What is Young Adult Fiction?

What Makes "YA" and "Teenage" Books Unique?

6 Comments
Join the Conversation
Teens Read YA Fiction - Julia Freeman-Woolpert
Teens Read YA Fiction - Julia Freeman-Woolpert
Young Adult fiction was once considered a kind of void between engaging children's books and sophisticated adult fare. But not anymore, 'cause YA has a new attitude.

The Young Adult Service Division of the American Library Association defines the age of a Young Adult as 12-18 years old. This means YA fiction is written for and marketed to youth of an age range which spans almost an entire decade, making it a very complex genre, as there are enormous differences in the intellectual and emotional maturity of a fourth grader versus a college freshman.

What Makes YA Fiction Different from Children's Books or Adult Fiction?

Young adult literature has certain unique features which set it apart. Books for teens are almost always written in the first person and usually have:

  • a teenage protagonist
  • adults characters as marginal and barely visible characters
  • a brief time span (the story spans a few weeks, yes, a summer, maybe, a year, no)
  • a limited number of characters
  • a universal and familiar setting
  • current teenage language, expressions, and slang
  • detailed descriptions of other teenagers' appearances, mannerisms, and dress
  • a positive resolution to the crisis at hand (though it may be subtle and never in-your-face moralistic)
  • few, if any, subplots
  • about 125-250 pages in length (although many of the newer YA books are much longer)
  • a focus on the experiences and growth of just one main character
  • a main character whose choices and actions and concerns drive the story (as opposed to outside forces)
  • problems specific to adolescents and their crossing the threshold between childhood and adulthood

Also, a lot of new YA lit is unique in that it is edgy: pushing the limits of socially acceptable content in teen books, especially regarding drug and alcohol use, violence, abuse, suicide, and social norms in human sexuality. This edginess pushes teenage fiction beyond appropriate boundaries for children's books.

What YA Fiction Is, and What It's Not

Don't let its name fool you: Young Adult fiction is not watered down adult fiction. It's also not children's fiction with older characters. It is literature that doesn't waste a breath. YA fiction moves at a clip that keeps pace with busy teens who are pressed for reading time, whose attention spans are brief, who are accustomed to and crave instant gratification. YA lit is the movie version of a great story... gripping from the first line, never slowing down, with all the slow parts edited out. YA literature is crisp, lively, and hip.

Is YA Fiction Trashy?

Some critics claim that YA lit is all about catty cliques and clothes and broken hearts and sex and and shallow, petty characters. Unfortunately, because of a considerable number of trashy reads for teens, YA has, in the past, been ghettoized in many book stores. The good news is that today, YA lit is finally getting the respect it deserves and teen readers are finally getting the selection they deserve. For more about this development, see my blog.

Is YA Fiction Literature?Long before the YA label was born, authors were cranking out books for the teen crowd and beyond. Think: The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas, Little Women by Louisa May Alcott , Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, Treasure Island and Kidnapped by Robert Louis Stevenson... all books for teens which have made their way to the distinction of great literature.

But the great books haven't all been written, and besides the ever-popular Harry Potter books, many others are being elevated to literature status such as: Mark Haddon's crossover novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in Night-time (Vintage, 2004) The Book Thief by Markus Zusak (Knopf Books for Young Readers, 2007) and The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield (Washington Square Press, 2007).

Are YA Books Educational?

Today's teen fiction books offer compelling stories which allow teens to connect with, and relate to, the characters. YA fiction helps teens to confirm themselves and their own experiences. YA books also let readers explore new experiences in a way that helps them learn about the world outside of their own knowledge, and there is truly value in that.

Francine Morrissette, Francine Morrissette

Francine Morrissette - Francine Morrissette is a freelance writer from southern Maine who has published articles on a wide range of topics including health, ...

rss
Advertisement
Leave a comment

NOTE: Because you are not a Suite101 member, your comment will be moderated before it is viewable.
Submit
What is 0+6?

Comments

Oct 13, 2009 12:52 PM
Guest :
YALSA defines young adult as 12 to 18, as they should.
Mar 5, 2010 12:40 PM
Guest :
most young adult books are now much longer than 125- 250 pages. there are many that are closer to 1000 than 100 pages.
Apr 22, 2010 9:30 AM
Guest :
A lot of what has been said here is true, but not necessarily accurate. Teens read YA books, because the material "hits home". The material can describe them perfectly or make them feel tremendously better about themselves.
-Out-Spoken Teen
Jun 29, 2010 8:31 AM
Guest :
The Book Thief is in the Young Adult section of the bookstore but it does not have most of these qualities. I am 48, and in a book group where I am the youngest member, we all LOVED it. None of us could see why it would be a young adult book. Are there more books we would love but haven't seen because of the category?
Sep 12, 2010 12:34 PM
Guest :
I have never read a 1000 page YA novel, nor have I ever heard of one, nor do I believe that any publisher would publish one in this day and age. The author of the article is correct; teens are pressed for time. They want instant gratification, and a 1000 page novel is not going to cut it. 250-400 pages is the norm, 500-600 if the story calls for it, a la The Book Thief. But 1000? Unless you're J.K. Rowling, I don't see that happening anytime soon.
Nov 10, 2010 10:44 AM
Guest :
I just read the article to gain some insight into why The Book Thief is considered YA. But now I'm troubled by the idea that YA writers are pandering to teens with "short attention spans" who "crave instant gratification." These are not good qualities, and writers shouldn't cater to them; they should instead challenge young readers with books that can be--gulp--sometimes difficult. But I guess any book sales are good book sales, right?
6 Comments
Advertisement
Advertisement