Judy Blume, one of the most well-known authors of children's literature and young adult novels, has had her work transformed into a few screen adaptations before. But a modern take on her divisive book, "Forever," recently debuted as a Netflix series, and the interpretation of such a hotly debated novel has garnered critical acclaim.
Why was the novel considered controversial? Blume released "Forever," a young adult novel about a young woman falling in love for the first time and losing her virginity to her more experienced boyfriend in 1975, and the book was almost immediately "deemed controversial by those who believed it was too sexually explicit for young readers," said Time. Some states even banned the book from schools.
It never occurred to her at the time that "what I was writing was controversial," Blume said on her website almost 30 years ago. "Much of it grew out of my own feelings and concerns when I was young." Blume wrote "Forever" in the "aftermath of the Pill, in response to her daughter's request for a story in which a teen girl doesn't get punished for having, and enjoying, a sex life — the dominant narrative at the time," said The New York Times.
Between 1990 and 1999, "Forever" was the seventh most frequently challenged book, according to the American Library Association. It was often flagged for its sexual content and offensive language.
How are people reacting to the Netflix adaptation? Mara Brock Akil, the creator and showrunner of Netflix's adaptation, takes the seminal coming-of-age story out of suburban New Jersey and reimagines it in 2018 Los Angeles with a primarily Black cast. The show also flips the roles and makes the male protagonist, basketball player Justin, the less experienced of the two, telling much of the story from his perspective. The critical response had been overwhelmingly positive.
Teen dramas "can be hit or miss," said The Cut. Luckily, "Forever" is a "worthwhile binge that will charm its way into your heart." The show is reminiscent of "late high-school experiences" like the "awkward tenderness of a first romance." The new series is "more than a great teen drama or an adaptation that effectively updates a 50-year-old book," Time said, thanks in part to the perspective expansion. It is "one of TV's best romances, full stop." |