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Janet Bode returns to the difficult and emotional topic of rape in this completely revised and updated edition of The Voices of Rape. In addition to the original interviews, Bode updates the reader on what has happened to those people she interviewed, appends a comprehensive list of related reading, intersperses the interviews with excerpts from the current press, and adds two comic strip inserts. Always compelling and relevant to the young adult reader, Janet Bode brings her classic text to the reader of the 1990s.
Profiles a series of young people who overcame seemingly impossible odds--drugs, poverty, sexual abuse--and not only survived but became successes in their own right.
From teens who are incarcerated for crimes to teens who have been the victims of crime, Janet Bode and Stan Mack present compelling and astounding portraits, examining why crime and violence are such a big part of young lives today. An "American Bookseller" Pick of the Lists. An ALA Quick Pick and an ALA Best Book for Young Adults.
Eleven young immigrants tell their stories in their own words, describing their escape from war, poverty and oppression.
Featuring his trademark documentary cartooning style, acclaimed journalist-artist Stan Mack chronicles a poignant, unflinching, and intensely personal story of love and loss, and the remarkable relationship at the heart of it all. Illustrations throughout.
Newly arrived teenaged immigrants describe their experiences in America, recount traditions of their native countries, and present short stories, poems, recipes, and artwork. Also provides interviews with native born American teenagers who share their family histories.
Bode speaks directly to preteens and their parents about the many dangerous eating disorders and describes their symptoms, causes and various ways to cope.160 pp.
Presents interviews with teenage mothers and provides information about adoption, parenting, abortion, and foster care.
The Realist was a legendary satirical periodical that ran from 1958 to 2001 and published some of the most incendiary cartoons that ever appeared in an American magazine. The Realist Cartoons collects, for the first time, the best, the wittiest, and the most provocative drawings that appeared in its pages, including work by R. Crumb, Art Spiegelman, S. Clay Wilson, Jay Lynch, Trina Robbins, Mort Gerberg, Jay Kinney, Richard Guindon, Nicole Hollander, Skip Williamson, and many others.