With Their Eyes: September 11th -- The View from a High School at Ground Zero by Annie Thoms, Taresh Batra (Editor), Taresh Batra (Created by), Anna Belc (Created by)

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(Paperback - 1ST)

  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • Pub. Date: August 2002
  • 256pp
  • Sales Rank: 58,292

    Reader Rating: (17 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Realism" See All

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: August 2002
    • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
    • Format: Paperback, 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 58,292
    • Age Range: Young Adult

    Synopsis

    September 11, 2001Monologues from
    Stuyvesant High School

    Tuesday, September 11, seemed like any other day at Stuyvesant High School, only a few blocks away from the World Trade Center. The semester was just beginning, and the students, faculty, and staff were ready to start a new year.

    Within a few hours that Tuesday morning, they would experience an event that transformed all their lives completely.

    Here, in their own words, are the firsthand stories of a day none of us will ever forget.

    Publishers Weekly

    Thoms, an English teacher at Stuyvesant High School, located four blocks from the site of the World Trade Center, spearheaded a school production last February based on 10 students' recorded interviews (with classmates, faculty and staff members). The students converted the transcripts into "poem-monologues," which they presented and the text of which appears here. In Thoms's introduction, she notes that the goal was "to capture the ways individual people express themselves in speech," and, indeed, the collective impression is one of a group therapy session that may well provide some healing for teen readers still struggling with the event's aftermath. Many of the monologues (at times laced with "um" and "like") probably work better in a dramatization; on the page, the narratives at times falter and a few repeat similar themes. The poignant "Precious Cargo," for instance, begins with a photograph of a student performing as a pregnant English teacher, and her words of protectiveness about both her unborn child and her students read well on the page, but would likely be even more moving onstage. Still, the emotional rhythms of the volume take on a credible ebb and flow. A welcome dash of humor comes through in a freshman's contention that the students' relocation to Brooklyn Tech (while their school functioned as a triage center) put everyone on equal footing ("Everybody was like/ `Where the hell are my classes?'/ so it was kinda like everybody was a freshman"). In the closing entry, perhaps the most smoothly structured in the volume, the school theater manager recalls returning to a newly reopened Stuyvesant to find the flag missing from the stage. Later, he "came across a picture/ of firemen/ installing a flag/ on the mast of the World Trade Center/ and I looked at the picture and my jaw dropped./ It was our flag." Readers willing to overlook less relevant and revealing segments will find a number of moving moments here. Ages 13-up. (Sept.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    Annie Thoms received her MA in English Education from Teachers College, Columbia University. She is currently an English teacher and theatre advisor at Stuyvesant High School.

    Customer Reviews

    With Their Eyesby Morgan94

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    July 11, 2009: This book allows the reader to catch a glimpse of what happened in the eyes of a High School at ground zero. It was especially relateable to teens and young adults because many of the things described in the book were from the point of view of a High School student. It was a moving description of a tragic event in our nations history.

    a reviewerby Anonymous

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    February 24, 2008: The book was very detailed but it wasn't all that great. It was like a formated play.


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