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S. E. Hinton

Author of The Outsiders

30+ Works 29,722 Members 852 Reviews 51 Favorited

About the Author

S. E. Hinton was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma and attended the University of Tulsa. Her first novel, The Outsiders, was published in 1967 and changed publishing for young adults by portraying a grittier, more realistic view of the lives of teenagers. It was made into a movie in 1983. Her other young show more adult works include Rumble Fish, Tex, Taming the Star Runner, and That Was Then, This is Now. Her children's books include The Puppy Sister and Big David, Little David. She has won numerous awards including the Margaret Alexander Edwards Award, the Media and Methods Maxi Award, and the Land of the Enchantment Award. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: EMS Author Photos

Works by S. E. Hinton

Associated Works

Wuthering Heights (1847) — Introduction, some editions — 52,316 copies
State by State: A Panoramic Portrait of America (2008) — Contributor — 518 copies
Rumble Fish [1983 film] (1983) — Original book — 64 copies
Love Can Be: A Literary Collection about Our Animals (2018) — Contributor — 7 copies
Bomb Pop Comics & Stories (1998) — Contributor — 2 copies

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1960s (94) 20th century (67) adolescence (57) American (80) American literature (84) brothers (148) children's (73) classic (305) classics (263) coming of age (469) death (108) family (217) favorites (64) fiction (1,700) friendship (383) gangs (622) goodreads (57) Grade 8 (88) greasers (93) high school (69) literature (75) murder (83) novel (164) Oklahoma (110) own (92) paperback (70) read (294) realistic fiction (360) S.E. Hinton (72) school (80) teen (136) teen fiction (63) teenagers (79) to-read (591) unread (54) violence (140) YA (611) young adult (1,047) young adult fiction (203) young adult literature (71)

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Reviews

Learning the author was 15/16 when she wrote this explains a lot to me. It's not the highest quality writing, but it's got the earnestness of a teenager with a huge burden on her heart.
 
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johanna.florez21 | 679 other reviews | May 27, 2024 |
"Youth is free from worry," I said sarcastically. "You've been listenin' to too many adults."

When I first read this book at thirteen, I enjoyed the story. After all, it was about teenagers trying to figure out the world and relationships. It's a time when "adults" try to tell you to enjoy your life because it only gets harder OR they just tell you to suck it up and deal with whatever is going on because it only gets harder. The drugs, alcohol, family situations, and fights were all just backdrops to the story. It was a teenage movie in book form.

Reading this book forty years later hit me the same but completely different. At this point in my life, I have navigated many of the problems this book addresses both successfully and unsuccessfully. This tempted me to recommend this book to a fourteen year old and then I thought better of it. It is an excellent book but there is a level of retrospection that makes the story more bittersweet. I returned to those feelings that occurred between the relative freedom of junior year in high school and the seriousness that happens for many as they enter their senior year in high school. Relationships shift and sometimes disintegrate in that space which feels like the flip of the switch at the time. But this book highlights how a totality of events are gently moving that switch until it just clicks into its new position.

With all that being said, I will probably still recommend this book to a certain fourteen year old in the hopes that they can have the same thoughts later in life.
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GrammaPollyReads | 45 other reviews | May 6, 2024 |
Maybe a little didactic with Ponyboy coming to many mature insights and conclusions from his miss-adventures, but believable, and very good characterizations. My version was this audio (9781490674568), quite well narrated. The LAPL-Overdrive library catalog says it was co-authored by Spike McClure and narrated by Jim Fyfe, but the audio description at the end says it was narrated by Spike McClure--so no idea where Jim Fyfe comes in. :-)
 
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TraSea | 679 other reviews | Apr 29, 2024 |
"The Outsiders" by S.E. Hinton is a really good book because it talks about stuff that teenagers can understand, like being friends, feeling like you don't fit in, and how money and where you come from can affect your life. It's interesting because it's set in the 1960s, but the things the characters go through are still things that people deal with today. Teachers could use this book with students to talk about what it means to be yourself, to be a good friend, and how the world can treat people differently just because of where they come from or how much money they have. They could also talk about why some people make bad choices and how those choices can change your life.… (more)
 
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triciayarotsky6 | 679 other reviews | Apr 23, 2024 |

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Works
30
Also by
6
Members
29,722
Popularity
#677
Rating
3.9
Reviews
852
ISBNs
431
Languages
19
Favorited
51

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