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Duncan (Steinmetz Arquette), Lois 1934–: Critical Essay by Richard Peck

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Lois Duncan Summary

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Contrary to certain opinion, the new wave of novels for adolescents hasn't explored every sensational topic after all; mainly because the adult author doesn't live in a world as corrosively conformist or as criminally cruel as that of the teenager. Breathy novels about drugs, sexual liberation and sub-proletariat gang warfare let off scot-free the majority of young readers, who are virtually all middle-class, who deny drugs are a problem, and who are amazingly prudish about other people's sex lives.

Lois Duncan breaks some new ground in ["Killing Mr. Griffin"], a novel without sex, drugs or black leather jackets. But the taboo she tampers with is far more potent and pervasive: the unleashed fury of the permissively reared against any assault on their egos and authority. A group of high-school seniors kill an English teacher who dares trouble them with grades, homework and standards.

This is a free excerpt of 142 words. There are 718 words (approx. 2 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Duncan (Steinmetz Arquette), Lois 1934–: Critical Essay by Richard Peck from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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