A friend of mine wrote me awhile back and asked me if I could write a post about resources for the YA writer. I’ll admit, I was stymied. In spite of the fact that I began writing in the YA genre, and as such it is my first true literary love, I realized I didn’t know nearly the number of resources that I could spout if he had asked the same question about speculative fiction. There is SCBWI, of course, the teenlitauthors yahoo group (although it tends to get a bit bogged down with congratulations and personal news), and Vera Kay’s Blueboards (where I’ve rarely been active). I’m sure there must be how-to-do-it books on YA (mustn’t there?), but I’ve never read them. Likewise, there must be various relevant blogs, but the few truly YA-focused ones I used to read are rarely if ever updated anymore.
Meanwhile, YA continues to be hot, hot, hot, even while agents and editors are cautioning writers that there is a glut of YA, and maybe writing some quality MG wouldn’t be a bad idea right around now. They say this at conferences, in any case, but I’m still hearing stories of agents recommending that their actual clients write YA, even if they’ve gotten their start in writing for adults. (Which incidentally tends to make me cringe. I understand intellectually that there is more money for fiction writers in YA, and the sales might be easier to make due to the aforementioned hotness, so it makes sense from a business perspective. But I’d like to think there’s more to writing YA than just good business sense; that it’s the end result of receiving a calling, of having some kind of affinity to teenagers, of what kind of stories a writer deeply desires to tell. I’m not saying a writer can’t write both YA and adult fiction–I do that myself. I just want it to be a case of good business uniting with a true interest in writing for teens. But I digress.)
I could write another whole post on the differences between the speculative and YA communities from where I sit (and maybe I will), but the fact remains that I don’t have a treasure trove of resources to share. Instead I will give three pieces of advice (which you can take or leave), advice that unfortunately does not offer any shortcuts but has helped me learn more about YA in the last three years than anything else.
READ YA. Read a lot of it. Read MODERN YA written and published in the last ten or so years (at least some of which has been published in the last three years) so you know what’s going on now instead of what was going on when you were a kid (trust me, unless you’re close to being a teenager yourself, it is different now). Read some MG (Middle grade) so that you understand the difference through examples instead of relying only on my handy-dandy list. Read different genres of YA; you might only be interested in writing science fiction YA, but read at least a few paranormal, fantasy, and contemporary novels as well. Read a few of the really “girly” book series so you know what’s going on there. Read the blockbusters of the field. I don’t care if you don’t like Twilight; if you want to write YA, you should read it anyway (at least the first one) so you can understand what about it tapped into the zeitgeist of the time and understand the ripples it generated (and still generates). Likewise, you should read The Hunger Games, and even though much of it is MG (in my opinion), you should read at least some of the Harry Potter books. Then go read some obscure titles no one has heard of.
STEEP YOURSELF IN TEEN-NESS. If you haven’t spent any in-person time with teens since you were a teenager yourself, it’s time to change that. I don’t care how–you can hang out with a family member, volunteer, teach a class, offer to mentor a teen writer. If all else fails, you can scout out where the local teens hang out after school, go there, and shamelessly eavesdrop. You can watch TV shows and movies targeted at teens (just NOT during your writing time, please): Buffy the Vampire Slayer is old school but still helpful, and lately I’ve been spending time watching Veronica Mars, Glee, The Vampire Diaries, and Gossip Girl (and I’m sure there are others). I don’t watch these shows thinking they are necessarily a realistic representation of teenage life, but to watch for more widespread trends: how do relationships/hook-ups work now? how do teens use technology? what are the latest fashion trends and the current slang? how do the characters speak to each other? what issues tap into today’s teen experience that might be a little different from your own teenage years? Sure, if you’re writing a far future dystopic novel, today’s slang might not be so relevant, but it’s still important to try to understand how your readers see themselves now.
REMEMBER WHAT IT WAS LIKE. Not just the clichés, and not from a superior, “now I’m a wise and mature adult” perspective. How can you understand as deeply if you’re looking down at someone? No, exercise that empathy muscle and try to remember how you actually felt: the frustration of not having complete power over your life, even if you were spending a lot of time watching adults royally screw up; the surging hormones and confusion when trying to deal with lust and affairs of the heart; the uncertainty of not knowing exactly who you were and how you fit into the larger world (or perhaps bending self perception of who you were to fit into a fantasy); the endemic unfairness; the world-crushing importance of everything going on in your life; the huge milestones bearing down on you, one after another (and whether you looked on them with excitement, horror, or a co-mingling of the two). And then remember that all of the above plays out differently for different people, both in terms of which ones are relevant to each person and what’s going on inside versus the show they’re putting on for the outside.
That’s all I’ve got. If you know of any YA resources I didn’t mention, please give them a shout-out below. Also, if you think all a modern YA writer needs to read is the juvenile Heinlein oeuvre, tell me that too because then we can have a truly epic argument.
It’s true — there aren’t a lot of resources for writing YA. I’ve been compiling my own set of informal resources for the past nine years, and it’s pretty slim. Basically I’ve scoured the Internet for Interviews, reports and blog entries. I’ll work on sharing them with you. (This may take a little time. They’re on an orphaned hard drive. Long story.)
I must admit concern for how the YA market is growing. On the one hand it’s super-awesome, on the other hand I worry it’s a bubble. I console myself by saying maybe it’s a change in publishing, and a genre that will thrive and continue to sustain itself.This comforts me both as a writer and a reader.
I agree that it’s essential to read modern YA. YA has changed so much since my pre-adult years. We have to know the market. However, I gotta admit, HAVING to read YA is just pretty awesome.
I love your third suggestion the best. 🙂 We have to remember. A lot has changed, but emotions and experiences haven’t. Some things are universal.
I would love to read, or hear about, the differences you see between the SFF and YA communities. I’m only familiar with the SFF community, and that’s a recent event.
Well, I’m glad I’m not the only one who has had difficulty finding lots of resources. Finding isolated blog entries on YA tends to be easier for me, but I hardly ever save them… oops!
I love reading YA! On my recent trip to Maui, I inhaled several YA novels and it was extremely satisfying. A few of them were great, a few of them were pretty bad (both dystopias, interestingly), but all were interesting learning experiences.
I really hope it’s not a bubble too. I don’t feel like I have enough data to make a decent analysis of whether it is or not, though. Crossing my fingers that it isn’t.
Hmm, will have to contemplate the SFF vs YA post some more…Yony wants to read it too, so I’m gaining motivation. 🙂
“STEEP YOURSELF IN TEEN-NESS”
GAH!!! Get it off! GET IT OFF!!!
Also:
What an amazing new smell you’ve discovered.
no, digress! digress! 🙂 i want to hear more.
also, i can’t agree more about reading! if you want to write something, read what’s been written. i see a fair handful of people in the process of writing YA or MG books that aren’t familiar with the past, present, and future of their chosen field. classics that they haven’t read, contemporaries that are solid reads, and unfamiliarity with what’s coming and going up the road. i want to shake them by the shoulders and say “WHAT ARE YOU DOING?”
but i digress. 😉
Digressing can be very entertaining. 😉 I will probably digress more on similar topics in the future….
Good point. To me, if you don’t like YA as a reader, you shouldn’t write YA. It came out wrong. You shouldn’t write YA just because it’s hot right now. It’s saturating the market. On the other hand, if you like YA for being YA, then by all means, go ahead.
I believe the greatest resource for judging YA writing are the teens in your life. They can be most helpful and knowledgeable about the quickly changing lives, hopes and dreams, worries and frustrations they live with everyday. They will also inevitably provide you with enough current slang, music and fads to make anything you write authentic.
Yes! With the caveat that not all people have teens in their lives already, and I don’t think this makes it impossible to write YA.
The one type of YA I haven’t immersed myself in is the Romance. Sounds like your first recommendation would be “Anna and the French Kiss.” Do you have a second?
I haven’t read that many YAs clearly labelled “Romance,” although I’ve read a bunch of contemporary YAs. I’d suggest something by E. Lockhart (she has a series of “Boyfriend” books, although it is more a chronicle of many romantic misadventures) or perhaps Maureen Johnson’s 13 Little Blue Envelopes. And there is a whole subcategory of YA historical romances a la The Luxe.
A couple of YA romances I’ve heard are good but haven’t read myself yet are When You Were Mine by Rebecca Serle and Falling Fast by Sophie McKenzie (the latter comes out in March). Strangely, both of these books feature the play Romeo & Juliet.
[…] spent the last three years reading YA (and a bit of MG on the side) voraciously, and so yes, I have a pretty clear idea of what YA is. I told my friend that many times, the place where writers go wrong when trying to write YA is the […]