Time to turn the page on children’s books as graduation gifts

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Zachary Michael Jack is the author of several books for children and young adults, most recently “March of the Suffragettes.” He wrote this column for the Chicago Tribune.

As a writer for children and young adults, I can’t help but celebrate the genius of Dr. Seuss. But as an educator of anxious college graduates who often receive multiple copies of “Oh, the Places You’ll Go!” as graduation gifts, I believe it’s time we diversify our books-for-grads, choosing texts whose challenges are less abstract than howling Hakken-Kraks, Giving Trees and Little Princes.

It’s a perennial and paradoxical phenomenon. At exactly the moment when America’s youth stand poised to grapple with the perils of real adulthood — when they are old enough to go to war or to finance a car — we inexplicably give them books for children.


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