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INTRODUCTION
When he hit me, I didn't see it coming, It was just a quick
blur, a flash out of the corner of my eye, and then the side
of my face just exploded, burning, as his hands slammed against
me.
Strange, sleepy Rogerson, with his long brown dreads and brilliant
green eyes, had seemed to Caitlin to be an open door. With him
she could be anybody, not just the second-rate shadow of her
two-years-older sister Cass. But now she is drowning in the vacuum
Cass left behind when she turned her back on her family's expectations.
Caitlin wanders in a dreamland of drugs and a nightmare of sudden
fists, trapped in her search for herself.
As violence becomes more and more prevalent in our world, one
out of every five teenage girls in America will be beaten by
a dating partner, and one third to one half of married women
will be victims of abuse. Yet shame, fear, and assumed guilt
keeps many in conspiracy of silence about this widespread but
invisible anguish. Why do girls allow themselves to get into
such relationshipsand what keeps them there?
In this riveting novel, Sarah Dessen searches for understanding
and answers through the mind of a young girl who suddenly finds
herself in a trap of constant menace, a trap that is baited with
love and need. More and more she must frantically manage her
every action to avoid being hit by the hands that had seemed
so gentle. All around Caitlin are women who carebest
friends, mother, sister, mentorbut she can confide
in none of them, especially not Cass, her brilliant older sister,
whose own flight from home had seemed to point the way for Caitlin.
Dessen has here created a subtle and compelling work of literature
that goes far beyond the problem novel in a story rich with symbolism,
dark scenes of paralyzing dread, quirky and memorable characters,
and gleams of humor. With the consummate skill and psychological
depth that brought her praise for Keeping the Moon, she explores
the search for self-identity, the warmth of feminine friendships,
and the destructive ways our society sets up young women for
love gone wrong.
ABOUT SARAH
DESSEN
Sarah Dessen grew up in Chapel Hill, where she teaches fiction writing at the University of North Carolina and recently married her high school sweetheart. Dreamland is her fourth novel for
young people.
Further Reading and Recommended Sites
Books by Sarah Dessen:
Dreamland
HC: 0-670-89122-3, $15.99 ($22.99 CAN)
Keeping the Moon
HC: 0-670-88549-5, $15.99 ($22.99 CAN)
PB: 0-14-131007, $5.99 ($8.99 CAN)
Someone Like You
HC: 0-670-87778-6, $16.99 ($23.99 CAN)
PB: 0-14-130269-0, $4.99 ($6.99 CAN)
That Summer
PB: 0-14-038688-2, $5.99 ($8.99 CAN)
Related Reading:
I Never Asked You to Understand Me
by Barthe DeClements
Puffin Books, 0-14-130059-0, $ 4.99 ($ 6.99 CAN)
In a school for "dropouts and druggies," Didi finds
friends who help her put her life back together after his mother's
death.
Zero at the Bone
by Michael Cadnum
Viking Children's Books, 0-670-86725-X, $ 15.99 ($ 22.99 CAN)
Puffin Books, 0-14-038628-9, $ 4.99 ($ 6.99 CAN)
After Cray's older sister Anita doesn't come home that nightor
everhe and his family are left searching for reasons
for her disapperance.
When She Was Good
by Norma Fox Mazer
Scholastic Paperbacks
Em's huge, dangerous big sister Pamela is dead, but her voice
goes on telling Em that she's stupid and bad and deserves to
be hit.
Breaking Free from Partner Abuse
by Mary Marecek
Morning Glory Press
A simply written little book that uses quotes from abused women,
poetry, and helpful advice, to drive home the message that "people
aren't for hitting." Includes 16 page mini-lesson on abuse.
Resources to Help Stop Partner Violence:
If you or someone you know is having trouble with partner
violence, here are some organizations that you can turn to.
National Domestic Violence Hotline
Tel: 1-800-799-SAFE
Advice, comfort, and referral for teens in violent relationships,
available 24 hours a day.
"Love Doesn't Have to Hurt Teens"
www.apa.org/pi/pii/teen
A teen-friendly website, sponsored by the American Psychological
Association, that offers counsel to girls who think they may
be headed for an abusive relationship.
National Resource Center on Domestic Violence
Tel: 1-800-537-2238
www.pcadv.org
A referral organization that works to develop national and
local programs and distributes materials, like their guide for
parents, "Helping Teens Stop Violence."
National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Tel: 1-303-839-1852
www.ncadv.org
A gathering of organizations and groups working to stop partner
abuse. Distributors of the "Rough Love" video and teaching
guide.
AN INTERVIEW WITH SARAH
DESSEN
How did you get started writing young adult fiction?
To be honest, I fell into it. But it is a voice that really works
for me, partially because I live in my home town, and I'm very
close to all of my friends from high school. A lot of my memories
are very vivid because I'm still in the same place. It's easy
to reach back when you drive past your high school at least once
a week.
Tell me how you came to write about dating violence.
I've had several friendsnot myself personally, because
I've been dating the same person since high schoolwho
have been in bad relationships like this and I didn't know until
years later. Teenage girls are evolving so much and it's so easythe
first time when you fall in love especiallyto think
maybe this is just the way it's supposed to be, or "Nobody
will ever love me again." You don't have the strength that
you would have later, to walk away. In writing this book there
was such a sense of having to be very, very careful with this
topic and very responsible with it.
Because you may have readers who are in this situation looking
to you for answers.
Exactly, although this is not a problem novel. I also felt I
had to be responsible about the role of marijuana in the story.
I worried that when Corinna and Caitlin are sitting on the couch
together for endless afternoons looking at television and smoking
pot that it was going to seem frivolous, like I was making it
seem attractive. But Caitlin uses it to dull her senses, and
Rogerson is the one who starts her on it, and it's what enables
her to endure his abuse. So I definitely needed it there, and
I'm prepared for controversy.
Did your editor feel the same way?
I was so glad I was with Deborah Brodie for this book, because
she allowed me to be true to my voice; she was respectful in
not wanting to tinker with things too much, and that was great.
And she has amazing insightI could not have done
better!
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
- In the first chapter, Sarah Dessen not only puts us immediately
in the midst of the action and introduces us to all the major
characters in her story, but she drops hints about ideas and
events that will be important in the novel. For instance, Caitlin
stumbles over Cass's gift as she leaves her room, "whacking
my face on a hall light switch." Later, her parents are
too distraught over Cass's departure to notice Caitlin's injurya
pattern that foreshadows the violence to come. What other clues
are embedded in the chapter that point to symbols and themes
that will be explored later?
- The idea of "Dreamland" as a place of refuge is
central to the story, as the title suggests. What childhood events
establish this picture in Caitlin's mind? Why is it significant
that Cass has given Caitlin a dream journal and what does she
imply in her cryptic message to her sister: "I'll see you
there"? Trace how the meaning of the word later changes
for Caitlin as she retreats into a drugged sleepiness and thinks,
"This Dreamland was preferable, walking through this life
half-sleeping, everything at arm's length or farther away."
Who else in the novel is in Dreamland? Find a passage at the
end of the novel that suggests that Dreamland could become a
more hopeful idea.
- Explaining Cass's flight, Boo says, "It's so easy to
get caught up in what people expect of you. Sometimes, you can
just lose yourself." In what way does this also describe
Caitlin's situation? Both sisters are trying to find an identity
by stepping outside of other people's expectations. In what ways
are their attempts at taking control alike? How do they differ?
Do you think women often try to find their own selves by their
choice of a man?
- What has been the effect on Caitlin of following in the footsteps
of her older and more talented sister all her life? How does
the scar on her eyebrow that Cass inflicted sum up those feelings?
On the other hand, what different meaning does the scar hold
for Cass? What scenes dramatize this? Why is Caitlin particularly
anxious to hide Rogerson's abuse from her? In the end Cass, with
unconscious irony, writes in a letter yo her sister, "You
were always able to make your choices based on you and what you
wanted, nothing else." How and why can she be so wrong?
- In a striking scene from Caitlin's childhood, Boo uses the
little girl's play with a Barbie doll to drive home a feminist
lesson. "She can be anythingand so can you,"
she tells Caitlinwhose own mother has never noticed
that fact. What small evidence can you find that this message
has not been entirely wasted on the teenage Caitlin, even as
she goes through her cheerleading routines and surrenders her
life to Rogerson?
- When Caitlin first chooses to go with Rogerson, even though
they know nothing about each other, she thinks, "I could
have been anybody, and it made everything possible." What
is it about Rogerson that makes him so perfectly suited to Caitlin's
need? Before he turns violent, weand Caitlinlearn
only seemingly unrelated facts about Rogerson's past, his family,
his likes and dislikes, his behavior quirks and odd abilities.
What are the missing pieces in this enigmatic personality, and
can you guess at the rest of the picture? What do you think is
the particular quality in Caitlin that makes her so attractive
to him?
- The first time Rogerson hits Caitlin, it comes out of nowhere
as a complete shockfor us as well as her. Yet, on
another level, we're not really surprised. We knew some things
about him that should have been warning signals. What were they?
Obviously, Caitlin should leave him immediately at this point.
Why is this impossible for her, and why does it become increasingly
impossible as his violence escalates? Sketch out a scene as to
what might have happened if she had been able to walk away from
him after the first attack. Would it really have ended there?
Or not?
- The affectionate portrayals of New Agers Boo and Stewart,
with their tempeh salads and wise comments, lighten this powerfully
dark novel. Do you think they have remained fast friends with
the O'Korens onlyas Caitlin supposesbecause
they live next door? Rina, too, who has issues with men, brings
some comic relief to the story, and she and Caitlin are another
unlikely friendship. What do you think holds them together? And
why is Caitlin unable to confide in her about the abuse?
- Corinna, another woman who has run away from her parents'
world, is also a mismatched friend for Caitlin, who thinks that
they have "a lot in common." Even though their backgrounds
and interests are so different, in what ways is this true? When
Corinna makes a safe haven for Caitlin, how is it both comforting
and destructive for both of them? When Corinna finally finds
the courage to leave Dave, what do her silver bracelets come
to symbolize to Caitlin, and how does the wearing of them affect
her decisions?
- One of the most puzzling paradoxes about Rogerson is his
gentleness as a lover, as contrasted with his violence. Find
evidence of his patience toward Caitlin in sexual matters and
his insensitivity to her needs in all other ways. What in his
background could explain this and why is it such a powerful tool
in gaining her trust? In a related paradox, what two kinds of
"hits" does he give her and how do they work together?
- Caitlin is tempted several times to tell her mother what
is going on with Rogerson, but she cannot begin to break through
her parent's complete obliviousness that something is wrong.
A poignant example is the moment when her father carefully spreads
ashes on the slippery sidewalk because Caitlin has blamed a fall
on the ice for the abrasions on her face. Find other examples
of their loving intentions coupled with blindness to the reality
of the situation. In a way, are these metaphors for most parent/child
interactions in adolescence?
- Sarah Dessen builds an almost unbearably escalating sense
of dread into the climatic scene of the novel. We can almost
hear the throbbing drums in the background as Caitlin, who has
been bullied by Rina into going off to the lake, frantically
tries to telephone a dangerously furious Rogerson. Imagine you
are shooting this scene as a movie. How would you underscore
the rising terror and tension with film techniques like jump
cuts, close ups, long shots, distorted focus, special effects,
computer graphics? What music would you choose? Where would you
end the scene?
- Much of the richness of the language of this novel comes from
the many symbols that amplify the meaning of the story, and we
have discussed several of these already, like the scar and the
silver bracelets. Others to explore are the black BMW, the staring
rows of dolls, the pyramid, Caitlin's photographs. An extended
metaphor that brings the book home to a satisfying conclusion
is drawn from T.S. Eliot's poem, "The Love Song of J. Alfred
Prufrock." A literary interpretation of this passage is
clearly laid out by a bright student in Caitlin's English class.
How do the elements of this metaphorthe mermaid's
song, the voices calling, water and drowning at the surfacecome
to represent salvation to Caitlin in her turmoil? In this context,
react to the last sentence, in which Caitlin feels "the
water break across my face as I burst through it into the air
to finally breathe on my own."
Patty Campbell is a longtime critic, librarian, editor,
writer, and teacher in the field of young adult literature. She
was the winner of the 1989 Grolier Award for distinction in the
service of young adults and reading.
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