Sophie Blackall and the Missed Connections of the Mail

This month Random House Children's Books released The Mighty Lalouche, a picture book by Matthew Olshan illustrated by Sophie Blackall. It gets my vote for cutest picture book of the year so far.

By Jen Doll

Apr 24, 2013

A Blogger Who Laughs at Nightmares Gets a Book Deal

For the last two years, 20-year-old Shane Burcaw has shared his tales of life with spinal muscular atrophy on the wildly popular Tumblr called Laughing at My Nightmare. Now he's writing a memoir, which he just sold to Macmillan.

Comments | 2,145 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 18, 2013

Leave a Book, Find a Book to Support Teen Lit

Thursday, April 18, is Support Teen Lit Day, a YALSA-declared holiday meant to raise awareness among the public that Y.A. is great. One way to participate is with Rock the Drop, a teen book drop initiative begun by literacy and social media project Readergirlz.

Comments | 578 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 11, 2013

The Spring Book Preview, Y.A. Edition

Following up on last week's adult spring book preview, here's the list of Y.A. novels I can't wait to read (or have already devoured) this spring.

Comments | 2,589 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 9, 2013

Meet the 17-Year-Old Who's Already Got a Three-Book Deal with Random House

Beth Reekles has a three-book deal with Random House, is working toward her physics degree, and is 17 years old. What have you done lately?

Comments | 6,058 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 2, 2013

The Author Who's Teaching Boys How to Talk About Rape

April is Sexual Assault Awareness Month, and today marks the kickoff of a new program focused on Laurie Halse Anderson's classic Y.A. novel Speak, which tells the story of a high school girl coping in the aftermath of being raped.

Comments | 21,912 Views

By Jen Doll

Mar 28, 2013

A New Way for Gay Characters in Y.A.

Suddenly, it seems like gay characters are everywhere in young-adult literature. How well is Y.A. doing at reflecting the current state of teen culture with regard to LGBT issues, and how far need we still go?

Comments | 7,369 Views

By Jen Doll

Mar 27, 2013

Can Books Solve the Bullying Problem?

In the New York Times today, Leslie Kaufman takes on the new proliferation of books about bullying in the Y.A. and children's markets. There are more, yes, but they are also different.

Comments | 701 Views

By Jen Doll

Mar 15, 2013

The Making of a Y.A. Character: A Q&A with Gayle Forman

Gayle Forman's Just One Day is a love story mixed with a coming-of-age tale featuring the character of Allyson Healey. Allyson can be a little bit frustrating. What's a Y.A. author to do about that? We asked Gayle Forman, who created her.

Comments | 1,035 Views

By Jen Doll

Mar 1, 2013

The Case for Rereading the High School Classics

If the act of rereading a book is partly about remembering the you who paged through it the first time, and comparing that version of yourself to the one who's reading the book again, the classics that we read in high school offer endless possibilities for rediscovery.

Comments | 5,499 Views

By Jen Doll

Feb 8, 2013

If the Wakefield Twins Could Draw: The Art of Y.A.

What do Jessica and Elizabeth Wakefield, the ladies of the Baby-Sitters Club, Nancy Drew, and R.L. Stine’s various goosebumps-inducing cohort have in common? They were art for your childhood bookshelves, and also, now, art for your grownup walls.

Comments | 1,465 Views

By Jen Doll

Jan 18, 2013

'The Face on the Milk Carton' Grows Up

In 1990, The Face on the Milk Carton was published by Bantam Doubleday Dell Books for Young Readers, introducing 15-year-old Janie Johnson to the world. This month, the final installment in the five-book series, Janie Face to Face, was released. 

Comments | 2,904 Views

By Jen Doll

Jan 10, 2013

A Literary Tour of Historical Y.A.

This week in Y.A. for Grownups we chart a course through history by way of books new, old, and upcoming. For your reading convenience, we've categorized the books by historical period or event. 

Comments | 4,862 Views

By Jen Doll

Jan 3, 2013

Y.A. to Watch for: The Winter 2013 Preview

2012 was an excellent year in Y.A. and middle grade across all boards — sales, growing acceptance for adults who love "cross-under" reads, and most importantly, content. 2013 is shaping up to be equally great. What can you expect, and what do you need to get your hands on now?

Comments | 6,035 Views

By Jen Doll

Nov 30, 2012

25 of the Most Wonderful Book Covers of the Year

In this week's Y.A. for Grownups column I'm paying special homage to the oft under-applauded but always important art of the books; specifically, the cover art that's appeared on books published for teens and middle-grade audiences this year.

Comments | 38,796 Views

By Jen Doll

Nov 16, 2012

What 'Twilight' Left Us

The final movie in the Twilight series is out this week, and the eldest of the four books is now going on 7 years old. My how they grow up fast! What has the equally maligned and adored—yet, either way, incredibly successful—series left us? And what might be next in hyper-popular Y.A.?

Comments | 4,097 Views

By Jen Doll

Nov 8, 2012

Calamities and Other Forces of Nature

As weather gets weirder (yes, Sandy. Yes, a nor'easter in November), here are a few of the Y.A. and middle-grade books we've relied on in the past for guidance and clarity when our environment appears to go off the rails.

Comments | 1,062 Views

By Jen Doll

Oct 26, 2012

Scary Books to Read in the Dark

In the lead-up to that scariest of holidays (no, not Thanksgiving with the family), I canvassed some of our favorite authors and writers and book lovers for a trip down Memory OMG I AM SLEEPING WITH ALL THE LIGHTS ON Lane—to find out their favorites. 

Comments | 7,414 Views

By Jen Doll

Oct 19, 2012

The Voice of 'Speak' Is Loud as Ever

Speak, a Y.A. novel written by Laurie Halse Anderson and published by Farrar Straus Giroux in October of 1999, tells of the aftermath of the rape of Melinda Sordino, who, in her freshman year in high school, nearly stops speaking altogether in her struggle to deal with what's happened to her.

Comments | 1,965 Views

By Jen Doll

Oct 11, 2012

A New Discussion of 'Skinny' for Teens

Just a handful of the Y.A. and middle-grade books I read while growing up in the '80s featured overweight or obese characters. Usually they weren't the protagonists. Since then, things have changed a bit, but Skinnyby debut Y.A. novelist Donna Cooner, promises to bring some new conversations to the category.

Comments | 3,579 Views

By Jen Doll

Oct 4, 2012

A Conversation with Lois Lowry

Writer Kate Milford and I sat down to talk with beloved children's author Lois Lowry upon the release of her latest novel, Son, the final book in The Giver quintet.

Comments | 4,138 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 28, 2012

How 'The Princess Bride' Became the Quintessential Teen Read

On this very Friday 25 years ago, The Princess Bride, a movie featuring the beautiful Robin pre-Penn Wright and the dashing Cary Elwes (whom hordes of teen girls would go on to have enormous crushes on), was released.

Comments | 5,189 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 20, 2012

Teen Reads Better Than 'Fifty Shades'

As Teen Lit RocksSandie Angulo Chen puts it, "To be honest, some of the sexiest books -- to me -- don't necessarily go all the way."

Comments | 11,178 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 13, 2012

A Book Cover in Time: The Changing Art of Our Childhood Reads

That old aphorism, "You can't judge a book by its cover," it turns out, is completely and totally untrue. We took a look at a few of our most adored childhood reads and compared the covers we pored over then with earlier covers and some current ones, too.

Comments | 5,173 Views

By Jen Doll

Sep 6, 2012

'Origin' Story: A Debut Y.A. Novel by a Young Adult

One of the highly anticipated Y.A. novels this fall is by 22-year-old debut author Jessica Khoury. Out this week from Penguin's Razorbill imprint, it's called Origin, and, with the film rights acquired by Scott Steindorff, it's getting a lot of buzz. It may even be your Hunger Games replacement read of the season. 

Comments | 1,897 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 30, 2012

The Fall Book Preview of Cross-Under Reads

We've been reading review copies all summer, and with the help of some bookseller friends, have compiled this fall preview of teen-and-younger books you won't want to miss.

Comments | 5,565 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 23, 2012

Reading Lois Lowry's 'The Giver' as an Adult

The Giver is one of the books you probably read as a kid, somewhere between late elementary or middle school and early high school, depending on your school and curriculum. Two of us hadn't, though, and finally did.

Comments | 13,966 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 17, 2012

The Legacy of 'The Baby-Sitters Club'

The Baby-sitters Club: Kristy Thomas, Mary Anne Spier, Claudia Kishi, Stacey McGill. They were the originals, the quintet of female friends who preceded the ladies of Sex and the City and came well before the foursome in Girls.

Comments | 11,027 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 9, 2012

Our 'Best Ever' Books List

As predicted, there was some debate about which books made NPR's list of greatest teen novels of all time, and which shouldn't have. We rounded up a list of our own.

Comments | 6,580 Views

By Jen Doll

Aug 2, 2012

The Best of the Young Adult 'B-Sides': Suzanne Collins, Markus Zusak, and More

Before there was The Hunger Games trilogy, there was Suzanne Collins' middle-grade series, Gregor the Overlander. We pay some attention to the best B-sides from a few of our favorite Y.A. and children's authors.  

Comments | 5,106 Views

By Jen Doll

Jul 25, 2012

In Search of the Best Teen Novels Ever

What's the title of the greatest teen novel of all time? NPR Books hopes to reach a conclusion on a topic that's fodder for no shortage of passionate opinion.

Comments | 4,153 Views

By Jen Doll

Jul 19, 2012

R.L. Stine Has Been Giving Us Goosebumps for 20 Years

If you're an adult of a certain age in America, of course you know the name R.L. Stine, you know it like a delicious shiver down your spine. His Goosebumps series, now celebrating its 20th anniversary, has crossed generations.

Comments | 8,936 Views

By Jen Doll

Jul 12, 2012

The Crowdsourced Funding of a Y.A. Movie

Y.A. author Nina LaCour is making a small-budget movie out of her novel, and the Y.A. community is helping her pay for it.

Comments | 957 Views

By Jen Doll

Jun 28, 2012

The Re-Readable List: The Books That Never Get Old

One key difference between a good book and a great book is that a great book is eternally transportive, no matter how times you return to the well. Here are the books we started reading as kids and haven't put down since.

Comments | 18,041 Views

By Jen Doll

Jun 21, 2012

The Inimitable, Unforgettable Redheads of Fiction

The latest redhead in the headlines right now is Merida, the Titian-tressed heroine of the first Pixar movie to focus on the tale of a female protagonist, Brave. But what about her predecessors in Y.A. and children's fiction?

Comments | 7,293 Views

By Jen Doll

Jun 14, 2012

Book Reviews Are for Kids: Meet the Next Generation of Book Critics

Kids are getting into the world of book reviews, offering up commentary and criticism on the Y.A. and children's books intended for them. Makes you wonder why this didn't happen sooner, right?

Comments | 2,007 Views

By Jen Doll

Jun 7, 2012

The Talk of Book Expo America

At Book Expo America, we got a sneak peek at the most-talked about new Y.A. and children's titles, and we referred to some publishing industry insiders for their takes on the books you don't want to miss. 

Comments | 5,673 Views

By Jen Doll

May 31, 2012

A Y.A. Lover's Summer Reading List, by Judy Blume, R.L. Stine, and Others

We asked some of our favorite Y.A. book authors for the titles that would have been on their ideal summer reading lists, and why. 

Comments | 7,652 Views

By Jen Doll

May 24, 2012

The Boys We Learned to Love

Who were the boy characters who formed our impressions of who guys were supposed to be, who set crushable standards, who we wanted to grow up and some day meet—or become—ourselves? 

Comments | 3,002 Views

By Jen Doll

May 17, 2012

Choosing Our Own Adventures, Then and Now

"BEWARE and WARNING!" begins R.A. Montgomery's The Abominable Snowman, book 1 in the recently repackaged Choose Your Own Adventure series you used to know and love. 

Comments | 11,426 Views

By Jen Doll

May 10, 2012

The Race for the Next 'Hunger Games'

There is a triumvirate of success in the annals of Y.A. book history: Potter, Twilight, Hunger. What comes next?

Comments | 8,767 Views

By Jen Doll

May 3, 2012

The Books That Taught Us About Sex

At some point in my early tweenhood, my mom ushered me into a room, just the two of us, away from my dad and younger brother, and presented me with a book.

Comments | 4,592 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 26, 2012

The Ongoing Problem of Race in Y.A.

In 1965, 11 years after the Supreme Court outlawed segregated schools, Nancy Larrick wrote an article titled "The All-White World of Children's Books" for the Saturday Review. Much has changed since then. Some has stayed the same.

Comments | 15,267 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 19, 2012

What Does 'Young Adult' Mean?

What exactly is "Y.A."? What does it mean? Why did it begin in the first place, and when was that? What has it become since? We conferred with librarians, agents, publishing world executives, and the experts of the Internet to put together a primer of sorts.

Comments | 15,979 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 12, 2012

The Banned Books We Have Loved

The ironic and rather wonderful thing about banning books is that the act doesn't, actually, do much to keep the books from being read. If anything, it inspires further interest in them, and sometimes sales, too.

Comments | 15,512 Views

By Jen Doll

Apr 5, 2012

The Greatest Girl Characters of Young Adult Literature

This kicks off our new series, Y.A. for Grownups, in which we talk about Y.A. literature—from the now nostalgia-infused stories we devoured as kids to more contemporary tomes being read by young people today. Despite what Joel Stein wants, grownups are reading Y.A. Let's embrace it.

Comments | 49,944 Views

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