Adults welcome! |
There are some really amazing books that might very well be
on the shelves disguised as adult fiction when, in fact, they would find
themselves at home on any YA or MG bookshelf. Crossover books? Perhaps. More
like shared books of interest.
Let us all remember that Harry Potter was not considered an MG
book when it was written and first marketed. Once YA/MG readers discovered it,
they loved it. The fact is that two covers were designed, one for adults and one
for kids! I remember being in the UK in 2000 and noticing Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (the original title of the
US-renamed Harry Potter and the Sorcerers
Stone which sadly overlooked the actual relevance of something called the
philosopher’s stone in alchemical history) on the shelf kids’ shelf in London bookshop. The artwork was not the same
as it was in the US but it was a cute illustration with the same spirit as the
American version. Perusing the shelves, I came to the adult fiction section.
There was a book with a dark edge, an obscured photograph of a train, foggy and
mysterious. And the name of that book was (wait for it…) Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone! Could it be? Were there
two books by the same name… and by the same author? I may be a little slow in
the uptake, but I was quick to realize that it was, in fact, the very same
book. Talk about not being able to tell a book by its cover.
Harry Potter is an excellent example of books that appeal beyond the confines of their designated shelf. But we cannot always rely on different covers to guide us. We need to share books with each other to know what can work. A book (or series) I’d love to share is Jasper Fforde’s Thursday Next series. The first book, The Eyre Affair, knocked my socks off. I think there are few things as exciting as finding a book so unique and incomparable, that upon finishing it I had to immediately turn back and read it again! No blurb can do it justice, though on the cover I have, the quote from the Wall Street Journal says that the book “combines elements of Monty Python, Harry Potter, Stephen Hawking, and Buffy the Vampire Slayer.” The hero is a literary detective in a 1980s world that is not quite the one we know. In this world cloning is hip and dodos are the ‘in’ pet. There is street warfare between gangs with different theories of who wrote the works of Shakespeare. Croquet is an extreme sport. And protecting the integrity of a manuscript can be, well, murder. And you don’t have to know all the literary references to appreciate this book. Like so many kid shows and films and stories, there are meanings on many levels and pleasure for all. There’s nothing worrisome or dangerous in the language or action, probably tamer in some respects than some books labeled YA. But it is enormously fun.
The reason books like Harry Potter and Thursday Next work
for different ages is that they were not written for any genre. They were just
written by excellent storytellers who can spin a good yarn. There was no attempt
to be naughty or attempts to be tame. The books were written to be read and
enjoyed and they can be, by adults and YA readers, alike.
It is one of my greatest pleasures when a reader claims that
the book is written for his or her own age. I get adults (never kids, other
authors, teachers, or librarians) who say the Young Inventors Guild is too
mature, too young for teens, too old for MG readers, or should be read by
adults. It makes me feel like I’ve done something right.
Posted by Team Member Eden Unger
Yes on having done something right! It really is all about the storytelling, we adults love it too.
ReplyDeleteI really only consider two categories of books when it comes to my own collection: good books, and the other category.
ReplyDeleteHa! Matt and Deb, I totally agree! I think great writing is great writing. I think the key for middle-grade and YA is NEVER trying to dumb something down. KIDS GET IT! Many kids' authors biggest fans are adults for a reason. :)
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Eden!
Thanks, Hilary, Deb and Matt! I think we all know how smart kids are and the respect they demand when we write things they plan to read. That's why we love YA books! People work hard and the books are often fab!
DeleteI love The Eyre Affair too!!
ReplyDeleteIsn't it magic when someone comes up with something completely different!
DeleteA good story is a good story. :-)
ReplyDeleteAt a conference a few years ago an editor at a major publishing house, when pressed for details on the differences bet. MG, YA and adult fiction said something like, 'don't worry about the age groups, if you write a good story we'll figure out where to put it.'.
That's true, Paul! A good book will find its audience...though clearly publishers may try to fit it into some silly suit that doesn't fit and try to get it to go to march the wrong parade.
ReplyDelete