When I read this week’s prompt, I immediately thought of an
interview I once ready with young adult author John Green. He said he writes
for and about teenagers because “young people are thinking about so many
important questions, about love and meaning and justice. And maybe in part
because they are new to those questions, teenagers tend to approach them
without much embarrassment or ironic distance. My favorite Y.A. novels explore
love and loss and meaning with that same unironic enthusiasm” (Why John Green Likes
Writing for Teenagers, 2019).
I think this sums up why adults enjoy young adult fiction,
or at least why I do. As adults, we grapple with the same issues and questions
about love, loss, and meaning as young adults do. The type of young adult books
I read and that seem to be popular deal with these heavy issues and aren’t
filled with happy youth fluff as one might think by the name of the genre.
When it comes to serving adults who enjoy young adult
literature, they should be served in the same way we serve adults who enjoy
adult literature. We should still be finding out what genres they want within
young adult (do they want a thriller, romance, mystery?) and what appeals to
them in a book. The questions used for young adult readers advisory in Tailoring
the Readers Advisory Interview to the Needs of Young Adult Patrons can work
well for adults too. Asking “What was the last book you read and really liked?”
“Do you want something similar to that one?” “Do you like to read books that
are like your favorite kinds of movies?” and “Is there a book you really didn’t
like?” are all helpful for adults looking for young adult books as well (Booth,
2005, p. 35). As with any reader’s advisory interaction, we shouldn’t make them
feel awkward or embarrassed about what they read and shouldn’t imply that those
books are meant to be read by younger people.
Sources:
Booth, H. (2005). RA for YA: Tailoring the readers advisory
interview to the needs of young adult patrons. Public Libraries, 44(1), 33-36.
Why John Green Likes Writing for Teenagers. (2019, October
10). Retrieved April 05, 2021, from
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/10/10/books/review/john-green-by-the-book-interview.html
Hi,
ReplyDeleteI like that you pointed out we should still ask the same questions when helping adults find YA books. I saw this prompt and thought my library is weird. We have so many patrons who immediately go to the YA section or they come up to me and a few other librarians and ask us if we have read any good ones. I don't get the age thing but maybe it is because I really don't care as long as the story is good. Great prompt and I love that you brought in John Green to make a point!
Abby Abbott
Christina,
ReplyDeleteI loved that you included information about the interview with John Green! He said it so well. I also wholeheartedly agree with you that the questions you mentioned aren't limited to a certain age, we can focus on finding what is appealing to the person we are helping and get them the right story, wherever it is!
I agree that we shouldn't make patrons feel embarrassed but we shouldn't even need to imply that those books are meant to be read by younger people- they are by definition meant to be read by young people and usually kept together in a designated area for that reason... except it really seems like this has changed and now YA is thought of more as a genre than an age category. If adult age groups read YA as much as young adults, at what point should these books just mix in with the other general fiction? This topic has also made me wonder about how we offer RA to teens who read fiction categorized for adults. Is this type of RA even being offered?
ReplyDeleteI love love love the John Green quote - he really sums it up so well and so so you in this well written prompt response. Full points!
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