Dangerous Angels


Dangerous Angels, also known as the Weetzie Bat series, is a young adult fiction series by Francesca Lia Block. The book consists of seven novels: Weetzie Bat, Witch Baby, Cherokee Bat and the Goat Guys, Missing Angel Juan, Baby Be-Bop, Necklace of Kisses, and . The books describe the lives of main character, Weetzie Bat, and her friends and family members who all live in Los Angeles. The books include supernatural elements such as witches, genies, and ghosts and can be described as magical realism or mythpunk.
The series title comes from the omnibus edition of the first five books, Dangerous Angels, first published in 1998. It was named a quote from Weetzie Bat: "Love is a dangerous angel." The omnibus was reissued in 2007 and again in 2010.

Plot summary

The major theme throughout all of the stories making up Dangerous Angels is “tolerance through love.”
Individual stories have more individualized themes etched within them. Cherokee Bat and the Goat Guys is about the importance loved ones and the natural and spiritual worlds.
Witch Baby’s magical story is about the “danger of denying life's pain.”
Weetzie Bat is a transcendent coming of age story. The strong theme of Missing Angel Juan Cart states best as, “love, in its infinite varieties, is both humankind's natural estate and heart-magic strong enough to redeem any loss.”
In Baby Be-Bop the theme is finding love for oneself and is “a safety net of words for readers longing to feel at home with themselves.”

Literary significance and reception

All of the short books that are combined to make Dangerous Angels received great reviews when they were published. Osborn says of Weetzie Bat, “Weetzie and her friends live like the lilies of the field, yet their responsibility to each other and their love for the baby show a sweet grasp of the realities that matter.” Block manages to bring the most important things in life, family and love to the front of the novel making other life matters secondary, which readers find enchanting. In 2005 Block received the Margaret A. Edwards Award, “for outstanding contributions to young adult readers”, for the Weetzie Bat books.

Baby Be-Bop controversy

In June 2009, Block's book Baby Be-bop, which deals with the life of a gay teenager, was part of a controversy in West Bend, Wisconsin, where several parents' groups insisted that the book, among others, be removed from the local public library and publicly burned.

Awards

AwardYearResult
Shrout Fiction Award1986Winner
Emily Chamberlain Cook Poetry Award1986Winner
Best Books of the Year Citation ALA1986Winner
YASD, Best Book Award, Recommended Books for Reluctant Young-Adult Readers1989Winner
Phoenix Award,2009Winner
Recommended Books for Reluctant Young-Adult Readers,1990Citation
ALA Best Books of the Year1991Winner
Recommended Books for Reluctant Young Adult Readers1991Citation