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Honorable Mention
Letters About Literature 2003
Level II
November 20, 2002
Dear Chris Crutcher,
Of all the books I've read by you, which is all but one (your
adult book, I'm still a teen), "Guns for Geeks," from
On The Fringe, was extremely poignant, a lesson that should
be taught to everyone at a young age. Guns are dangerous instruments,
sort of like an out-of-tune violin in the hands of someone who's
tone deaf, but the point is that we're putting these dangerous
instruments into the hands of crazy, trigger-happy people. We,
as in the great U S of A, give guns to people who have no right
out of their houses in the morning! Do wonders ever cease?
I believe that the attitude about guns and conformity is coming
from adults still trying to be teenagers as in when you sarcastically
mentioned that Rob's father held militia meetings in his kitchen.
You implied that maybe Rob's father still wanted to be on good
terms with the youth, which by the way, is an exclusive club for
those between thirteen and nineteen. Towards the end of the story
though I realized Rob's father wasn't some malicious wrongdoer.
He was just an ordinary guy, just a little more compliant than
the rest.
When Taylor shot those students, it was almost like I was sitting
there in that classroom, sweating and whimpering, just waiting
and praying for the pandemonium to end. What Taylor did was not
something that goes unsaid or undone. Columbine wasn't the first.
I don't know the first school victim to severe violence among
the students, but you can't act surprised, with all the violence
from their peers they're going to retaliate and it won't be pretty,
I'm sure. I just think that even if "people do kill people,"
maybe we shouldn't let these people have guns, or even breed.
It's just flat out dangerous.
The way your story really touched me, though, was how you helped
me feel the pain of Taylor. That was the moment I realized I had
to stop the madness. My aim in life went from getting a motorcycle
(which is still a priority), to disinfect those infected with
the dreaded "populitis," an extremely contagious social
disease that travels from clique to clique, person to person,
causing serious developmental problems, not affecting the lower
social class. I just have to say, I'm not perfect, so I can't
stop all the taunts, end the mass hysteria of conformity, or even
sometimes stop myself from conforming, but I really try. Your
story made me realize that it's not the outside, it's not even
the inside, it just is. And we've got to take care of that. You
can't let that be ruined. I don't know if it's the psyche, the
heart, or even the chemicals in your brain, but it's touchable
and moldable, and you just can't keep taking advantage of it.
And that is how your story changed my life forever. Thanks.
Please write back. The Gruening address is on the heading. Thanks
again.
Sincerely,
Lauren Nelson
Lauren Nelson
8th Grade
Gruening Middle School, Eagle River
Teacher: Mrs. Terri Semmler
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