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If Brent Runyon’s The Burn Journals (Knopf, 2004) and Stephen Chbosky’s The Perks of Being a Wallflower (Pocket Books, 1999) could be melded into a single work, it might be this one.
Differentiated, African-inspired chapter introduction music assists in delivering this parallel story of two very different, but equally difficult, lives in Sudan.
Feedback this month ranges from the defense of librarians who embrace technology to support for Isabel Allende's novel The House of the Spirits, which is still being challenged by parents in a North Carolina school district.
Justin Bieber times the release of his unusual new album to coincide with appearance of his concert documentary in theaters; our SLJTeen reviewer identifies a more adult sound. Wii Fit U arrives just in time for New Year's resolutions, and Nintendo is sweetening the deal with a free download, for a limited time.
Egmont USA is giving five SLJTeen readers a chance to win a copy of debut YA author Len Vlahos’s humorous and heartbreaking coming-of-age novel set in the 1980s, The Scar Boys.
Think reality shows are nothing but a bad influence on viewers? Think again. A new report from the National Bureau of Economic Research links a decline in teen pregnancy rates to the MTV show 16 and Pregnant.
Director Brad Bernstein’s homage to a groundbreaking, internationally recognized author/illustrator (Moon Man) is a tour de force, with cinematography as playful, creative, and subversive as its protagonist.
The President has an assignment for students in grades K-12: make a video for him highlighting the use of technology in your school and classroom. But hurry—the first ever White House Student Film Festival contest deadline is January 29!