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The Wave is a 1981 young adult novel by Todd Strasser under the pen name Morton Rhue (though it has been reprinted under Todd Strasser's real name). It is a novelization of a teleplay by Johnny Dawkins for the movie The Wave, a fictionalized account of the "Third Wave" teaching experiment by Ron Jones that took place in an Ellwood P. Cubberley High School history class in Palo Alto, California.
[8] Barnes & Noble described the book as "poignant, yet spare and unsentimental". [15] Marcia Kaye, an author and journalist, in her review for the Colombo Telegraph wrote, "Wave is somehow both jaggedly raw and beautifully crafted at the same time. Above all, it speaks to the power of the human spirit to survive, to love, to remember.
The Wave, by Todd Strasser, based on the 1981 film; The Wave, a novel by Lochlan Bloom "The Wave" (poem), by Gruffudd Gryg; The Wave of Long Island, a New York newspaper; Los Angeles Wave, a weekly newspaper in Los Angeles, California; The Wave, a weekly newspaper in Huntington Beach, California published by the Orange County Register
Ron Jones (born 1941) is an American writer and formerly a teacher in Palo Alto, California.He is best known for his classroom exercise called "The Third Wave" and the book he wrote about the event, which inspired the made-for-TV movie The Wave and other works, including a theatrical film in 2008.
The Wave (German: Die Welle) is a 2008 German socio-political thriller film directed by Dennis Gansel and starring Jürgen Vogel, Frederick Lau, Jennifer Ulrich and Max Riemelt in the leads. It is based on Ron Jones' social experiment The Third Wave and Todd Strasser's novel The Wave. The film was produced by Christian Becker for Rat Pack ...
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The book you read is probuly a reeditted version they do from time to time when they make a movie version of a book and try to set it against a newer time frame as to make it seem less dated. Im not sure but you could update the article with a section that discusses that perticular version of the book. thanks B.s.n. ( R.N. ) 11:38, 6 August ...
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