What
is YA and Where Should We Put It?
Last December, like a slew of other
people, I lined up to see Juno,
the quirky, warm and incredibly smart PG-13 rated
movie about a sixteen-year-old pregnant teenager who
opts to put her baby up for adoption. Juno went on
to win an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay
and earn $228,057,576 making it the highest grossing
movie in Fox Searchlight's history. At the particular
showing of Juno I attended the vast majority
of the audience appeared to be over eighteen but if
Juno were a novel, odds are it would be labelled
YA and shelved in the teen section of the bookstore
like Nick
and Norah's Infinite Playlist and Twilight
(two other young adult books soon to be hit movies).
So why is it that films focusing on young people,
like Bend it Like Beckham, Juno, Mean
Girls, Almost Famous and Nick and Norah's
Infinite Playlist, don't get filed away on a teen
shelf at Blockbuster Video?
Nearly a year ago I read a Washington
Post article about Nick Hornby's Slam, a YA novel
which centres around a sixteen-year-old Tony Hawk
fan and father to be. The article quoted Hornby's
English editor as saying "I would like to have
done this as an adult book. I think it would have
done really well." Geoff Kloske of Riverhead
(the publisher of Hornby's adult books in the States)
also commented that, "There's no reason Slam
couldn't have been published as an adult book."
Hmm, it's been a couple of years since I read High
Fidelity but I remember main character Rob Fleming
as in his thirties but still undoubtedly suffering
from growing pains and the first person narration
is both very immediate and accessible, qualities shared
by copious amounts of teen fiction. However, if the
chief factor defining a book as YA is indeed the main
character's age why were Megan
McCafferty's Jessica Darling books released as
adult novels? The first two books in the series, Sloppy
Firsts and Second Helpings, definitely
read like YA, both in tone and by virtue of featuring
a teen protagonist. Elizabeth
Berg's trilogy, following the life of twelve to
thirteen year-old Katie Nash, is likewise shelved
in the adult fiction section of the bookstore while
Stephanie
Kuehnert's I Wanna Be Your Joey Ramone details
the life of its main character Emily Black through
childhood and up to her early twenties but resides
on YA shelves. Meanwhile Melissa
Marr's highly successful teen novel Wicked
Lovely was re-released as an adult mass market
novel in Germany, debuting on the bestseller list
at 32.
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
(Mark
Haddon) and The Girls (Lori
Lansen) are both crossover titles, with versions
of the books being released for both the youth and
adult markets. Defining YA is trickier than it at
first appears - obviously it's not just about narration
style or the age of the main character so if there's
one special thing that marks a book as YA, I have
to confess that as a young adult writer I'm not quite
sure what that is. I also have to wonder, given the
common wisdom that teens fourteen and older mainly
read adult books, and that adults themselves are clearly
drawn to material revolving around young people if
it's marketed in a way that doesn't dissuade them
from reading/viewing it, if we need to rethink how
books aimed at the older end of the YA spectrum are
marketed and shelved. To my mind novels like Tyrell,
Before I Die, Inexcusable and Thirteen
Reasons Why (all books described as being for
readers fourteen and up) read like natural born crossovers.
None of them give you the sense that they're pulling
their punches because of their young characters. Novels
so edgy you could put an eye out with them, funny
books, chick lit, fantasy sagas - all of that and
more can be found on young adult shelves. I have a
hard time believing mature fiction readers wouldn't
give any of these teen books a chance - if they were
only aware of what was out there.
Maybe some of the novels I've mentioned will be lucky
enough to be adapted for the screen and find their
audience that way or perhaps a publisher will decide
to repackage a couple of them and transplant them
to the general fiction shelf but at the moment there's
a hell of a lot of good material hiding out in the
YA section, away from the eyes of the general population.
In May, Newsweek published an article about the publishing
business being flat, except for teen books, which
are booming. A recent New York magazine article was
full of even more doom and gloom, musing on the death
of the book business as we know it. Yet according
to a Children's Book Council sales survey, young adult
fiction sales are up more than 25 percent in the past
few years. Wouldn't it be nice to spread some of that
vigor around the bookstore? What would happen if bookshops
began stocking more titles intended for older teens
simultaneously on both the YA and adult shelves? In
many bookshops the teen department is still uncomfortably
close to the picture books and easy readers. Would
more people be inclined to check out the teen section
if it resided closer to adult fiction or somewhere
else within the store entirely? Maybe instead of marketing
older YA strictly to a very narrow segment of the
population (grades 9 - 12) a more general, PG-13 sort
of tact could be taken. In the meantime, discover
a wealth of new reading material by taking a stroll
through your local bookstore's teen section and look
for Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist and
Twilight at a theatre near you.