Review : The Wednesday Wars

The Wednesday Wars plays out like a Shakespeare geek’s version of the hero daydream.

Think back to when you were a child.  Surely at one point or another we all dreamed the hero daydream, where bullies backed away from us in the halls, teachers and adults praised our genius, teammates carried us around on their shoulders after we singlehandedly won the big game.  You know the drill.  All that stuff that would never happen, we just hoped that maybe someday. I remember, and this will seriously date me, that I would someday appear on Johnny Carson because I was just so very precocious, and Johnny would be amazed at how smart I was at such a young age.

Our narrator, seventh-grader “Holling Hoodhood”, has to read The Tempest … and takes away from it the knowledge that most of Caliban’s lines are Shakespearean curse words.  So he spends the rest of the book muttering “toads…beetles…bats!” when he’s angry at the situation, sometimes going so far as to shout “The red plague rid you!” at his enemies.

Do you know what happens?  Do the bullies of the school all point and laugh and call him an even bigger nerd, knock his books down and give him a wedgie?  Oh no, patient reader!  In this hero’s daydream the bullies think that these newfangled curses are cool, and it’s only a matter of time before Shakespeare is heard up and down the hallways.   I wish!

There’s an even funnier scene when our hero needs a favor from a grownup, who just happens to be in charge of the upcoming Shakespeare show.  “What I need,” says the grownup, “What would really save the day?  Is to find a 12year old boy that knows his Shakespeare!”  Because, you know, that happens. 🙂 And then there’s the scene where he gets to play ball with the Yankees.  Yeah.

Much of this story’s structure has been told before. A middle school student growing up in the 60s, having to deal with the teacher that hates him, the bullies that want revenge after he “takes one out,” an older sister who threatens death if he ever comes into her room….you know, the usual.  If that’s all it was, I’d have no interest in this book.  It is still a young adult book, narrated in that voice, and I found it overly redundant in many points.  It’s cute in places (like when Holling’s most pressing concern over his Shakespearean debut is the fact that his costume has feathers on the butt).  But his obsession with these things, while in character for a 12yr old, tried my patience on more than one occasion.

What makes this book special is Holling’s relationship with his teacher, Mrs. Baker, who has him working through Shakespeare as part of a special extra assignment.  There are bits in the beginning (as noted with Caliban’s curses) where it’s amusing to watch him get into Shakespeare, but it’s not long before they’re taking on bigger and more important issues like “The quality of mercy is not strained” from Merchant. All this is set against the backdrop of the Vietnam War (Mrs. Baker’s husband is missing in action, and Holling’s older sister is considering becoming a flower child).

It’s here that we go from “hero’s daydream” to “Yes, yes, I wish life was more like this.”  Everything that happens to Holling has happened and will continue to happen to all young adults at this stage of life.  I’m jealous of him because he’s got Shakespeare (and Mrs. Baker) by his side. I mean, come on, he takes a date to Romeo and Juliet  … and she likes it!  In middle school!

All kidding aside there is a wonderful story being told here, in particular as the narrator’s relationship with his sister evolves. I’ve heard that there might be a sequel in the works, and I’ll definitely put that one on my list as well.  I want to live vicariously through this kid.

Rocky Shakespeare III

What if Rocky Balboa and Clubber Lang beat the holy stuffing out of each other not with their fists, but in a Shakespeare slam?  They’re still in a ring, still dressed in boxing gear, and Mickey’s still in Rock’s corner screaming at him.  There’s just a whole lot more Shakespeare.

Watch about the first 5 minutes (you’ll know when to stop).  I was wondering how they were going to keep the bit up for almost 10 minutes and the answer is they don’t. Not even close. It’s like they got bored with it right in the middle and went off in an entirely different, and unfunny, direction.  But I got a kick out of some parts in the first half.  Mostly the Clubber Lang / Mr. T character (who throws down far too little Othello for my taste).

All plays are on the table. There’ll be no calls for lines, and absolutely no sonnets. Is that clear?



This year’s Shakespeare Day Celebration is sponsored in part by Shakespeare Is Universal: Shakespeare truly is for everyone, and nothing demonstrates that sentiment better than his most famous quote of all, translated here into languages from around the world.   In celebration of Shakespeare’s birthday, show that you believe his works are just as relevant, powerful and important as they’ve ever been!

Your Shakespeare Geek Lives In Boston

I live just outside of Boston.  No, I was not in town when the unthinkable happened.  I did have family and friends there.  My sister-in-law’s brother (and his wife, whatever that makes her to me) were there.  My daughter’s 5th grade teacher was there.  A parent from my daughters’ Irish step dancing class was there.  A cub scout father was there.  My young coworkers have many friends at colleges throughout Boston, all of whom were there.  To the best of my ability to track them, all are safe (although each of them, in turn, has friends and acquaintances who were affected more severely).

In an upcoming post you’ll hear me refer to Shakespeare as my comfort.  Shakespeare’s words are what I turn to when I am unable to otherwise express what I might be feeling at any given time.

What words does Shakespeare have for Boston at a time like this?  I’m honestly asking.  I don’t want grief over the fallen.  I know that.  I want something more, something that speaks to our strength, that we will rise up out of this chaos stronger than we were before.

Help me.

Shakespeare Day is Coming

I’m sure everybody knows we celebrate a very special day on April 23.  I long ago got tired of alternately referring to it as Shakespeare’s Birthday and The Day Shakespeare Died and decided to make it my own personal holiday.  Around here we call it Shakespeare Day.

I celebrate by posting all day.
In 2009 I had 9 posts.
In 2010 I had 12.
In 2011 Shakespeare Day was a Saturday, which made it impossible to meaningfully celebrate online.
So I made up for it in 2012 with *25* posts.
I plan on breaking that record again this year. I’ve already begun queueing up the posts, and I encourage people to come back to the site frequently throughout the day because they will scroll into the archives rapidly at that rate and if the past is any indicator there’ll be a whole lot of conversation going on in many different threads.
If you don’t see me around between now and then it’s because I’m catching up on my old requests, queuing up new posts, thinking about new topics, and researching interesting links.  If you’ve ever wanted to get a link in front of me, hint hint, now’s the time to do it.

It Begins….Again!

Y’all know me, I never give up.  Earlier this year I mentioned to all my children’s teachers that I would volunteer to do a unit on Shakespeare for their class, tuned however they like.  A couple weeks ago my middle geeklet’s teacher sent a note home asking for more information.   So I promptly wrote her a lengthy bunch of suggestions, and never heard back.

That’s because she never got it.  Tonight was one of those “academic fairs” where the parents wander around the school looking at our kids’ projects, and sure enough this teacher came up to me and asked for more details.  I asked if she’d ever gotten the email, she said she had not.

So!  Here’s how I pitched it, just to put some scope on it.  I told her that we can tackle the subject one of three ways:

1)  History/biography.  Who Shakespeare was, when he lived, what was going on at the time, what role he plays in history, that sort of thing.  Probably the least interesting, but also the easiest and most straightforward.  (The kids’ projects we were looking at were all biographies, so it tied in).

2) Poetry/Meter/Rhyme/Memorization.  I know that each grade does some degree of poetry work so I know that this could fit in easily with their regularly scheduled plans.

3) Get them out of their seats and performing some scenes!  I emphasized that this is by far the most fun and most valuable but that it’s also got the most variables – finding acceptable scenes, dealing with the shy kids, managing head count, etc…  (I’m sure you directors don’t see any of those as a hurdle but if I’m going to get one shot at this I don’t want to spend 90% of the time trying to coax a kid out of his seat, or convince a boy to play a girl’s role.)

#3 is her clear favorite, and as “head teacher” she doesn’t think that there’ll be any obstacles.  So it looks like we’re on….again!

If anybody’s got pointers to scene selections appropriate for 8yr olds, send them my way.  I’ve got some copies of “Shakespeare for Kids” and “60 Minute Shakespeare” around here someplace so I’m going to try those as well.  Both of those are modern translations that leave in key passages, which might be the easiest way to go for an introduction.

Yay!