I am peevish. I have a lot of peeves. If peeves were cats,
my neighbors would be banging on my door to complain about the yowling and the
smells.
Among the most vexing of my peeves is when the middle-grade novels Charlotte’s Web and A Wrinkle in Time appear on one of those “Greatest YA Novels of
All Time” lists.
Great book, but not "Young Adult." |
To put that in perspective, I also get upset when some
writer confuses a shotgun with a rifle, or misattributes a quote, or uses the
phrase “begs the question” incorrectly. Every writer’s error diminishes me,
because I am a writer and I am involved in writerkind. (Sorry about that, Mr.
Donne.)
I just read an article by Sarah Hannah Gómez about the middle-grade vs. YA thing. Nice article, Ms. Gómez! Now you got me all stirred
up, because I’m having a MG vs. YA moment concerning my soon-to-be-published
novel, Slider.
Is Slider YA or
MG?
Easy answer: It is middle-grade, suitable for ages 10-up.
Real answer: Slider
is upper-MG. It is lower-YA. It is both, and it is neither. The prose is
accessible to most nine-year-olds, and a smaller number of eight-year-olds. The
story, the issues, and the humor are geared to ten- to twelve-year-olds.
My protagonist is fourteen, an age of particular interest to fourteen-year olds. And I hope my even older readers will find it to be a fun, easy read
that will not insult their burgeoning intelligence and sophistication.
You may be saying, Middle-grade,
YA, tomAYto, tomAHto…what’s your damage, man?
Well, it’s about making the book available to readers who
will enjoy it most. Most of my work has been for “young adults”—that is, ages
12-16. I want this book to be read by
a younger audience, one that my YA books do not reach. So it matters where it
is shelved in bookstores and libraries.
The transition from MG to YA is not seamless. Between the
two lies a gulf, both literal and figurative.
In most libraries and bookstores,
middle-grade is shelved in the children’s section along with Dr. Seuss and Goodnight Moon. YA books are given their
own space, often at the far end of the library or bookstore. There is relatively
little traffic between the two spaces.
This presents a dilemma for precocious ten-year-olds who are
intrigued by more complex, forward-looking books, and for teens who might
prefer to read the easier, less angst-ridden books found in the children’s
section. It is also an unsolved marketing problem for publishers.
A middle-grade novel. |
The cover of Slider
says that the book is suitable for ages 10-up, what you might call “upper
middle-grade.” It will be shelved with the children’s chapter books, as are my
previous two MG novels, The Flinkwater Factor
and The Forgetting Machine. That is
good; it’s where it belongs.
Up next: Should "middle-grade" be hyphenated? Experts weigh in.
4 comments:
I remember seeing Tamora Pierce's Squire and Knight shelved as middle grade in the children's room at the Roseville Library and thinking.... not an appropriate place for those, especially Knight.
I've only read her Lioness books. But yeah, I see stuff mis-shelved often, including my books. It's a tricky business.
I never realized it was such a gray area on where to place those books that are stuck between being middle-grade books and young-adult books. But I think you're right; I have found myself going back and forth between the children's books and young-adult books in multiple libraries to look for books by the same author.
P.S. I like middle-grade hyphenated when it is used as an adjective, but then wouldn't young-adult have to be hyphenated as well? Maybe the expert will weigh in! :)
I am terrible with hyphens, as every copyeditor who has ever worked with me will attest. As long as the meaning is clear, I don't worry about it much other than in this blog, which does not have the benefit of a copyeditor.
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