How are the two brothers and sisters different? In "Where is Cleveland, where are you?", Robert Coimia introduced to two brothers, Jerry and Arman who are not well-known. The 11 - year - old protagonist, Jerry, of the story has great interest at the beginning of the story: collecting transaction cards. But according to the conclusion of this story, Jerry began to notice that several things are more important than his personal interests, and the most responsible person to teach Jerry is Armand.
"Yes, they did it, they did it, this is the way you gave birth to a child", I confidently said that Robert Coomie's novel I was reading Look into it. A very real novel about love, gender, disability, and cruelty among young people of Robert Coimia constituted my understanding of hurting people and expressing compassion. Somewhere in the second book I saw the most mad menstrual explanation (this is the concept I have never heard before). According to her wisdom, the kit did not name it even menstruation. It will take some time to find the appropriate term. The kit explained it as follows: "A small partner came to drive you out." I remember reading and rereading over and over again.
When his son refused to sell chocolate at school, the novel was inspired by Robert Cormier's own life. But the result is not like a novel, but Cormi uses it as an inspiration to write down what happens if completely different things happen in rejection. The psychological strategy used in the novel makes this novel uneasy and controversial. As a young adult literary novel, the theme of personal protest and resistance is an important way to introduce this to students.
Then in 1974, and published one of the most important and influential novels in the history of young adult literature. Robert Cormier's "The Chocolate War" is definitely the first novel for young people to trust young people. In this memorable book it can be said that the first literary young adult novel, the 17-year-old protagonist Jerry Reynolds strongly refused to sell chocolate for his school - this is a terrible result I am bringing it. Comil took his reader to the dark center of adolescent anxiety, lighted the lights, revealed a dark moral landscape. In the chocolate war and the other fourteen following novels, as he told the interviewer, Komile continued daring to disturb the excessively comfortable universe, "Adolescence is the era of such wounds, It is the burden of life for all of us. "