Bless the Beasts and the Children is the story of six emotionally damaged boys sent by their parents to a rough and tumble cowboy-styled camp in Arizona. They grow close due to their alienation from the other campers, but their attempts to put an end to the barbaric local tradition of slaughtering tame bison in canned hunts, despite being an affirming coming of age experience, ends in tragedy. One of the boys dies in an attempt to spook the complacent bison into running and the others are quickly discovered.
Nothing But the Truth is a young adult novel comprised of diary entries, memos, letters, and pieces of dialogue that tells the story of Philip Malloy, a high-schooler who tells his parents that his teacher, Miss Narwin, forbade him from singing the National Anthem after he gets suspended for acting up in class. Although this is a lie, or at least an exaggeration of the truth, Philip is soon caught up in a media frenzy defending his rights. The narrative is an exploration of the nature and subjectivity of truth.