Speak Laurie Halse Anderson. You need paper and pen/pencil out for notes.

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Speak Laurie Halse Anderson

Transcript of Speak Laurie Halse Anderson. You need paper and pen/pencil out for notes.

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SpeakLaurie Halse Anderson

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• About the author

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Laurie Halse Anderson

• Born in 1961 in Northern New York• Currently lives with her husband

(once her childhood sweetheart) and a dog• Has raised four children• Loved writing since second grade• Best known for her young adult

books, Speak being one of them

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Inspiration for SpeakWhat was your inspiration for writing Speak?“At the time I wrote it, my oldest daughter was in sixth grade. I have four kids. She was going through the wonderful joys of middle school. And so, as a mom, it was beginning to make me think about how vulnerable girls can be and all the pressures that adolescent girls face. And that’s what I thought was my inspiration, at the time. Of course, looking back, I had to acknowledge my own experience, which was, a month before ninth grade started, I was sexually assaulted. And because of the dynamics of my family and what was going on at the time in our family life, I didn’t tell anybody, I didn’t speak up for almost twenty-five years, when I wrote the book. So I came to it as both a young woman in my heart and as a mom, and the story took off from there.”

Interview: http://hellogiggles.com/speak4rainn-an-interview-with-author-laurie-halse-anderson/

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• Terminology and Literary Devices

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Young Adult Literature (YAL)

• Targeted toward young adults (hey, that’s you!), though many adults still read and enjoy YAL.

• The main characters are young adults who often struggle with some type of problem and seek a resolution.

• Also referred to as “coming of age” story where the character grows from the problems and experiences he or she encounters.

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Examples of YAL

• The House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer• The Giver by Lois Lowry• The Outsiders by S.E. Hinton• Holes by Louise Sacher• Harry Potter by J K Rowling• The Fault in Our Stars by John Green• The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins• Twilight by Stephanie Meyers

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Literary Devices

• Internal Conflict: struggle that takes place within the character’s own mind. • External Conflict: struggle between the main character and another

outside source, such as another character.• Allusion: an indirect or passing reference to something• Symbolism: something that stands for or represents something else• Hyperbole: use of exaggeration • Theme: central idea, issue, or problem that is universal

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• Novel Background

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• Novel is about a girl, Melinda, who has a secret.

• She is an outcast in high school.

• A lot of the text revolves her internal conflict with whether or not she should speak out about what happened to her.