"When Are You Going To Write for Adults?" (Joy Preble)
“So, do you think you’ll ever write for adults?”
This is one of the questions I’ve been asked numerous times
since I began writing YA novels. On the surface it’s not unreasonable; one
could assume it’s asking if YA is the only type of novel I ever see myself
writing. And actually, I have some middle grade ideas and possibly even some
picture books simmering in my head, so I could totally mention that in
response.
Except that’s not what
the question is asking. It’s asking when I will stop playing around and writing
‘just for kids’ and actually write a ‘real’ book. As though writing for
children and young adults is somehow less legitimate of an artistic pursuit,
for a less legitimate audience with a less legitimate need for storytelling.
I have taken to responding: “Maybe. But would you ask your
pediatrician when he or she is going to finally start treating adult
patients?” That tends to nip things in
the bud.
It’s not the first dismissive or even hostile question I’ve
received since my first YA novel came out in 2009. When first novel DREAMING
ANASTASIA debuted, a librarian in the school district where I was teaching
actually came to my classroom after school one day and asked me if I was
‘encouraging tobacco use’ since one of the main characters smoked cigarettes.
Her implication was that I probably was and if so perhaps I should be uninvited
to the then district-sponsored book festival. At first I thought she was
joking. How could she possibly believe that a character’s smoking habit was in
the novel not only gratuitous, but included with the express purpose of me advocating tobacco? And that by implied
extension, keeping this book and its tiny handful of references to cigarette
smoking by an immortal Russian who had been around since the Bolshevik Revolution
out of the book festival would somehow keep teenagers safe from all evils.
She had to be playing with me.
She wasn’t.
It happens so often it no longer surprises me. YA books are
challenged for their use of language or for sexual content, as though readers
want to believe that these things do not exist for teens. Resolutions to
stories are sometimes criticized if they are not clear and unambiguous, if the
‘bad guy’ isn’t appropriately punished and dealt with. As though teens have no
ability to deal with gray areas. Well, of course they do. Teens live--and have always lived--in a world that includes--as it always has--sadness and violence and love and hope and awful things and wonderful things. They suffer bullying and harassment, experiment with drugs and sex, deal with poverty and divorce and loss and rape and war. They dream big. They are cowardly and heroic. They speak in all sorts of ways. They betray and lie and protect. They are human. Even if their age ends in the word 'teen.'
Female characters in particular take the brunt of this
misguided ire, although certainly it’s not limited to gender. My narrator in
The Sweet Dead Life series, Jenna Samuels, starts the first book at age 14.
Some readers have taken exception to her occasionally salty language—and we’re
talking words like ‘asshat’. As one
reviewer put it, “Some things that turned me off just a little: Jenna’s
language and independence.” Would Jenna
would have received the same criticism if she were a fourteen year old boy? I
am not sure. But I have my doubts.
In full disclosure, I do understand that this is why fewer
YA main characters are only fourteen, and in fact fewer characters in general,
with MG novels aging them down to 13 and YA aging them up to at least fifteen
and more frequently sixteen. Because not only do younger readers (for whom the
content of a YA novel might or might not be inappropriate) generally read ‘up’
and look for stories about characters a few years older than they are, there is something in between about that age
that makes readers want characters to act younger, to retain a greater sense of
innocence. Of course, I also want those leveling that criticism to spend just
one day subbing in a junior high…
Here’s a Writer’s Digest article that discusses that YA/MG
issue. http://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/the-key-differences-between-middle-grade-vs-young-adult
And my friend and awesome author Dianne Salerni talks about
it here, too: http://project-middle-grade-mayhem.blogspot.com/2014/09/age-14-no-mans-land-between-mg-and-ya.html
And the very savvy Mari Mancusi talks about another side of
the protagonist age issue here: http://cynthialeitichsmith.blogspot.com/2014/09/guest-post-giveaway-mari-mancusi-on.html
All of this, of course, is just the tip of the iceberg. And
all of it goes back to the underlying issue that sparked that original question
that I get asked so much: The perception of teenagers as somehow ‘other,’ of
requiring stories that are ‘less’ in some way, that present them only in their
most idealized (and thus imaginary) form.
Love the pediatrician analogy.
ReplyDelete