Francesca Lia Block's Wolf

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The involvement of social issues in young adult literature is no red flag to modern day society. New Realism, which first occurred around the 1960’s-1970, lead to the evolution of the appropriateness of social issues in the young adult literature genre. (Robinson) In Francesca Lia Block's Wolf, the author addresses the taboos of sexual violence and abuse in the home, and pairs this with the idea of female self-empowerment, and the age appropriateness of young adult literature for young adults.

In Francesca Lia Block's Wolf, the young, nameless protagonists, and heroine, runs away to her Grandmothers’ house after being repeatedly sexually assaulted by her Mothers’ boyfriend. "They don't believe me. They think I'm crazy. But let me tell you something it be a wicked wicked world out there if you didn't already know." (Block 40-45) From the first sentence and thereafter, the reader can infer through the thoughts, actions, and motivations of the protagonists, that something is not right. She does not come from a nuclear family, nor is she the 'Little Red' that we have come to expect. Her abuses, are no longer held under the daintily cloaked impressions of a lost little girl in a red cloak, they are explicitly stated. "I started screaming how he raped me for years..." (Block 40-45) The protagonists sees running away as her only solace, and even that is not guaranteed; as her abuse has happened for so long, she fears that it will forever haunt her as a "...red flag." (Block 40-45) An example of this is found with the boy she encounters on the bus, while running towards her Grandmother’ house; "I am freaked that if I get close to a boy he will somehow find out what happened to me-like it's a scar he'll see or smell o...

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...n the home, and the detrimental aspects of both of these. Through the protagonists’ plight, of self-empowerment, and finally the enactment of revenge on her attacker, Wolf, sheds light on the age appropriateness of this so called young adult story for the young adult literature genre. While this story has many of the characteristics of a piece of young adult literature, the content themes could be considered adult in aspect.

Works Cited

Block, Francesca Lia. WOLF. Concise. Ontario, Canada: Broadview Press, 2011. 40-45. Print.

Reida, Jeanie. Personal Interview. 02 02 2014.

Scudamore, Judy. Personal Interview. 02 02 2014.

Donnelson, K.L. and Nilsen, A. P. (1997). Literature for Today's Young Adults. New York: Longman.

Robinson, Elizabeth. "Francesca Lia Blocks’ Wolf and Ronald Dahl." Class Meeting. Harrington 205, College Station. 28 01 2014. Lecture.

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