IWSG—Insecure Writers Support Group, coming together on the first Wednesday of every month for a virtual pat on the back.
I like the YA genre. My bookshelf proves that. But I am not
a YA author. Writing for a younger audience is different from adult.
Or is it?
I've said before that genre designations are confusing. Take
mine, the speculative fiction/urban fantasy/contemporary fantasy genre. Yeah,
that one. The Magic Withheld trilogy
is set in modern times, in the real world, in urban and rural settings about
characters doing impossible things.
It is an adult novel. Little cursing, no explicit sex. But I
wrote it for an adult audience.
So why are fifteen-year-old boys falling all over themselves
to read it?
I marketed it to adult men and women. I didn’t try to use YA
lingo or follow the normal well-traveled path of popular youth-oriented novels when I wrote it.
So why are kids in Middle School reading it and writing book
reports?
Holy Jehoshaphat.
I had a young man come up to me and blurt out how much he loved it. How he'd read it so many times that he knew every line. I sure my expression was the epitome of surprise/shock listed in The Emotion Thesaurus by Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi:
the mouth falling open, a hand flying to the chest, fingers touching parted lips, an incredulous stare or dazed look.
Not that there is anything untoward about my storyline. I
felt RL Stine was iffy when my daughter was in school and I don't think my
books cross that line especially in Wilder
Mage.
But that’s the first book. Things kinda heat up in the next one
in the series, Mage Revealed, to be
released October 24th.
Uh, eek.
So how do I face parents or the winking school kid when it comes out?
* * * *
Insecure Writers Support Group: The Final Frontier.
These are the continuing voyages of the Ninja Captain, AJC. His mission, to explore all new writing venues, to seek out new authors and new blogs.
To boldly go where no blogateer has gone before.