There’s a bit of a trend going around on Youtube in which vloggers recreate the hair, makeup and fashion looks they rocked in high school, typically to much comedic effect (especially if you’re my age – the 1990s weren’t particularly kind to anyone…). Now, I’m not much into style, but I was inspired to write a post about a pivotal book in my high school reading career. So prepare yourself for a blast from the past as we fire up the way-back machine and head all the way back to the late 1990s!
There’s pretty much only one word to describe my high school reading obsession – RUSSIAN. I was obsessed with Russian literature – the intensity of emotions, the world-weariness, the angst – it all seemed perfectly attuned to my high school sensibilities. And the novel that first sparked my adolescent Slavic obsession was Cancer Ward, by Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
Based on the author’s experiences while undergoing cancer treatment, Cancer Ward was a revelation – darkly humorous, honest and completely unflinching, this was unlike any novel that I’d ever encountered before, and certainly unlike any of the teen novels available at my local school or public library. I remember being absolutely gobsmacked, and devoured the entire book in a few fascinated sittings. Solzhenitsyn opened my eyes to a whole new literary world, and helped rekindle a childhood passion for books that had been somewhat dimmed by the young adult materials that well-meaning but uninspiring librarians and teachers recommended – suffice it to say, the world of young adult literature was very different in the ’90s, and there was little that appealed to me the way this novel did.
There’s also a bit of a funny story about how this life-changing book ended up in my hands. When I was in high school I sang in my local church choir. While waiting for practice to start one day, I found myself browsing a bookshelf in the rectory. I don’t know what initially drew me to Cancer Ward – I’d never heard of the author and hadn’t read anything Russian before, and the cover certainly wasn’t all that exciting, but for some reason I pulled it off the shelf and started to read. When the rest of the choir members arrived I went to put the book back on the shelf, but Fr. Rossi encouraged me to borrow it, and said I was always welcome to any of the books in his collection. I took the book home and finished it, and the rest was history.
Cancer Ward is a pretty heavy book with some potentially “adult” content, but neither the parish priest nor my parents ever questioned whether or not I was old enough or mature enough to read it. I’ve always felt free to read whatever I want, whenever I want, and that’s such an important feeling, especially for a teenager. I’m a vocal champion of thinking outside the box and connecting readers with the right books without judgement, regardless of the category that society has slotted them into. If teenagers find comfort in childhood books or enjoy the challenge of adult novels, whether they enjoy graphic novels, nonfiction, romances or controversial topics, what matters is that they connect with what they’re reading, and that it speaks to them in the right way at the right moment in their lives. Novels geared towards teenagers just didn’t appeal to me when I was a teenager, but because I was encouraged to explore beyond the YA world, my love of reading survived and even flourished during my awkward adolescence.
Thanks for taking this trip down memory lane with me! Are there any pivotal books that you remember from your high school years? I’d love to hear about them!
Which Catholic girl is you, Jane! Loved this reading history post!
Ha, I’m the one with the bangs 😀
I was a lone reader in my teens. No one I knew read – not in my family, not one of my friends. Actually, most of the people around me struggled to read. And there was me, reading everything I could get my hands on and no one monitored what I read. One of the books I remember reading was “Looking for Mr Goodbar.” I was 13 and I think I picked it up when I went camping at Cultus Lake. It did make an impression on me. It wasn’t the sex and murder but rather that the main character was a special ed teacher and the great things she did with kids.
Yes! So often well-meaning adults worry about the “bad influences” in books (sex, violence, swearing, etc.), when there’s often so much more in so many books that young readers actually pick up on and are drawn to.
I was the same way- read pretty much whatever I liked and yes the books I read did have an impact on me and were the right books at that time. I like how you worded that. Great story and I think sometimes a book that doesn’t seem like it would be the one can really matter to someone and spark their love of reading.
There’s been a lot of talk recently in the library community about “reading levels”, and the idea of trying to shoehorn children into boxes and categories, which really drives me nuts. General reading levels can be helpful for caregivers who are trying to pick books for their little ones, but the idea of trying to limit children’s reading just boils my blood!
Thanks for sharing that lovely story. I read some really heavy books (including Russian classics) as a teen too. I started with War and Peace. And just continued after that.
What other Russian novels do you recommend?
I really enjoyed Chekhov, Turgenev, Solzhenitsyn, Dostoyevsky, Bulgakov and Gorky when I was a teen, and I admit I haven’t read that much Russian lit since!
Thanks! I’ll give one of them a go!