Subject:
what makes Lolita any less disturbing than Nineteen Minutes, ... |
From:
"Sandy P. Klein" <spklein52@hotmail.com> |
Date:
Thu, 15 Feb 2007 08:51:09 -0500 |
To:
spklein52@hotmail.com |
CONCORD – A best-selling author’s novel about
a school shooting has rattled nerves in her hometown of Hanover, where
high school officials pulled it from the reading list amid fears the
fictional town too closely resembles the real thing.
Jodi
Picoult’s “Nineteen Minutes” won’t even be published until March 6.
Students at Hanover High School were among three schools in New
Hampshire and Massachusetts given advance copies to study. In the
novel, an ostracized teen living in Sterling, N.H. – a wealthy, Upper
Valley college town on the Vermont border – goes on a school shooting
rampage, killing 10 people in 19 minutes.
[. . .]
Picoult
said in one class, “Nineteen Minutes” was being taught alongside James
Dickey’s “Deliverance,” which depicts sodomy and violence, Vladimir
Nabokov’s child-sex novel “Lolita,” and Anthony Burgess’ violent “The
Clockwork Orange.”
“I don’t know really what makes ‘Lolita’ any less disturbing than
‘Nineteen Minutes,’ ” she said.