Young Adult Fiction
Judy's mother writes young adult novels. Her latest features an adult heroine and her publishers won't buy it- so she's rejigging it as an adult novel. Apparently kids only want to read about kids. Really?
When I was kid the last thing I wanted to read about was some guy having problems with acne and girls. I wanted to read about the adult world- with a view to figuring it out before I got there. And so I read adventure stories and detective fiction and my heroes were people like Allen Quartermain and Sherlock Holmes. I didn't want to be a half-licked bear cub, I wanted to be a great white hunter or the greatest detective in Victorian London.
And then- when I was about 15- I read War and Peace and there was absolutely no going back.
When I was kid the last thing I wanted to read about was some guy having problems with acne and girls. I wanted to read about the adult world- with a view to figuring it out before I got there. And so I read adventure stories and detective fiction and my heroes were people like Allen Quartermain and Sherlock Holmes. I didn't want to be a half-licked bear cub, I wanted to be a great white hunter or the greatest detective in Victorian London.
And then- when I was about 15- I read War and Peace and there was absolutely no going back.
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Strangely, I do read YA novels now...
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Just because there are teenagers in it, doesn't mean that teenagers are the target audience.
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So even though children's lives in and of themselves didn't interest me, I did read plenty of pre-teen and young adult books with kids in them. The stories as I remember them all had something deeper about them, they weren't just fluff. Judy Blume got me through quite a lot as a pre-teen, I have to give her credit. So did Anne of Green Gables, the Moffats, the Secret Garden, and oddly enough, the Ramona series which I devoured. I'm sure there were more. And let's not forget the first time I opened Stranger in a Strange Land or any of Ray Bradbury's books.
I'm never surprised that young people want to read books about other young people - after all, kids are always comparing their place in the world; but I am *really* surprised to hear that young people might only want to read about young people. That's strange to me.
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Good writing is good writing whatever age it's aimed at. I read Stevenson's Kidnapped- the ultimate boy's adventure story- for the first time recently and I didn't have to make any allowances for it.
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