Sarah Dessen
Subtitle
From Burritos to Box Office
Dessen's body of fiction appeals to readers on many levels. Her writing style is complex yet readable, rich in meaning yet accessible. Adult readers find themselves drawn to her works for their passages of grace and good humor. They are reminded of the joys and frustrations they experienced during adolescence, those years that seemed to last an eternity at the time but now seem to have passed when they weren't looking. With her wit and insight, Dessen takes older readers back. With her honesty and sensitivity, she moves adolescent readers forward. Dessen's novels offer not only high-quality writing, but also characters who experience life as young people do, featuring teens working to figure out who they are, upon whom they can depend and how to assert their place in an increasingly complex world. Dessen speaks to her readers, taking on weighty issues with skill and intention, refusing to talk down to the young people who find themselves both lost and found in the fictional worlds she creates. She knows how to balance the heavy with the light, weaving humor and quirkiness into stories that deal with themes weighty with emotional baggage.
Bio
Wendy Glenn earned a Bachelor of Arts in English at Arizona State University in 1992, earned a Master of Education in secondary education in 1995 and a doctorate in English education in 2001.
Praise for this book
Glenn... analyzes the themes running through the six novels for adolescents that Sara Dessen has published in the last eight years, particularly the definition of relationships, the search for personal identity, and the role of community. The 2003 movie 'How to Deal' is based on Dessen's first two novels.
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