The 52 Book Club: 2025 Challenge discussion
2021 Challenge
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24 -- A Book You Think They Should Read In Schools
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Lindsey
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Dec 06, 2020 04:30PM

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Good choices. I actually read the second one in school, but I don't think it's widely read in them.


Loved this book. It explains how people start believing conspiracy theories and gives tactics for talking to friends and loved ones who have fallen down a rabbit hole. I wish more people would read it.
I read Woke: A Young Poet's Call to Justice by Mahogany L. Browne, Elizabeth Acevedo and Olivia Gatwood. 4 Stars



"Kindred" by Octavia E Butler"
Unfortunately I already read this last year :( but totally agreed, it is a great book.


I agree so hard with the Phantom Tollbooth. It's on my list to re-read for this challenge! It fits a couple of prompts; this one and #7, an Author with 1 published book :)

Loved this book. It explains how people start believing conspiracy theories and gives tactic..."
I am adding this to my read for this prompt! Thanks for the suggestion, I was struggling with what to do for this one.


Just finished reading: "America Is in the Heart" by Carlos Bulosan (★★★★☆), is a semi-autobiographical novel written by Filipino American immigrant poet, fiction writer, short story teller, and activist, Carlos Bulosan. My North American education was rather Euro-centric with the month of February dedicated to Black History. Very little, if any, was spent on East-Asian culture, which is the main reason I thought this book should be read, if not taught.
Bulosan's narrative is an emotionally and esthetically true account of the immigration, spiritual and physical, of the pinoy, the young Filipino with all his village innocence, focused on an America, which, always promised more than it was willing to give. It is the quintessential experience of the pinoy migrant worker in fisheries and fields, up and down the western coast of these United States.


https://titlesurfingwithtraci.blogspo...
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

I read "Funny you don't look autistic" this year - it was a great summary of a man with autism who is working as a stand up comedian. Interesting and educational.


https://cdnbookworm.blogspot.com/2021...
This teen novel has so many things to discuss, it would be a fantastic discussion book in high schools.

It's a kid's book promoting girls in STEM. I got it as an Amazon Prime First Reads book in January, so it's a recent release. It's a picture book, so it wouldn't be added to the curriculum the way a YA book might, but it would be a nice selection for story-time.

This would be a fabulous addition to any high school reading list. It's short enough to fit into any syllabus (I read it in an evening) but filled with enough complexity and ambiguity to form a lesson series. The prose is easily digestible, but the questions less so. There is plenty of allusion to real people and places of the time period (the Harlem Renaissance) and as a book about race, written by a POC woman, it would fill a gap in many reading lists still populated primarily by white men.


Reawakening Our Ancestors' Lines: Revitalizing Inuit Traditional Tattooing
This is a really interesting look at work being done to revive First Nation culture. It shows how it differs from the standard Western ideals of women.




1. things are not always as they appear at first glance
2 are we comfortable trusting technology?

I agree so hard with the Phantom Tollbooth. It's on my list to re-read for this challenge! ..."
I LOVE The Phantom Tollbooth! I still have my copy from when I was 7 or 8 (which was a LONG time ago). Read it to my kids and still loved it, which is the sign of a good kids book — if both generations can get something out of it.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America (other topics)How Fascism Works: The Politics of Us and Them (other topics)
The Phantom Tollbooth (other topics)
With the Fire on High (other topics)
Mystery Rider (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Nella Larsen (other topics)Mahogany L. Browne (other topics)
Elizabeth Acevedo (other topics)
Olivia Gatwood (other topics)