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What?!! Go to a dance? With a girl?!! When the large flower appeared in front of Julian's face, he thought the girl was checking to see if it matched his light blond hair-he ran into that a lot. Not this time: he had been tagged to attend the Sadie Hawkins Day Dance. This was the latest obstacle in his secret strategy to gain the love of his life. It had to be secret: in 1962, life for a gay boy could be especially risky. Rule 1: pretend you're normal; rule 2: evade the bullies; rule 3: keep busy. Mark Schaefer, Julian's scoutmaster-the center of Julian's romantic bulls eye-had problems of his…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
What?!! Go to a dance? With a girl?!! When the large flower appeared in front of Julian's face, he thought the girl was checking to see if it matched his light blond hair-he ran into that a lot. Not this time: he had been tagged to attend the Sadie Hawkins Day Dance. This was the latest obstacle in his secret strategy to gain the love of his life. It had to be secret: in 1962, life for a gay boy could be especially risky. Rule 1: pretend you're normal; rule 2: evade the bullies; rule 3: keep busy. Mark Schaefer, Julian's scoutmaster-the center of Julian's romantic bulls eye-had problems of his own. His recent promotion at work, combined with a growing personal need to get out from under his past had his full attention. With reluctance, he allows a colleague of his wife to be his guide and mentor. Then there's Randall… a new friend, or a complication? Eldot, author of the critically acclaimed Julian's Private Scrapbook novels, presents a new and hilarious chapter in Julian's poignant story: his first year of high school. Again, he weaves a comical tapestry for a very serious subject: who are these boys who get bullied? Eldot gets inside the heads of the characters and shows how they should be accepted and celebrated for who they are. "Humor is one of Eldot's strong suits; he has an impressive capacity for penning farcical, innocently disastrous moments." [Kirkus] The pre digital world-when a milkshake cost 25 cents and Playboy was sold under the counter-lends charm to the subject, and allows a frank and honest treatment of same sex discovery and activity. "Well-written, with engaging, likable characters, this book skillfully presents the challenges and pleasures boys who love men face in growing up." [BlueInk]
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Autorenporträt
Eldot is the nom de plume Leland Alan Hall devised when he decided to take up writing. [ Eldot = L. ] The cipher is easy to decode because it is intended to clarify, not disguise. For thirty terrific years he was a classroom teacher and leader in his profession. Reserving that proud and distinguished heritage as its own chapter is important. The credentials and honors of those years belong to those years. Now retired, he has begun a new chapter-hence, the need for a new "handle." You're in High School Now is his twelfth book. Born in Reno Nevada, Eldot has lived in Oregon most of his life. A 1956 graduate of Corvallis High School, a BA with Honors in English and Classical Languages was awarded in 1960 at the University of Oregon. Post-graduate study began with a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship at the University of Washington. Further study at the U of O Theatre Department and the School of Education qualified him to begin his high school teaching career in 1963. English, Drama and Journalism were his classroom assignments. He served as Department Chairman and after ten years as Drama Director, became active in professional association activity. He served in a number of capacities at local and state levels, culminating in a two-year term as the state president. A lifelong side interest in home construction led to a disabling ear injury in 1992, forcing an early retirement. Unable to tolerate the sound levels of a public high school, he was forced to read and work on his stamp collection while his ears healed. Eventually he found ways to venture out; he designed several porch and deck projects for friends and relatives. His first foray into writing was Ahab, a dramatized version of Moby Dick, which he directed on stage. A collaboration with two colleagues, it was not published. Aside from Department reports, state agency testimony and monthly editorials for the professional newspaper, no writing was published. The urge to write fiction developed quite unexpectedly in 2010. Television news coverage of a child abuse story was so outrageous he felt forced to respond. An irate letter to the editor evolved-morphed-into his first novel, Barr's Meadow. It led to the series entitled Julian's Private Scrapbook. The novels are not autobiographical.