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Alice Mead

Author of Junebug

25 Works 1,389 Members 23 Reviews

Works by Alice Mead

Junebug (1995) 582 copies, 8 reviews
Girl of Kosovo (2001) 114 copies, 1 review
Year of No Rain (2003) 113 copies, 2 reviews
Junebug and the Reverend (1998) 108 copies, 1 review
Soldier Mom (1999) 78 copies, 2 reviews
Beetles (Leveled readers) (2001) 76 copies
Junebug in Trouble (2002) 63 copies, 2 reviews
Crossing the Starlight Bridge (1994) 56 copies, 1 review
Dawn and Dusk (2007) 40 copies, 2 reviews
Adem's Cross (Laurel Leaf Books) (1996) 39 copies, 2 reviews
Isabella's Above-Ground Pool (2006) 20 copies, 1 review
Swimming to America (2005) 14 copies
Madame Squidley and Beanie (2004) 14 copies
Billy and Emma (2000) 12 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1952
Gender
female
Education
Bryn Mawr College
Occupations
teacher
author

Members

Reviews

24 reviews
Reviewed by Mark Frye, author and reviewer for TeensReadToo.com

DAWN AND DUSK by Alice Mead is a compelling work of fiction that is a timely read for youth of the 21st Century.

Azad is a pre-teen, Kurdish boy living in Iran along the Iraq border in the late '80's during the Iran-Iraq war. To make the lives of his people even more trying, the Kurds are despised in their own country as well as Iraq. This sad fact of life inspires many to join a resistance movement against the Ayatollah's regime, show more putting their lives in danger. When Azad's town is bombed with Iraqi chemical weapons, he retreats to his mother's home in the mountains of Kurdistan.

The heart of this story - in spite of its foreign setting - is one of universal concerns for young people. Azad's parents are divorced and he has mixed feelings for both his mom and dad. Who is to blame for his broken home?

He feels abandoned by his mom, who moved far away after the divorce, but he wonders if the rumors are true about his father. Is he really an informer for the Iranian secret police? Did his mother leave because she is a member of the resistance? His struggles with his family situation combine with his feelings of alienation as a Kurd. Many young people will identify with Azad's concerns.

Although the ending is a bit too tidy for realistic fiction, Mead's resolution keeps DAWN AND DUSK acceptable for its targeted young audience. This novel is extremely well-written and has an authentic sense of place.
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Decent little book -- Junebug is a very winning young man. It does feel a bit dated, which makes sense, since it was published in 1997. A little whiff of after school special, but also a kid who knows what he likes (sailboats) and has a plan to make that wish happen.
More people need to read stories such as this. Stories about countries that are in a perpetual war. War is totally senseless. Grown men fighting over land and ideologies and sending in young men to fight their wars; killing innocent people in sense of duty. It is sad.
I think this is an important book for elementary students to read. My students do not live like Junebug. They don't understand poverty, gangs or drugs on their street. This was an eye opening book for my students. They were exposed to a life totally different than their own. I think is powerful read for students who don't know Junebug's hard life and for those who do.

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Julie Dretzin Narrator

Statistics

Works
25
Members
1,389
Popularity
#18,509
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
23
ISBNs
88
Languages
5

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