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Hardcover Wonderland: A Year in the Life of an American High School Book

ISBN: 0871139170

ISBN13: 9780871139177

Wonderland: A Year in the Life of an American High School

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Book Overview

Pennsbury High School would be like any other were it not for one thing: its prom. Its spring dance is considered to be one of this country's best legacies. Wonderland is the inspiring true story of a... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A Triumph of Old Fashioned "New Journalism"

Pennsbury is an ordinary sort of high school except with a traditionally fantastic prom. Every year the students, teachers, parents, in fact the whole community goes overboard to make sure that Prom is a once in a lifetime experience for their graduating seniors. Mike Bamberger arrived there one summer and spent the next ten months following a handful of students and other citizens as they planned for the Prom. There's a young couple who are having a baby. There's the star quarterback, and the homecoming queen. There are nerds and jocks and heads and Goths, and everyone focussed on one activity--the Prom. What makes the book so good is Bamberger's attention to even the smallest details. He is from the Lillian Ross school of journalism, in which details like the clothes the characters wear and the slang they use serve to characterize them as a great novelist might populate the pages of his mise-en-scene. In any documentary some of your success is going to be a matter of luck, and it depends on who you choose to follow. I think Bamberger made a tiny mistake focussing on this one girl, Lindsey Milroy, the head of the Prom Committee, to whom nothing interesting seems to happen, she just remains unlikeable and weird looking--great hair, small face. The other characters grow in your mind, especially Bobby, the QB with a disabled younger brother of 14 who depends on him in every way. This storyline is enough to break your heart, as is the story of the young boy who gets killed in a traffic accident on his Christmas break. Played for laughs is the storyline of the detention monitor, "Miss Snyder," who seems to have a yen for one or more of the boys in the senior class. It is whispered through the whole community that she parties with her favorites and even buys one of them a tattoo. She's daring if nothing else. The go-getter boy, Bob Costa, is hilarious, whether he's ogling the homecoming queen Alyssa Bergman, or trying to score an on camera interview with Patti LaBelle, hampered not at all but not even knowing who she is. I think Bamberger identifies with this boy, as a modern-day version of his own high school self (he graduated in the 1970s from Patchogue-Medford HS on Long Island) and paints him as a geek with balls for days. Towards the end of the story Costa meets one of his heroes, and again the encounter will have readers clapping their hands with delight. I think anyone who's been to an American high school with identify with one or more of the characters in this book. Or anyone who's had a dream of doing something great. My estimation of Maroon 5 has grown exponentially, and my regard for John Mayer has sunk to an all time low. Bamberger paints him as a mean, sarcastic creep surrounded by layers of entourage like cotton batting, keeping him far, far away from human reality. As Bamberger plays it out, you get the feeling that one of these days Karma's going to come back for a big bite out of John Mayer's ass.

A School Where Kids Are Happy and Involved: Refreshing!

The most "wondorous" thing about Michael Bamberger's book on Pennsbury High School in Pennsylvania is that it is not an indictment of what is wrong with the American Educational System like so many other books on Education. It's not the tales of woe of unhappy students, disaffected teachers, crime or financial waste. Quite the contrary: Wonderland is a book that illustrates how excellent education occurs in a school where the the faculty and staff care about the kids, have standards, believe in what they are doing and work hard at realizing high expectations. Its a book about kids who are effectively engaged in school academically and through extra and co-curricular activities. Its a book about parents, who despite differing socio-economic standing, support their kids education and value the school and its traditions. As much as there are many grand plans for the reform of education that will "really show results" there are no better results to be found than in schools like Pennsbury where professionals, parents, the community, and the kids themselves, value the educational process, and where each group does its part to achieve success. Bamberger does a remarkable job of capturing the life and pulse of a high school across the year he visits Pennbury as a returned 'senior'. He gets to know students and faculty, is able to move between the two groups without forming alliances, or becoming judgemental. He tells his stories through the daily events of the school as seen through individual faculty and student eyes. He introduces real people from Pennsbury as characters we begin to care about and root for, as the year proceeds. And, by this rather ordinary reporting, Bamberger presents a pretty eloquent and exciting story of kids learning, growing, worrying, groaning and progressing, and of the adults who are in their lives through these developmental years. Pennsbury is a story that is worthy of being told because it is a school like many of the other good ones that we never read about because they aren't besieged by scandal, or crime or some other 'newsworthy' problem. But, it is a remarkable story in that it gives witness to the most vital elements of excellent education at work. We don't need to rebuild the American Educational System. We need to see that the most important ingredients for good education are at work -- together -- on behalf of the success of kids. When administraors, teachers and staff are devoted to their work, engage the students, enlist the support of parents and the local community, good education takes place. And that is pretty exciting and amazing! More stories of good schools like Pennsbury need to be told so that people begin to see that the wheel doesn't need to be reinvented. We know how good education happens. Lets see that it happens in all places that kids call school throughout our country. A well told and inspiring story. Highly recommended! Daniel J. Maloney Saint Paul, Minnesota

couldn't have said it better

No matter where you are from or what high school you went to, everyone can relate to this book. I very recently graduated from high school (class of '03, the same year as the kids in the book) and just happened upon this book at the airport. Before I even landed at my destination, I had finished it. The people in this story are the same characters at every high school. Every school has it's jocks and it's preps and it's preverbial screw-ups. Bambarger did an amazing job of capturing high school as it is lived, even if the prom at the end of the year is the climax. High school even only having been gone a year now, seems like another lifetime and after reading this book it seems like just yesterday I was preparing for my five day prom. Pick it up, I promise you'll love it as much as I did.

They arrive... in their own way, at their own pace:

Mr. Bamberger illuminates the lives of a cross-cut of students and paints their lives and values within the nurturing structures of the various "villages" that feed into the Pennsbury School District. This is not just a book about an "ordinary" American High School with an exceptional prom. It's not an "ordinary" high school because not one of the towns ("villages") that feed into it is "ordinary" in any way. Because, as quoted: "No examined life is ordinary." It's a book about the families in those villages who have formed the long held values as well as the faculty and administrators who share so many of those values in common. It is appropriate that Mr. Bamberger features the exceptional Pennsbury Prom in this book because it's the appropriate conclusion to the celebration of life that the diversified "villagers" all revel in routinely... and that keep them, from generation to generation, firmly rooted where they are.I'm reviewing herein how well Mr. Bamberger captured the "feel" of the communities and the type of individuals that a School that serves such a diverse societal mix turns out... or rather how families who choose to live in such a District choose to raise their children. It's truly a give and take. It starts with the families and their conscious decision to raise their children in an area where they "turned out just fine." No criticism there; people, for the most part, are happy with themselves. They are certainly not without their issues, but "survivors" as Bamberger describes them. It continues with a High School whose administrators share the same "happy with themselves" attitude and progressive but conservative and very tolerant values. For an outsider , Mr. Bamberger does a great job of this.The Prom is special because the neighborhoods are special. The students arrive at the prom in their own unique conveyances, whether it be a tractor or a Rolls Royce or pulled in a cart by a donkey; or in the junker being towed by the local gas station's tow truck. At Pennsbury it has always been more desireable to arrive in a VW Minibus painted to look like the Mystery Machine than to arrive in a Limosine. But arrive they do.. on the scene much the way they will arrive on every scene of life, henceforth from graduation day... in their own way, at their own pace...

A very good story

Sure this book is about a particular High School, in a particular place and time. But it could be about your High School, and it could be about when you went to High School. I graduated from High School almost thirty years ago. Mr. Bamberger makes the characters come alive, the names may change but all high schools have the same characters. It was a trip down memory lane for me. I was the AV geek in high school, and daydreamed about the hot mysterious blonde babe who I later came to know. Was this, or is this a special High School? No, it is a very ordinary High School in a very ordinary place. It is a story about people that all of us have known. It is a story about a place that all of us have been to, and yes there is something about a prom. This book now sits on the shelf next to my yearbook. You see, I spent 2 years in "The ROCK" they call Pennsbury High. Jim Cunningham was my Social Studies teacher, and the mere mention of his name makes my left ear twinge. I am a proud graduate of the class of '75.Am I just a little prejudiced? Buy the book and find out for yourself.
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