, Research Paper
Falling pants and other worries’Her green eyes were looking right at him. “You want my phone number?” “I guess,” he said. He stretched again. As he raised his arms, the drawstring on his trackpants became untied and his pants fell down. In one motion, he turned, pulled up his pants and ran.’ That episode is just one of the trials of David, the hero of Louis Sachar’s The Boy Who Lost his Face ( Bloomsbury £4.99, pp198 ). Not that David really is a hero, of course. At least not at first and certainly not in a way that he or his peers would understand. In fact, all the best books aimed at teenage boys (and this comic but thought-provoking story is one of them) have engagingly ‘unsorted’ protagonists who are struggling to make sense of their lives. And whatever the plot, the same themes recur: anxieties about girls and sex, guilt about almost everything and fears of being different. Unsurprisingly, given the long history of the quest to prove one’s manhood in folk legends and classic picaresque novels, the plots usually concern a journey. Sometimes, the journeys are metaphorical and sometimes literal, as in two very different books, K.K. Beck’s compelling Fake ( Scholastic £7.99, pp281 ) and the richly intense Across the Nightingale Floor by Lian Hearn ( Macmillan £12.99, pp332 ). In Fake , Danny has been diagnosed as ‘oppositionally defiant’, which roughly translates as ‘typical teenager’, but his stepfather is fed up with him and his parents decide to send him on a ‘wilderness survival experience’. After being effectively kidnapped from his home by the thuggish security guards who work for the organisation that tackles ‘out-of-control teens’, middle-class Danny finds himself heading for the desert with streetwise Keith. It doesn’t take long for Keith to outwit the guards and hijack the car, and Danny finds himself on the road from California to Seattle, leaving a trail of stolen cars and credit-card thefts. He has vague plans to track down his real father in Seattle and Keith agrees to help. But Keith has ideas of his own, and somehow the wrong ‘long-lost son’ gets taken in, while Danny goes on the run. However, he doesn’t get very far before being ‘adopted’ himself. This is a great thriller with subtle and empathetic insights, not just into the teen characters but also into the befuddled grown-ups. Across the Nightingale Floor is a fantastic (in both senses of the word) tale set in a mythical feudal Japan. Tomasu returns to his village to find a massacre has taken place. He runs for his life and meets Lord Otori who adopts him and renames him. Tomasu has special powers that he barely understands and he finds himself caught up in a dangerous web of intrigue. It is impossible to know whom to trust, and the suspense builds as Tomasu t
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