Catholic school - as vicious as Roman Rule." (Death Cab for Cutie)
I
really liked this book though it was very disturbing and dark. As a
teacher, librarian and nurse at a Catholic high school, I have heard
that phrase a million times since the song with those lyrics came out
~2005. There seems to be no end to the inventive ways that students find
to torment each other. Though this book was set in the 1990s, many of
the behaviors and problems described exist in school settings today.
Students in high school are faced with academic pressure, shifting
loyalties, betrayal, bullying, and other issues that so make these NOT
the best days of their lives. The students in BRUTAL YOUTH come from
different backgrounds and home situations that make their ability to
succeed more difficult as kids compete with each other to stand out and
be different while still wanting to belong to at least one group or
clique. The blind eye or ignorance of what was really happening at St.
Michael the Archangel was sort of unbelievable but definitely adults
don't always get the real picture because students don't often confide
the complete truth. A critical conversation or intervention by an
observant teacher, mentor, coach or staff might have helped immensely --
I thought most of those employees should have been fired!
I
originally thought this was a YA novel but I can see that it is not as I
don't feel that most high school students would read between the lines
for the insight that is there in the stories of the teens at SMTA
school. The lack of resolution and the missing happy endings is
difficult to accept because the reader, given the benefit of knowing the
real inner workings of each character's mind, has definite thoughts and
feelings as to how things should end. Consequences. Punishment? The
level of abuse meted out to students under the watchful eyes of equally
disturbed adults was horrific. I will be thinking about this book for a
long time and I hope it keeps me mindful of the myriad ways in which I
personally can be empathetic and helpful to the kids I interact with
each day. Observant and open. Watchful and ready to step in to prevent
the bullying or the "jokes" made at another's expense. Are students more
vulnerable now given the impact of social media? I think everyone is
potentially a target and that learning to handle it is one of the main
learning experiences of the high school years, but no student should be
left unprotected by the adults given the charge to keep them safe from
mental and physical harm. The adults described in the book were horrible
stereotypes of all the myths about Catholic school, but demonstrate how
toxic an environment can be if allowed to go unchecked. I don't care
what people say, any kind of "hazing" by upper classmen is inappropriate
in a school community. Adults can and should model behavior that
encourages students to be kind to one another and they should be
vigilant to weed out and help break the cycle of "do unto others" when
that means being cruel.
I'm sure I will be thinking about this
novel for a long time and would love to discuss it with others. It was
disturbing but pertinent. I'd recommend it.
4.5 stars Thank you to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for the e-book copy to review. May 11, 2014
Reposted with paperback release 6/15
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