy and as such it was served at upscale affairs and in New York’s finest tearooms.”

What’s New in Books about Peculiar Children?

A young teen boy finds that rather than being like his mundane and commonplace family, he is really one of the magical people, many of whom live in a sort of home for special children where they are free to practice their special magical talents. The world is divided between the commoners and the magically gifted, and the magical people are further divided into two groups: the good ones and the evil ones who, in an attempt to gain power, are about to destroy the world as we know it. Could it be Harry Potter?

Find out in my review on the new Youth Reads page at the The Point (Chuck Colson’s Breakpoint).

Saturday Review of Books: June 18, 2011

“In a good bookroom, you feel in some way that you are absorbing the wisdom contained in all the books —through your skin, without even opening them.”~Mark Twain

SatReviewbuttonIf you’re not familiar with and linking to and perusing the Saturday Review of Books here at Semicolon, you’re missing out. Here’s how it usually works. Find a book review on your blog posted sometime during the previous week. The review doesn’t have to be a formal sort of thing. You can just write your thoughts on a particular book, a few ideas inspired by reading the book, your evaluation, quotations, whatever.

Then on Saturday, you post a link here at Semicolon in Mr. Linky to the specific post where you’ve written your book review. Don’t link to your main blog page because this kind of link makes it hard to find the book review, especially when people drop in later after you’ve added new content to your blog. In parentheses after your name, add the title of the book you’re reviewing. This addition will help people to find the reviews they’re most interested in reading.

After linking to your own reviews, you can spend as long as you want reading the reviews of other bloggers for the week and adding to your wishlist of books to read. That’s how my own TBR list has become completely unmanageable and the reason I can’t join any reading challenges. I have my own personal challenge that never ends.

1. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (The Two Deaths of Daniel Hayes)
2. SuziQoregon @ Whimpulsive (The Wordy Shipmates)
3. GretchenJoanna (A Long Long Time Ago & Essentially True)
4. Beth@Weavings (Raising Real Men)
5. Barbara H. (The Judgment; Mine Is the Night)
6. Donovan @ Where Pen Meets Paper (A Visit from the Goon Squad)
7. Donovan @ Where Pen Meets Paper (The Spirit of Food)
8. Cindy Swanson (Son of Hamas)
9. Graham @ My Book Year (The Tiger’s Wife)
10. Zee @ Notes from the North (Wintersmith)
11. Lazygal (The Apothocary)
12. Lazygal (The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland…)
13. Lazygal (Secrets at Sea)
14. Janet (The Love Exchange: An Adventure in Prayer)
15. Sarah Reads Too Much – Carry Me Home
16. Sarah Reads Too Much – Ordinary Beauty
17. Beckie @ByTheBook (Lion of Babylon)
18. Beckie@ByTheBook (An Unlikely Suitor)
19. Amy Reads (Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor)
20. Amy Reads (Woman at Point Zero by Nawal El Saadawi)
21. Carol in Oregon (Harry Truman’s Excellent Adventure)
22. Carol in Oregon (Meter Means Measure)
23. Carol in Oregon (Wonderlust)
24. SmallWorld Reads (April/May reviews)
25. SmallWorld at Home (500 Writing Prompts for Kids)
26. Mental multivitamin (Pitch Uncertain)
27. Mental multivitamin (Somer summer reading notes, Item 2)
28. Europeanne (Marriage Matters)
29. Hope (Forgotten God by Francis Chan)
30. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Picture Book Biographies by David A. Adler)
31. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Can We Save the Tiger?)
32. Amy @ Hope Is the Word (Summer reading picks)
33. Melissa @ Betty and Boo Chronicles (The Box)
34. Girl Detective (Absence of Mind by Marilynne Robinson)
35. Girl Detective (Finder: Voice GN)
36. Unbroken: A World War II Story of… (Library Hospital)
37. The Hollow (Library Hospital)
38. Sparkling Cyanide (Library Hospital)
39. Debbie Rodgers – Exurbanis.com (Radio Shangri-la)
40. Megan @ Leafing Through Life (Matched)
41. A Foodie Bibliophile in Wanderlust (A Monster Calls)
42. Melody @ Fingers & Prose (Townie)
43. Melody @ Fingers & Prose (If There is Something to Desire)
44. Becky (Clouds of Witness by Dorothy Sayers)
45. Becky (Fer-de-lance by Rex Stout)
46. Becky (Oscar Wilde and the Death of No Importance by Gyles Brandreth)
47. Becky (The Cat Who Played Brahms by Lilian Jackson Braun)
48. Becky (The Cat Who Saw Red by Lilian Jackson Braun)
49. Becky (Doggirl by Robin Brande)
50. Becky (Should I Share My Ice Cream by Mo Willems)
51. Becky (Slightly Invisible by Lauren Child)
52. Becky (How to Get a Job by me the Boss by Sally Lloyd Jones)
53. Lucybird’s Book Blog (Darkly Dreaming Dexter)
54. Lucybird’s Book Blog (The Earth Hums in B Flat)
55. Lucybird’s Book Blog (Dragon’s Pupils: The Sword Guest))
56. Lucybird’s Book Blog (Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone)
57. Yvann @ Reading, Fuelled By Tea (The Silent Sea)
58. Yvann @ Reading, Fuelled By Tea (Purgatory Road)
59. Diary of an Eccentric (The Storm at the Door)
60. Diary of an Eccentric (Next to Love)
61. LL(Serving Up the Harvest)
62. melydia (Children Playing Before a Statue of Hercules)

Powered by… Mister Linky’s Magical Widgets.

The Hobbit by JRR Tolkien, chapter 6: Out of the Frying Pan into the Fire

Bilbo had escaped the goblins, but he did not know where he was. He had lost hood, cloak, food, pony, his buttons and his friends.

Into the fire, indeed. Bilbo and the dwarves bounce from one fix to the next, each a little more perilous than the one before. In this chapter, they have escaped the goblins only to be treed by Wargs. My annotated version of The Hobbit has a few notes on the origins of various names of creatures that Tolkien introduces in the course of his tale:

Hobbit— Tolkien said, “I don’t know where the word came from. You can’t catch your mind out. It might have been associated with SInclair Lewis’s Babbitt. Certainly not rabbit, as some people think.
But he also wrote elsewhere, “I must admit that its faint suggestion of rabbit appealed to me. Not that hobbits at all resemble rabbits, unless it be in burrowing.”

Goblins— Tolkien’s goblins resemble the goblins of author George Macdonald in The Princess and the Goblin and The Princess and Curdie, except that Macdonald’s goblins had soft and easily injured feet, which Tolkien said he “never believed in.”

Warg—Tolkien in a letter to author Gene Wolfe, 11/7/66, “It is an old word for wolf, which also had the sense of an outlaw or hunted criminal. This is its usual sense in surviving texts. I adopted the word, which had a good sound for the meaning, as a name for this particular brand of demonic wolf in the story.”

Orcs— are barely mentioned in The Hobbit, but rather the term “goblin” is used for all the creatures that live in the mountains and serve evil. By the time Tolkien wrote LOTR, he had switched to calling all of Sauron’s creatures orcs. In Tolkien’s Middle Earth, goblins and orcs are approximately the same or related creatures.

As the chapter closes, the eagles rescue Bilbo and Gandalf and the dwarves from their predicament in the trees. And Bilbo gets the dubious pleasure of spending the night in an eagle’s eyrie.

“So ended the adventures of the Misty Mountains. Soon Bilbo’s stomach was feeling full and comfortable again, and he felt he could sleep contentedly, though really he would have liked a loaf and butter rather than bits of meat toasted on sticks. He slept curled up on the hard rock more soundly than ever he had done on his featherbed in his own little hole at home. But all night he dreamed of his own house and wandered in his sleep into all his different rooms looking for something that he could not find nor remember what it looked like.”

Chapter 1, An Unexpected Party
Chapter 2, Roast Mutton.
Chapter 3, A Short Rest.
Chapter 4, Over Hill and Under Hill.
Chapter 5, Riddles in the Dark.

The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic by Jennifer Trafton

Cybils nominee: Middle Grade Fantasy and Science Fiction. Nominated by Amy at Hope Is the Word, because she beat me to it.

Read the first chapter of The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic.

The rest of it is just as good as the first chapter. End of review.

O.K. I do have more to say about this book. But I think mostly what I want to say is:

1. Read this book.

2. If G.K. Chesterton were living now and writing fantasy for middle grade readers, he would be accused of being Jennifer Trafton. Or she would be him. Or something.

3. Since my lovely Z-baby likes maps, here’s a link to a map of The Island at the Center of Everything.

4. How did she or her publisher manage to get Brett Helquist to illustrate? Mr. Helquist is the guy who did the illustrations for Lemony Snicket’s Series of Unfortunate Events and for Blue Balliet’s Chasing Vermeer and its sequels. Perfectly wonderful pictures.

5. Persimmony Smudge wants to be a heroine. How is this ambition different from what I wrote about yesterday, wanting to be famous? Is it different? I think so, but I’m not sure how to articulate the difference.

“The truth was that King Lucas the Loftier had never gone down from the mountain in his entire life It meant no longer being On Top of Majestic, no longer being Lofty. It meant descending into the world of Everybody Else. He would have no idea what to do, where to go, how to behave. He wouldn’t know who he was anymore.”

6. Persimmony Smudge is a wonderful name for a character. So are the following names in the book: Guafnoggle the Rumblebump, Worvil the Worrier, Jim-Jo Pumpernickel, King Lucas the Loftier, Rheuben Rhinkle, Barnbas Quill, and Dustin Dexterhoof. (I’ve always liked the word “pumpernickel”, but I never thought of using it as a name.)

7. Insanitorious. Ludiculous. Ridiposterous. Flibbertigibbeted. Discumbersomebubblated. The presence of these words and others like them in this book compels the logophile to read and enjoy. Word play galoric.

8. You can buy a copy of the book at the Rabbit Room Store online, if you want. Or Amazon.

“You said might!” Worvil covered his face with his hands. “Of all the words that have ever been invented, that is the worst. All of the terror in the world hangs on the word might. The Leafeaters might kidnap me and keep me locked up underground forever. They might tie me to a tree and leave me to be eaten by poison-tongued jumping tortoises. A hurricane might flood the Willow Woods and both of us drown . . .”
Persimmony stared at Worvil and discovered that she liked him. He was a coward, certainly, but he had Imagination. She liked people with Imagination.

9. Have you read the first chapter yet?

10. Oh, just buy the book already. (No, you cynical people, I don’t know Ms. Trafton personally, and I don’t get a commission from recommending her book. I do get a few cents if you go straight from here to Amazon and buy the book there.)

“For the last time, I am not the one who puts gifts in the pots!”
“Well, if you don’t, who does?”
“I have no idea,” said the potter. “Who puts words of truth into the strings of a Lyre? Perhaps there some things that we are not meant to understand. Without a few mysteries and a few giants, life would be a very small thing, after all.”

Famous and Not-so Famous: Two YA Takes on Fame

Famous by Todd Strasser.

My Life, the Theater, and Other Tragedies by Allen Zadoff.

In the author blurb, Todd Strasser says he “decided to write Famous after realizing that teens and kids are obsessed with fame.” The book is about sixteen year old paparazzo, Jamie Gordon, and her best friend, Avy Tennent, who wants to be a famous actor. The story is told in chapters from several points of view, and there’s constant switching between Jamie’s first person story and Avy’s first person story and the letters of some weird guy named Richard who’s stalking teen star Willow Twine, and several second person intervals in which the author pretends that the reader is Jamie while she’s unravelling the secret of what happened to Avy when he ran away to LA. It’s confusing. As I’ve mentioned before, I don’t like stories or any part thereof told in second person. I’ll enter the story on my own terms; don’t try to pop me in there where I don’t belong.

However, that aside, the novel did make me think about the obsessive desire to become famous, to be known, that I’ve seen in many people I’ve known. I don’t think I have this hunger for fame that afflicts some people. I do enjoy people reading my blog, but riches and celebrity and people focusing on me, watching me, adoring me—no, that’s not appealing at all.

And even though the magazines say They’re Just Like Us! they’re not really. They’re prettier, smarter, richer and, to be brutally honest, just better.
Oops! I said it, didn’t I! That they’re better than you. And better than me.
Sucks, doesn’t it? That deep down you believe they must be better, different, special. They have to be better.
Because they’re famous.
And you’re not.
But maybe that’s not the whole truth either.
Maybe the truth is, they’re no better than you or me or anyone else.
Then why do we think they are?
Perhaps because we want to. We need to.

Well, I don’t believe that celebrities are enviable or better than me. In fact, I could much more readily identify with the protagonist in the second book in this double review post, My Life, the Theater, and Other Tragedies. Sophomore Adam Ziegler is a techie, NOT an actor. And in his school, Montclair High, the division between the two groups, techs and actors, is deep and unbridgeable. Techies don’t associate with or respect actors, and vice versa. Actors are the ones who always want to be seen and admired, but techies are the ones who make it happen behind the scenes. Adam is particularly fascinated by lights. He’s the guy “on a catwalk, high above the theater floor, surrounded by lighting instruments and cable, watching the actors get a tour of the set down below.” And Adam likes being invisible, behind the lights rather than in front.

I like the idea that there are two kinds of people, call them introverts and extroverts, behind the camera and out in front, famous or wannabe famous and the rest of us. Of course, I identify with the techies, not because I’m particularly handy with electricity or a hammer, but because I’m an something of an introvert myself. But these two books demonstrate that there are strengths and dangers in both personality types and both ways of coping with the world. Extroverts can turn into narcissists, constantly seeking fame and affirmation, and if they don’t get it easily they can go to extreme lengths to feed the beast. Introverts, however, can be just as self-centered and can shut themselves off from the world, preferring their own company to the joy of engaging in relationship.

I’d say these are both cautionary tales, but not in a preachy, didactic way. Famous demonstrates what happens to those who put themselves and their own fame above every other consideration: they end up destroying themselves. And My Life . . . shows how one introvert, hiding in the shadows, is able to come out into the light and assert himself. Balance is the key.

Both books contain some bad language, and some teen age immature (crude) behavior. Famous also deals with drug use, abusive cosmetic surgery, and generally nasty and obsessive behavior.

The Ambition by Lee Strobel

Nominated for the INSPY awards in the category Mystery and Thriller.

Written by the best-selling author of The Case for Christ, The Case for Faith, The Case for a Creator and many other nonfiction books of Christian apologetics.

A legal/journalistic thriller in the tradition of John Grisham, with more emphasis on the journalism and on Christians in politics than Grisham’s books.

The Ambition is not a subtly nuanced novel about ambition and its insidious effect on the Christian believer. That’s there to some extent, but this is a thriller: lots of action, plot twists, intrigue, and corruption in high places. Strobel is not Grisham–yet–but on the other hand, Mr. Strobel’s first novel does deliver a readable story with interesting and unpredictable characters. Since my main complaint about Christian fiction is its predictability, the depth of characterization in what could have been a action-packed story full of cardboard characters was welcome. The mega-church pastor/protagonist is neither a saint without fault nor a hypocritical money-grubber, although he’s suspected of being one or the other throughout the novel. The cynical reporter is cynical, but not unlikeable, and he doesn’t have the come-to-Jesus moment that we tend to expect for this kind of character in a “Christian” novel. By the end of the novel, reporter Garry Strider may be a bit more open to considering the claims of Christ and the church, but that’s all. And it’s OK. Strobel has left room for these characters to grow and change and perhaps surprise us some more in another book. Or maybe we get to finish the story in our own minds, not a bad way to end a book either.

I have a couple of complaints. Pastor-turned-politician Eric Snow seems a a little too eager to jettison his association with the church he helped to build without adequate motivation. If he still sees himself as committed to Christ and to Christianity, no matter how rusty and secondary that commitment has become, would he really agree to not even set foot inside church after his resignation from the pastorate? And Garry’s girlfriend who has become a Christian is a little too didactic and too unquestioning in her immediate commitment to chastity. “Not to be unequally yoked” sounds perfectly reasonable to me since I’ve grown up in the faith, but I’m not sure it would be so immediately understandable to a new convert who has been immersed in our culture or to her boyfriend.

Those are minor points, however. For a beach read this summer, The Ambition would be a good pick. It’s well-paced, intricate, and unpredictable. Thanks, Mr. Strobel.

Sunday Salon: It Takes Darkness and Light to Make a Good Book

The Sunday Salon.com

I’ve read several rather interesting blog posts and articles this week about the quality and the breadth of selection of books in the young adult section and in the Christian fiction genre. I’ll give you some links, and then invite you to come back here to see how I masterfully tie all this opinion and controversy together.

First, Meg Fox Gurdon wrote an article for the Wall Street Journal about a mom who was having trouble finding an appropriately bright or upbeat book as a gift for her thirteen year old daughter. The piece was called Darkness Too Visible.

(ADDED: Lenore Skenazy: Is This What Your Kid’s Reading? “I am SURE this author thinks he’s cutting-edge — so to speak — by showing us what teens are “really” like, without the sugarcoating of well-adjustment. But there is such a thing as being trite in the other direction, too. The triteness of teen despair.”)

The kidlitosphere exploded in response to Ms. Gurdon, attacking not the bookstore’s selection policies or the publishers’ choices of what to emphasize in their publishing lists, but the poor mom and the author who was pointing out her dilemma. Here are a couple of responses:
There’s Dark Things in Them There Books by Liz B. at A Chair, A Fireplace and a Tea Cozy.
Salon: Has young adult fiction become too dark? by Mary Elizabeth Williams

Janie B. Cheaney, one of my favorite writers of children’s fiction and of opinion for World Magazine, wrote a post on her blog called Turn On the Light in support of Ms. Gurdon’s original concerns. I’m obviously a lot closer to Ms. Cheaney’s opinion than I am to others who have written responding to Ms. Gurdon.

Then, Gene Veith linked to a seemingly unrelated piece in Image journal by Tony Woodlief entitled Bad Christian Art. Mr. Woodlief gives examples of what he calls common sins of the Christian writer: neat resolution, one-dimensional characters, sentimentality, and cleanliness (the purging of bad language and sensuality and critical questioning).

So how does all this discussion about the “darkness”, or lack thereof, the language, the explicit sexual perversion, or lack of it, and above all the critical questioning going on in both young adult literature and in so-called “Christian” fiction come together in my mind? Glad you asked.

I don’t think it’s as simple as the anti-book-banning crowd or the hyper-cleanliness squad or anyone else has tried to make it.

The lady in the WSJ article just wanted a book for her thirteen year old daughter. And she wanted a book that wouldn’t feature vampirism or rape or incest or (probably) profanity or other nasty stuff that she judged either her daughter wouldn’t want to read about or that the mom wouldn’t want her to be spending her reading time on. This request is not unreasonable, and a book, YA or adult, does not have to feature dark and corrupt themes and characters in order to be a good piece of literature or to be worth reading. If some people want to write about those things and if other people want to read their books, that’s their choice. But if someone, particularly a mom, comes along and says he or she wants something different, lighter, more hopeful, they are not censoring, banning or infringing upon anyone else’s freedom. They are simply saying that they prefer to have choices, too, and it seems to some of us that the darkness is overwhelming the light in Young Adult literature.

Yes, resolutions in novels can be “too neat” and unearned. But just because a novel resolves at the end, ends with a wedding rather than a death scene, doesn’t mean that the novel is unworthy or superficial. Comedies are just as literary as tragedies. And the unearned resolution happens in both stories written by Christians and stories by non-Christians. In the non-Christian variety, characters make all sorts of sinful and destructive choices, often described in gruesome detail, but they are rewarded with life, health, and happiness because underneath they’re really good people who mean well.

One-dimensional characters and sentimentality are both examples of poor storytelling techniques that are again found in all sorts of books from all sorts of publishers for every age group.

As for cleanliness, I believe that it is possible, and even advisable, to tell stories without an over-abundance of profanity and sensuality, but never without critical questioning. If YA authors or authors in the Christian publishing realm are putting gratuitous violence, sex, and language into their novels simply to titillate and thrill readers and sell books, then those writers are bad writers, no matter how many books they sell or how many accolades they receive. And if YA authors or Christian fiction writers take the sin and questioning and controversy out of their novels in favor of a sanitized version of reality, they are also poor writers who may have an audience but who have lost their message and their integrity.

Tolstoy, Victor Hugo, Tolkien–all of these men wrote novels without the kinds of gratuitous depiction of intimate sexuality and sin that is thought to be necessary for good literature these days. (Although Hugo did descend into the sewers for a good while in Les Miserables.:)) Yes, the books of all three of those authors contain all sorts of darkness: prostitution, violence, adultery, lies, and deception. But there is also goodness and joy and, dare I say it, a grace-filled resolution. Part of the problem is that when a book does not come with a “Christian” label or doesn’t have an explicitly evangelical Christian conversion scene, we cease to describe it as a Christian novel (or movie). So then the really good “Christian” movies or books never get factored into the discussions about bad Christian art. There are good movies and books out there, made by Christians and others with grace-filled themes and characters and ideas, but they may not fit the template of a Christian movie or book marketed to Christians. And there are good Young Adult fiction books, tastefully and honestly dealing with the messiness of life in the twenty-first century, either from a Christian or a non-religious point of view. But there aren’t enough of either, and sometimes you have to look really hard to find the good books, the ones that satisfy our need for a candid portrayal of truth without pandering to our sinful and fallen nature.