Flirtin' With the Monster: Your
Favorite Authors on Ellen Hopkins'
Crank and Glass
edited by Ellen Hopkins

    FLIRTIN' WITH THE MONSTER edited by Ellen Hopkins
    Category:  Non-Fiction
    Age Recommendation:  Grades 9+
    Release Date:  5/5/09
    Publisher:  Benbella Books
    Reviewed by:  Angie Fisher
    Rating:  5 Stars


    Knowledge is power, and although Ellen Hopkins no doubt would have preferred to not have lived the nightmare of
    her daughter’s dance with Meth and other drugs, she has chosen to share her experiences with others.  We should
    be grateful she has.  

    FLIRTIN' WITH THE MONSTER is Ellen’s non-fiction, no-nonsense account of why she chose to tell her story to
    the world, her choice of the fiction genre verses memoir, and her solid belief that teenagers deserve to read about
    real issues that affect their very real lives. We can’t protect our teenagers forever, and if one adolescent can read
    about someone else’s mistakes, and be frightened into not ever making the choices Ellen’s daughter made, then she
    will have paved her way to heaven.
       
    In this title, Ellen has joined forces with numerous people, and included letters written by her own family, “Kristina”
    included, to discuss the Monster, her writing, and the impact her two best-selling novels have had on their own and
    others lives.  The book is testimony to the influence that a story such as this can have on a person, young or old,
    when the choice to try a drug that first time presents itself.  And it will present itself.  

    As Niki Burnham so eloquently puts it in the opening chapter on role models our kids are reading about, or not
    allowed to read about, “…those caring parents do their teen a greater service by allowing them to read
    whatever they want and making it clear they’re willing to discuss it with them afterward:  Protecting them
    by preparing them.”
           
    The world is full of imperfect people with imperfect lives.  Why should the books we open to our teenagers be any
    different?