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Laura Nicol's avatar

Alison, I so appreciate this explanation of the differences between adult and YA. I've printed this post off as a reference! I suspect I'll need it when my agent's editorial notes arrive and I embark on another round of revisions.

I also appreciate the discussion of sex in YA. The story I've written is definitely one in which sex is central--a juggernaut of hunger and risk that sends the protagonist about as far from her original goals as it is possible to get. The prominence of this aspect has probably accounted for years of my ambivalence and confusion about the story's genre. As I like to say, both the protagonist and her story have boundary issues. ; )

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Sheldon Goldfarb's avatar

An interesting discussion of the difference between YA and Adult novels.

It reminded me of the publisher who commissioned a YA novel from me back in 2002. I had never written a YA novel, so I asked what the difference was, and he said, "A young adult novel is just like an adult novel - except, no sex!"

So I wrote it mostly like an adult novel, though occasionally I thought I should simplify the vocabulary and, for instance, said "daydream" instead of "reverie." (The first time, but I used "reverie" later.)

The publisher had also specified that the protagonist be 14 years old, so that in itself pushed the novel into YA territory (which in those days meant a younger age group than you describe).

But I was interested to read your thoughts about the different voice etc. I think I did have a somewhat younger voice, because the protagonist was so young and the story was seen through his eyes (though it wasn't first person narration, just close third person).

It was a mystery, by the way, and did get published in 2005 as "Remember, Remember."

Oh, and there was no sex, though one reviewer went on about the romance in the book, and I had to warn one potential reader that if she was looking for something steamy, this wasn't it. Still, adults liked it too.

Sheldon Goldfarb

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