Showing posts with label Hollywood originals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hollywood originals. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

The American Dream

A Look at The American Dream 

Recently I was looking for films about the American Dream and I could find almost nothing. So, I created this list based on the films of what I did find, the films that I use or have used to make and measure my version of The American Dream combining them with descriptions friends, family, and other people writings. 

First, I must state that The American Dream is different to different people, but my interpretation is it is usually about having a certain level of success and comfortable lifestyle with the end goal of freedom, having a family, ownership of a house, land, car with success in a career.

I started this list at the end of WWII because I feel like things got really good for America and the American people and the core idea of the modern American Dream came to be. 

What is here is a sampling of storylines of people living or trying to achieve The American Dream in different decades. 

The 1940’s and 1950’s 

This period of time was about the end of WWII, returning to normal life and home ownership. 

The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)
Based on the book Glory For Me by MacKinlay Kantor [First Published in 1945] Three men of different social economic backgrounds are returning to their hometown of Boone City from WWII become friends as they face the challenges of returning to post war life and American society.

It’s a Wonderful Life (1946)
George Bailey has dreamed of traveling the world and doing important things however he has had to choose between doing what he wants and or being responsible and helping family, friends, and community. He gives up what he desires. When he is close to committing suicide, an angel shows him what the world would be like without him.  

Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream House (1948)
Based on the novel Mr. Blandings Builds His Dream Housby Eric Hodgins [First Published in 1946] The Blandings family wanting more room to buy a house and some land out in Connecticut. Upon learning that the house is unlivable the Blandings tear it down and build a custom house. Unforeseen setbacks add expense and delayed move in dates.

My Blue Heaven (1950)
A married song and dance team is unable to have children become determined to adopt a child. While going through the process adopting and raising the child thy try to change their act from stage and radio to Television.

Leave It To Beaver (1957-1963) 
The Cleaver Family is an all-American Family of four living in the suburbs. The parents Ward and June try to raise their boys Wally and Bever to be good productive members of society. When Bever or Wally get into trouble Ward and June help them resolve the problem and teach the boy's a moral lesson. 

The Last Angry Man (1959)
Based on the novel The Last Angry Man by Gerald Green [First Published in 1956]. Woodrow Trashed is a Television producer tasked with making a docuseries about ordinary people. He selects Dr. Samuel Abelman a decided GP that serves a poor area of Brooklyn, New York and dreams of owning his own single-family home.


1960's 

With the help of Television, the 1960's American Dream revolved around the nuclear family, home and car ownership and having a certain lifestyle with material goods. 

A Raisin In The Sun (1961/2008)
Based on the play A Raisin In The Sun by Lorraine Hansberry [First Published in 1959] A Black family struggling to make a living get an unexpected windfall in the shape of an insurance check. The members of the family disagree on how to use the money to better their lives until outside prejudices unite the family in a common dream.

The Jetsons (1962-1963)
Cartoon about an average nuclear family living in the future with lots of modern futuristic convinces and misadventures. 

How To Successes In Business Without Really Trying (1967/1975)
Inspired by the book How To Successes In Business Without Really Trying: The Dastards Guide To Fame and Fortune by Shepherd Mead [First Published in 1952].  J. Pierpont Finch is a window washer that finds a book called How To Successes In Business Without Really Trying and uses it to guide him from the mail room to an executive position in a matter of weeks. 

The Sweet Ride (1968)
Based on the novel The Sweet Ride by William Murray [First Published in 1968]. An older tennis Pro, a surfer, and a musician have a bohemian lifestyle in a house in Malibu, California.  When they become involved with a mysterious woman their lives become complained with by a biker gang, and a movie producer.

Mad Men (2007-2015)
Starting in 1960 the series is about the professional and personal lives of the people working at a smaller ad agency on Madison Avenue New York City. The show mainly focuses on Don Draper a genius with a troubled past and a need to have The American Dream. 


1970's
  

In the 1970's I believe The American Dream shifted to living the life, you want even if it does not fit an ideal image, saving the small-town America and upward mobility. 

The Brady Bunch (1969-1974)
Two widowers each with three children and one live-in housekeeper marry creating a large family. The family lives in a suburban area and they have various adventures.

The Boatniks (1970)
Ensign Tom Garland of the US Coast Guard has been assigned to station in southern California that constantly rescues wealthy civilian pleasure sailors. There is also a side story about three jewel thieves trying to recover some stolen jewels that were lose near the naval station.  
  

The Landlord (1970)
Based on the novel The Landlord by Kristin Hunter [First Published in 1966] Elgar Enders is from a wealthy family. He plans to participate in the fad of buying a rundown building and remaking it into an upscale luxury home. The building he buys is in Park Slope, Brooklyn, New York. First, he has to evict the people living there, however once he gets involved with the tenets his plans change. 

Cold Turkey (1971)
A cigarette company has come up with a publicity stunt $25 million to any town that can give up smoking and tobacco for 30 days. Reverend Clayton Brooks and the 4,000 residents of the dying town of Eagle Rock, Iowa take on that challenge to save their dying town. 

The Adventures of the Wilderness Family (1975)
The Robinson are family living in Los Angles but decide to leave their urban life for the rural outdoors hundreds of miles from another living person. The family faces many dangers from the wildlife, the elements, but by pulling together if they survive it all. 

The Jeffersons (1975-1985)
The newly wealthy Jeffersons move on up to a luxury apartment on the upper east side enjoy the good life and sometimes clash with their neighbors. 

That 70’s Show (1998-2006)
Set in Point Place, Wisconsin during the 1970’s Eric Forman and his friends grow up and have life experiences as the decade progresses. 

1980's

In the 1980's to me it seems like an updated ideal image based on the 1950's and 1960's version of The American Dream along with career success and building wealth quickly came to define The American Dream.  

Family Ties (1982-1989)
Steve and Elyse Keaton are liberal ex-hippies in Regan Era America in a traditional suburban family situation with children that do not share their values. This is especially true of their oldest son Alex P. Keaton a passionate conservative republican. 

The Cosby Show (1984-1992)
The home life of the successful Dr. Heathcliff Huxtable, lawyer Clair Huxtable and their four children.  

Risky Business (1983)
Joel Goodson is a rich kid living in the Chicago North Shore area following his parents plans to do well in school and attend Princeton University. One weekend his parents need to go out of town and Joel starts a series of misadventures that result in his parent's belongings being damaged or stolen including his father's Porsche 928. To fix his problems he needs money fast so with the help of his friends and Lana a prostitute he has fallen in love with. He makes his house into a pop-up brothel. This is also the night the Princeton recruiter shows up for an interview. 

Quicksilver (1986)
Jack Casey is a stockbroker that makes a costly mistake and becomes a bike messenger for Quicksilver Speed Delivery. When his friend Hector needs money to open his own food cart business but cannot obtain a loan Jack is convinced to go back to trading where he is more successful than they imagined. Jack also takes on a dangerous drug dealer and finds love with a coworker. 

Baby Boom (1987)
A successful businesswoman inherits a baby from a distant relative. To give her new family a better life she buys a house sight unseen Vermont. It is of course a fixer upper. Once there she fixes up the house, starts a successful business, and finds love. 

The Secret of My Success (1987)
Brantly Foster is an ambitious new grad that is excited about business and is looking for a big break. He gets a job in the mail room of a big company in New York. Seeing how poorly the company is run and finding an opportunity to make himself an executive at the company, he creates an alter ego, Carlton Whitfield. He is very successful and improves the company’s operations. This gets him noticed by the CEO, how long until he is discovered?

Wall Street (1987)
Bud Fox is a stockbroker that wants to be a top trader and work with his hero Gordon Gekko. After a lot of work Bud gets a meeting with Gordon where he performs a small act of insider trading. Impressed with this Gordon mentors Bud and teaches him how to manipulate the stock market and insider trading. Getting everything, he wants until his family and community are at risk of being hurt and must choose between his mentor or his family. 

Working Girl (1988)
Tess Mcgill is a secretary going to business school at night and is trying to advance her career. When her boss is injured during a ski trip she poses as her boss and teams up with an investment banker to prove she has what it takes. It goes well until her boss returns. 

The Pursuit of Happyness (2006)
Based on the memoir The Pursuit of Happyness by Chris Gardner [First Published in 2006]. Set in San Francisco in the early 1980’s Chris Gardner invested heavily in bone density scanners however they did not pan out as well as he hoped putting a strain on his marriage. When he loses his car, house and wife he takes a chance on an internship with a stockbroker firm. He works hard and in time he changes his life and becomes successful.   

1990's 

In the 90's The American Dream became less conservative but still influenced by past decades while adding leaving the suburbs and living in spacious apartments in large metro areas.   

Mr. Destiny (1990)
Larry Burrows blew a game winning hit in a baseball game in his teens resulting in living in a middle-class life. He is obsessed with what could have been. On his 35th birthday he offered the life he would have had if he had not missed the ball to the live the life that could have been. While he has the things, he wanted out of life the person he became and the price he paid for that life is not what he thought it would be. 

Home Improvement (1991 – 1999)
A sitcom about a home improvement host, his family, friends and neighbors living in a nice suburb of Detroit, Michigan. The show's humor often revolves around tools, cars, home projects, family issues and a rivalry with Bob Vila of This Old House.

For Love or Money (1993)
Doug Ireland is a Concierge at a luxury hotel in Matthan that has a goal, a plan and a dream of building his own luxury hotel on Roosevelt Island in New York. Putting all of his money to this project when he finds investor Christian Hanover shows interest in the project Doug is willing to take on the unofficial job of managing Christian's mistress Andy Hart. In doing this Doug falls in love with her and may lose his project to save the girl from a businessman that uses everybody. 

Friends (1994-2004)
The personal and professional lives of six friends in their 20's while they live in New York City and try to achieve their dreams. 

King of the Hill (1997-2010)
Hank Hill assistant manager and propane salesman in Arlan, Texas lives his American Dream as best he can while dealing with a society that is changing and the wild antics of his friends and family. 

Sex and the City (1998-2004)
Inspired by the book Sex and The City by Candace Bushnell [First Published in 1996]. Four close female friends in their 30's living in New York City gather and talk about their professional, personal, sex lives as they navigate womanhood in the 90's.  

2000's 

Tech start-ups, social networks internet fame became The American Dream for a lot while economic factors made not losing what you built and having steady employment were factors in this decade. 

Pirates of Silicon Valley (1999)
Based on the book Fire In The Valley by Paul Freiburg and Michael Swaine [First Published in 1984]. This is the history of Steve Jobs and Bill Gates and how they made the computers, programs and technology that changed modern society. 

Fun With Dick and Jane (2005)
Remake of Fun with Dick and Jane (1977) Dick and Jane Harper are a well-off family living in an affluent suburb. After Dick gets a promotion to VP of his company Jane quits her job to be a housewife. Suddenly Dick's company goes out of business and the family becomes bankrupt. The couple become criminals to regain their lifestyle. When they see their former friends and coworkers struggling, they go after the CEO of Dick's company to restore the pensions and benefits that had been embezzled by the top executives.   

iCarley (2007-2012)
Carley Shaw along with her friends Sam Puckett, and Freddie Benson create their own web show earning them fame and fortune. 

The Social Network (2010)
Based on The Accidental Billionaires: The Founding of Facebook, A Tale of Sex, Money, Genius, and Betrayal by Ben Mezrick [First Published in 2009]. In 2003 Mark Zuckerberg creates the site Facemash during a bought of anger after the site is taken down. Mark is sought after by people wanting to create social networks. However, Mark Zuckerberg creates his own network with his friend Eduardo Saverin thefacebook.com.  As it grows in popularity Mark Zuckerberg becomes a billionaire while changing and expanding the network into Facebook.com. 


2010 - 2023

2010 to today (2023 when I wrote this) I feel like having Freedom, being debt free (student loans being a big part of this), being able to provide for one’s family, achieving life events/growing up, understanding how and why America and society changed so suddenly is The American Dream. 

Last Man Standing (2011-2021)
Mike Baxter is co-owner of an outdoor sporting and fishing stores bases out of Colardo. He travels the world, owns classic cars and lives with his wife and three daughters and a grandson in a large house in the suburbs. The less-than-ideal parts of his life come from his daughter's romantic choices, parenting, that society is less conservative and his neighbors.  

The House (2017)
When the Johansen's daughter is about to go to college when they learn that the full scholarship, they were counting on has been canceled they team up with a neighbor to run an illegal casino to pay for their daughter to go to college. 

Santa Clarita Diet (2017-2019)
Sheila and Joel Hammond are a married couple that work as real estate agents while raising their daughter in Santa Clarita, California. When Sheila becomes a zombie, the family pulls together to find a cure and keep their life they built for themselves. 

At Home In Mitford (2019) 
Based on the novel At Home in Mitford by Jan Karon [First Published in 1994]. Writer and artist Cynthia Coppersmith goes to Mitford to find inspiration and to do something with a house she inherited. While nest door neighbor Reverend Tim Kavanaugh has a large puppy that has decided to live with him taking in a boy whose family is deployed. The two of them find friendship and romance in this perfect small town. 

Picture A Perfect Christmas (2019)
Based on A Family Under The Christmas Tree by Terri Reed [First Published in 2016]. Professional Photographer Sophie Griffith goes to see her grandmother over Christmas. Not having much to do she helps as the nanny to the next-door neighbor Davis who is the guardian of his nephew. They celebrate Christmas, fall in love, and create a family in a beautiful town. 

Emily The Criminal (2022)
Emily has a lot of student loan debt and difficulties with obtaining gainful employment. She gets involved in credit card scams making good money getting out of debt. She gets deeper in the Los Angles criminal underworld. 

Vengeance (2022)
Ben Manalowitz is a New York writer that wants to expand his career to include podcasting. His pitches are about explaining what America is today. When he gets a call about the death of an ex-hookup he goes to West Texas and sells a podcast idea on the mystery of her death and explaining the current red, blue divide. As he investigates, he loses his preconceived ideas about culture, life and Texas. 





Sunday, October 1, 2017

The most frequently challenged (banned) books in the US, that have a film adaption 1990-2009



The most frequently challenged (banned) books, In the US that have a screen adaption. 1990-2009 


Every 10 years The American Library Association releases a top 100 list of books that are most challenged/requested by people and organizations to be banned from libraries and schools.

"A challenge is an attempt to remove or restrict materials, based upon the objections of a person or group. A banning is the removal of those materials. Challenges do not simply involve a person expressing a point of view; rather, they are an attempt to remove material from the curriculum or library, thereby restricting the access of others. As such, they are a threat to freedom of speech and choice." - ALA Website.

I took the lists from 1990-1999 and 2000-2009. For various reasons several books are on both lists making the combined list 100 plus over those 20 years. This blog being what it is I focused on the books that have been adapted to the screen. 69 books of the 100 plus have an adaption. 

The full lists are at ALA.org.


On 12/20/2018 I updated and added a I added a brief synopsis.

A Prayer for Owen Meany, by John Irving [First published in 1989]: Simon Birch (1998)
Set in the 1960’s Owen a disabled boy believes that he is an instrument of God and embarks on a mission to fulfill his fate.

A Time to Kill, by John Grisham [First published in 1989]: A Time to Kill (1996)
A 10-year-old girl is raped and beaten by 2 white supremacists. Her Father gets an assault rifle and kills the men. A capital murder trail follows the killing.  

A Wrinkle in Time, by Madeleine L’Engle [First published in 1962]: A Wrinkle in Time (2003/2018)
The story is about a brother, sister and their friend travel to another planet to save their father and stop a great evil from taking over the universe.

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain [First published in 1884]: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1939/1955/1960), The Adventures of Huck Finn (1993), and Huckleberry Finn (1974/1975)
A sequel to Tom Sawyer it is the adventures of a runaway slave and a white boy in the Mississippi Valley. 

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain [First Published in 1876]: Tom Sawyer (1917, 1930, 1938, 1973) Tom and Huck (1995)
Set in the 1840’s a young boy’s life and adventures in a small town in Missouri along the Mississippi River.

America: A Novel, by E.R. Frank [First Published in 2002]: America: A Novel (2009)
Story of a biracial boy named America from birth to 18 as he gets lost in the foster care system.  

American Psycho, by Bret Easton Ellis [First Published 1991]: American Psycho (2000)
Set in the Wall Street boom in the late 1980’s Patrick Bateman is a psychotic investment banker that may or may not be a serial killer.

Angus, Thongs, and Full Frontal Snogging, by Louise Rennison [First Published in 1999]: Angus, Thongs, and Perfect Snogging (2008)
The first story in a series of 10 books. The series and the first book is a coming-of-age tale about a 15-year-old girl and her quest for popularity, and romance/love. 

Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret by Judy Bloom [First Published in 1970] Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret (2023)
Margaret Simon is an 11-year-old girl that is in an interfaith family that is moving from the suburbs of New Jersey to New York City. In the city she makes friends, deals with puberty education, and religious questions and growing up. 

Beloved, by Toni Morrison [First published in 1987]: Beloved (1998)
Set during and after the American Civil War a runaway slave escapes from Kentucky to the free state of Ohio. All the while doing the best for her family while dealing with the ghosts of the past. 

Black Boy, by Richard Wright [First Published in 1945]: Black Boy (1995)
A memoir of Richard Wright’s youth in the US South and his early years in Chicago Illinois. 

Bless Me, Ultima, by Rudolfo A. Anaya [First published in 1972]: Bless Me, Ultima (2013)
A coming-of-age story about a young Chicano, growing up in New Mexico and his mentorship with his curandera. 
(A curandera is a female healer that uses folk medicine and mysticism for healing). 

Blood and Chocolate, by Annette Curtis Klause [First published in 1997]: Blood and Chocolate (2007)
A young werewolf girl longs for a normal life, but can she have that? 

Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley [First Published in 1932]: Brave New World (1980/1998) TV Series (2020)
Set in the future a totalitarian utopia exists through genetic engineering, drugs, sex and brain washing. However, one-man longs to be free. 

Bridge to Terabithia, by Katherine Paterson [First Published in 1977]: Bridge To Terabithia (1985/2007)
A boy befriends a new girl and together they create Terabithia a fantasy world where they rule as king and queen. 

Captain Underpants (series), by Dav Pilkey [First Published in 1997]: Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie (2017), The Epic Tales of Captain Underpants (2018-?)
A 12-book series about a 2 fourth grade boys who hypnotize their principle into becoming a superhero called Captain Underpants. 

Carrie, by Stephen King [First published in 1974]: Carrie (1976/2002/2013)
Carrie White a bullied high school girl develops telekinetic powers and gets revenge at the prom. 

The Chocolate War, by Robert Cormier [First published in 1974]: The Chocolate War (1988)
One boy takes on a secret society at a Catholic School by not selling chocolate in the annual chocolate sale. A secret society of students seeks to punish and put the boy back into his place. 

Christine, by Stephen King [First published in 1983]: Christine (1983)
A 1958 Plymouth Fury named Christine that is possessed by malevolent supernatural forces that destroy anybody that gets in her way. 

The Color Purple, by Alice Walker [First published in 1982]: The Color Purple (1985)
Set in Georgia during the 1930’s the story is about a black woman of low social status, suffers abuse from her father and other people in her life over four decades. 

Cujo, by Stephen King: [First published in 1981]: Cujo (1983)
A Saint Bernard gets infected with rabies from a bat. The disease goes untreated causing the dog to attack and kills members of his family and other unfortunate people. 

The Dead Zone, by Stephen King: [First published in 1979]: The Dead Zone (1983) TV Series (2002 -2006)
After a car accident Johnnie Smith, a schoolteacher wakes from a coma with the powers of clairvoyance and precognition. He labors to deal with his new powers change a possible apocalyptic future. 

Fat Kid Rules the World, by K.L. Going: [First published in 2003]: Fat Kid Rules the World (2012)
A 296-pound kid is about to kill himself when a local guitar legend stops him. Together they form a band. Saving each other and changing the world of punk music. 

The Face on the Milk Carton, by Caroline Cooney: [First published in 1990]: The Face on the Milk Carton (1995)
A 15-year-old girl sees her face on a milk carton and solves the mystery of her kidnapping. 

Fahrenheit 451, by Ray Bradbury: [First published in 1953]: Fahrenheit 451 (1966), (2018)
Set in the future where books are outlawed a fireman one who sets fire to books and houses that they are hidden in. Rebels and joins a resentence groups who memorize and share the world’s great literature. 

Flowers for Algernon, by Daniel Keyes: [First published in 1959]: Charly (1968), Flowers for Algernon (2000)
A mentally disabled man goes through an experimental producer that increases his IQ to highest possible levels. Only to have it reverse and leave his as he was before. 

Forever…, by Judy Blume: [First published in 1975]: Forever (1978)
A boy and girl meet at a New Year's Eve party and fall in love thinking it will last forever. The parents feel otherwise and separate them over the summer. Will the relationship survive the distance? 

Friday Night Lights: A Town, A Team and A Dream, by H.G. Bissenger: [First published in 1988]: Friday Night Lights (2004) TV Series (2006-2011)
A nonfiction book about the 1988 Permian High School Football team, and the run for the Texas State Championship. 

The Giver, by Lois Lowry: [First published in 1993]: The Giver (2014)
Set in the future a boy sees realizes that his utopian society is really a controlled dystopia. 

Go Ask Alice, by Anonymous: [First published in 1971]: Go Ask Alice (1973)
Taking place from 1968 – 1970 a 14 young girl develops a drug habit and begins a downward spiral to rock bottom.  

The Goats, by Brock Cole: [First published in 1987] Standing Up a.k.a. Goat Island (2013)
A boy and a girl are selected for a long-established camp prank that leaves a boy and a girl stranded on an island naked. This time the kids decide to run away rather going back to camp resulting in a lifelong friendship.  

Goosebumps (series), by R.L. Stine: [First Published in 1992] Goosebumps (1995-1998), Goosebumps (2015), Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween (2018)
Goosebumps is a series of horror novellas that follow child characters, who find themselves dealing with unusual situations; that usually involve the supernatural and or science fiction. There are 62 books are printed under the original umbrella title. With several spin offs. 

Gossip Girl (series), by Cecily von Ziegesar: [First Published in 2002] Gossip Girl (2007-2012)
A book series that follow the lives, and romances of privileged elite teens from the Upper East Side Manhattan.  

The Great Gilly Hopkins, by Katherine Paterson: [First published in 1978]: The Great Gilly Hopkins (2015)
A 12-year-old foster child that has been bounce around foster homes plots reunite with her idealized birth mother. 

Grendel, by John Gardner: [First published in 1970]: Grendel Grendel Grendel (1981)
The story of Beowulf told from the monster Grendal’s point of view. 

The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Atwood: [First published in 1985] The Handmaid’s Tale (1990) TV (2017-?)
Set in a dystopian future a totalitarian government runs a country called Gilead where all fertile women are stripped of rights and must serve as surrogates for infertile wives of the rich and powerful.  

Harry Potter (series), by J.K. Rowling: [First Published in 1997] Harry Potter (series) (2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011)
The novels chronicle the life and adventures of Harry Potter at his friends as they attend The Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.  

His Dark Materials (series), by Philip Pullman: [First Published in 1995] The Golden Compass (2007) TV His Dark Materials (2019-?)
A Trilogy about a girl that travels between worlds to save a multiverse from impending destruction. The movie is based on the first book in the series. 

The House of Spirits, by Isabel Allende: [First published in1982]: The House of Spirits (1993)
Three generations of the Trueba family are chronicle through personal and political upheaval in Latin America during the 20th Century. 

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, by Maya Angelou: [First published in 1969]: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1979)
The autobiography is about the early years of poet, writer, singer, and activist Maya Angelou 1928 - 2014. 

Jack, by A.M. Homes: [First published in 1989]: Jack (2004)
Coming of age novel about a 15-year-old boy dealing with his parents' divorce and dealing with the revelation that his Dad is Gay. 

James and the Giant Peach, by Roald Dahl: [First published in 1961]: James and the Giant Peach (1996)
An orphan boy enters a giant magic peach and has adventures with seven giant insects as they travel the world in that giant peach. 

Jumper, by Steven Gould: [First published in 1992]: Jumper (2008)
A boy with the ability to teleport runs away from home and makes his way through the world as he searches for his birth mother.  

Killing Mr. Griffin, by Lois Duncan: [First published in 1978]: Killing Mr. Griffin (1997)
A group of students kidnap their English teacher as revenge for being too strict. During the kidnapping he dies of a heart attack The students then try to conspire to hide the crime. 

The Kite Runner, by Khaled Hosseini: [First published in 2003]: The Kite Runner (2007)
Tells the story of a friendship between two boys beginning in the final days of the Afghanistan Monarchy and into the rise of the Taliban Regime

Lord of the Flies, by William Golding: [First published in 1954]: Lord of the Flies (1963/1990)
After a plane crash groups of English school boys are stranded on a deserted island with no adults. The boys quickly become savage. 

The Lovely Bones, by Alice Sebold: [First published in 2002]: The Lovely Bones (2009)
In the 1970’s a teenage girl is raped and murdered then watches from her personal heaven as her family and friends deal with moving on while she comes to terms with her death. 

My Brother Sam is Dead, by James Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier: [First published in 1974] My Brother Sam is Dead (1986)
A boy named Tim has an older brother named Sam who has chosen to fight for America’s independence in the Revolutionary War against their Father's wishes. As the war continues Tim will have to choose a side. 

Native Son, by Richard Wright: [First published in 1940] Native Son, (1951/1986)
In the 1940’s a black man works as a chauffeur for a rich white family.  Things turn bad when he accidently kills his employer’s teenage daughter and tries to cover it up. 

Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck: [First published in 1937]: Of Mice and Men (1939, 1968, 1981, 1992)
Two drifters working the fields during The Great Depression George and Lennie work to achieve their dream of having their own land. Until an accidental murder kills the dream they have.

One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, by Ken Kesey: [First published in 1962]: One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1975)
Set in an Organ psychiatric hospital a criminal pleads insanity after getting into trouble again.  Once on the ward he rebels against the oppressive tyrannical Nurse Ratcheted and to improve the lives of the scared patients. 

Ordinary People, by Judith Guest: [First published in 1976]: Ordinary People (1980)
A typical suburban family deals with the aftermath of the death of the favored son the end of a psychiatric hospital stay of the other son. Who is still dealing with issues that lead him to attempt suicide four months earlier.

The Outsiders, by S.E. Hinton [First published in 1967]: The Outsiders (1983)
Two gangs in Oklahoma on opposite sides on the social economic divide have rivalry. Things turn heated when a member of the rich gang is killed leading to tragedy and a rumble. 

The Perks of Being a Wallflower, by Stephen Chbosky: [First published in 1999]: The Perks of Being a Wallflower (2012)
A coming-of-age novel set in the early 1990’s about an introvert starting high school, dealing with death, drugs, sex, abortion and family and coming to terms with being molested as a child. 

Pillars of the Earth, by Ken Follett: [First published in 1989]: Pillars of the Earth (2010)
Set in 12th Century England a monk is driven to build the greatest gothic cathedral the world has ever known.  

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, by Mildred Taylor: [First published in 1976]: Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry (1978)
Story of the Logan’s a black family and the racism they face in the rural south in the 1930’s. 

Slaughterhouse-Five, by Kurt Vonnegut: [First published in1969]: Slaughterhouse-Five (1972)
A man who was been abducted by aliens has become unstuck in time and is reliving periods of his life. 

Snow Falling on Cedars, by David Guterson: [First published in 1994]: Snow Falling on Cedars (1999)
Set in the 1950’s in the Pacific Northwest a white fisher man is found dead, and a Japanese American is accused of murder and put on trial.

Speak, by Laurie Halse Anderson: [First published in 1999]: Speak (2004)
At the final party of the summer a high school freshman calls the police ending the party. Unable to say why she called the police due to a trauma that happened during the party she becomes a loner. Through art she is able to overcome what happened and speak up. 

The Stupids (series), by Harry Allard: [First Published 1974] The Stupids (1996)
A children’s book series that depicts a family that is so dim, dull stupid that the simplest of tasks becomes a humorous ordeal. 

Summer of My German Soldier, by Bette Greene: [First published in 1973]: Summer of My German Soldier (1978)
Set in Jenkinsville, Arkansas during World War II. A 12-year-old Jewish girl befriends and later helps a German POW. 

That Was Then, This is Now, by S.E. Hinton: [First published in 1971]: That Was Then, This is Now (1985)
A boy Byron and his adopted brother Mark start to grow apart. Byron matures and gets involved with girls, while Mark lives for the moment. This leads to a conflict that changed their lives forever. 

The Things They Carried, by Tim O’Brien: [First published in 1990]: A Soldier’s Sweetheart (1998)
A set of connected short stories about US soldiers fighting in the Vietnam War. 

Tiger Eyes, by Judy Blume: [First published in 1981]: Tiger Eyes (2012)
A 15-year-old girl is dealing with anxiety and is in morning her father after he is shot dead in a robbery. The girl and her mother temporarily move to New Mexico with her family. There she meets a boy that helps her deal with what happened and finish the mourning process. 

To Kill a Mockingbird, by Harper Lee: [First published in 1960]: To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)
Atticus Finch, a lawyer in the depression era Deep South defends a black man accused of raping a white woman in a court of law. While teaching his children about predigest. 

Where’s Waldo?, by Martin Hanford: [First Published in 1987] Where’s Waldo? (1991-1991) (2019-2020)
Search for Waldo in a group of similarly dressed crowd of people in different locations. 

The Witches, by Roald Dahl: [First published in 1983]: The Witches (1990) (2020)
An orphan boy and his grandmother discover a witch’s convention and a plan to turn children into mice. Together they battle the witches and save the children. 

The Upstairs Room, by Johanna Reiss: [First published in 1972]: The Upstairs Room (1987)
An autobiography by Johanna Reiss documenting her childhood in occupied Holland during the Nazi invasion.

 Haruki Murakami reminds us that “If you only read the books that everyone else is reading, you can only think what everyone else is thinking.”

What I Am Watching 2026

This will be the usual format and setup  Movie Theater numbers 2025 Cinema 25 2026 Current Number 2 The first film of 2026 was New Year'...