Monster…
After reading Monster by Walter Dean Meyers, I feel like I have a better understanding of what is going on in the life of a teenage boy that has grown up in a bad neighborhood. I thought this book sounded very interesting from the beginning, even before I found out that it was written like a movie. I read the back of the novel and began thinking to myself, “how scary would that be, to be put on trial for murder at the age of sixteen”. This book reminded me in a way of The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton, not only because someone was killed but because the teenagers were afraid of getting in trouble. It was slightly different than S.E. Hinton’s book because Steve doesn’t actually kill anyone, whereas Jonny does. Steve is just in the general area when the man in the drug store is shot. Again, I thought that these two novels had some similar themes to them, The Outsiders being that nothing ever stays golden. Meaning that you have to lose your innocence sometime, you can’t stay a child forever, and in Monster the theme is once again you have to grow up sometime and take control of your own actions. Steve learns this the hard way; he is on trial for a dumb mistake that he got himself into. He knew that robbing the drug store was wrong but yet he still did it. I feel that on page 2 of the novel, we can really see how distraught Steve is with his situation. “They say you get used to being in jail, but I don’t see how. Every morning I wake up and I am surprised to be here” (Meyers). I feel like these two sentences really show us the type of character that Steve is. Through reading this I knew that Steve was an innocent boy, who was just in the wrong place at the wrong time.
I feel like I would teach this book to my students in a heartbeat. This novel is a pretty easy one to read, and it is very interesting in the fact that it has crime, murder, and a good underlying moral. This novel would be pretty easy to teach also, because since it is written like a movie script, the students would be able to act some parts out in class. I feel like this would really help the students out because it is something fun for them to do to interact with one another. I feel like the theme of this novel and the attitude presented by Steve is a strong one that even the students can pick up on. Like I said in all of the other blogs that I have written, I feel like a novel should have a strong moral that is brought out within the readings of the novel, and that the students can relate easily to the novel. It also doesn’t hurt if the students learn something about themselves or others as they read. This novel does all three of the previously mentioned items; it has a very strong moral to it, it also it easy for some student to relate to, maybe not in the literal sense but in some other ways. And lastly the students have the potential to learn something about themselves through reading this novel. I feel like this novel is easy for students to relate to because it is written by a ‘teenager’ and it’s through the eyes of a teenager.
I feel like this novel is one that should be taught in schools because it is different than all of the ‘classics’ but it serves its purpose well. It may not be a classic but it sure will get students interested in reading. And that’s what we need to do as teachers.
Meyers, Walter Dean. Monster. New York, Ny. Harperteen.1999. Print.