Here, in order from the left, are Delia Sherman, Susan Cooper, Garth Nix, Neil Gaiman (at the back, heading towards his seat), Will Hill and Holly Black, taking part in a panel at the World Fantasy Conference
2013, which as you probably know was held in Brighton over last weekend. What they were discussing
provoked a good deal of passionate comment from the audience, both agreement and
disagreement – most of which remained pretty much inaudible, as for some unknown reason the
massive conference hall floor was not provided with roving mikes.
The subject under discussion was: "The Next Generation: Are All the Best Genre Books Now YA?" and the explanation ran: "Over the past decade the young adult market has seen a huge boom in genre titles and readers, in no small way helped by the Harry Potter series, The Hunger Games and the works of Philip Pullman and Neil Gaiman. What has caused this surge amongst younger readers, and can it be used to keep them reading into adulthood?" However, as these things tend to do, the discussion veered away into a conversation about the nature of YA fiction: what it is and what it isn't, and what makes it what it is.
So when is a book YA? It's not easy to say. Perhaps it's simply when the protagonist is a teenager or young adult. So does that make 'The Catcher in the Rye' a YA book? Discuss... But is 'To Kill a Mocking Bird' a children's book, just because Scout, the point of view character, is a child? Clearly not: so it's not as straightforward as that.
Moreover, is YA fiction a new phenomenon? Other members of the panel were in broad agreement with Neil Gaiman when he said - I paraphrase - that YA is a new genre, and that in his youth and that of most of us, we sprang from reading children's books straight into adult fiction, especially genre fiction. Teenagers were not especially catered for.
Deep in discussion - CJ Busby and Elizabeth Wein; Kathleen Jennings listening behind |
Some of the people sitting around me wanted to question or at least qualify this - but it's difficult to make a nuanced point while effectively yelling from the fifteenth row. Elizabeth Wein, sitting behind me, pointed out that maybe the perceived absence of YA fiction in the 60's and 70's is more about categorisation than actual fact. She pointed to books such as KM Peyton's Flambards series (in which the heroine grows up, elopes, marries, is widowed, remarries twice, has a child, loses a child...), Rosemary Sutcliff's historical novels, published as children's books, but always with young adult heroes - and Ursula K Le Guin's Earthsea novels in which the main characters start out as young adults and eventually even grow old.
So if ‘Young Adult’ is a new
category, maybe this is only true in the sense that the idea been newly created:
the books were always there.
Of course Neil Gaiman is correct to say that we also moved into ‘adult’ genre
fiction. Of course we did – to Agatha Christie
and Dorothy Sayers, John Buchan, Isaac Asimov, Arthur C Clarke, Jack Schaeffer,
Georgette Heyer. But what about Alan
Garner’s ‘The Owl Service’? Is that a children's book? Is ‘Red Shift’? What about TH White’s ‘The Once and Future King’? Also available were many
non-genre (for want of a better word) novels which were both accessible and
attractive to teenage readers and which dealt specifically, many of them, with
the pains and challenges of growing up: Rumer Godden’s
‘The Greengage Summer’, Dodie Smith’s ‘I Capture the Castle’, Jane Gardam’s ‘A Long Way From Verona’, and ‘Bilgewater’, and ‘The
Summer After the Funeral’. Some of these were labelled adult books, some
children’s: for better or worse, all would be marketed as YA today. Labels or no labels, they
existed.
These were the books I pulled off my parents’ shelves, or found
for myself in the libraries as I – never left children’s books behind, I never stopped reading them –
but as I hacked my own paths through the uncharted jungle that lay beyond the
children’s shelves.
Elizabeth Goudge’s novels are a case in point. She may be
best known today for her children’s novel ‘The Little White Horse’, which JK
Rowling’s praise probably helped back into print. It is indeed a lovely book, and so are her
other children’s novels, especially my favourite, ‘Linnets and Valerians’- but
she was, in the main, a writer of adult novels. At age 14, I found depth and
complexity in her adult fiction – a thoughtfulness, a slower narrative pace, a
concern for the difficulties of relationships, and a delight in abstract
concepts of philosophy and religion which opened my horizons. There were nearly
always children in these books, but the children interacted with adults and
their concerns in an un-children’s-book-like way. Goudge wrote of terror and
horror and mental illness. The sensitive child Ben, in ‘The Bird in the Tree’,
is haunted by a sketchbook he has found which contains pictures of dead and
decomposing bodies. He becomes terribly afraid of death for himself and for
those he loves – but he doesn’t tell, or
not for a long time. The story is not about Ben, but about a love affair
between his mother Nadine and his cousin David, which threatens to break up his
parents’ marriage and split his family. Ben and his brother and sister are not
in control, but they are still affected by the actions of the adults in their
lives.
Is this is what makes ‘The Bird in the Tree’ adult
fiction? This lack of centrality for the child or teenage characters? What we now term YA fiction
places the young person in the focus of the action, in the learning,
decision-making centre. So Cassandra in ‘I Capture the Castle’ grows and
learns, watches and experiences, and makes in the end the wise and sad decision
not to accept an offer of love which is largely pity. But the boy Leo, in LP
Hartley’s ‘The Go-Between’, although the point-of-view character, is on the edge of the action. He doesn't understand what he's doing. Like Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird, he needs his adult self to narrate, to mediate, to understand, to explain. The child Leo has a minor part in adult lives. He is collateral
damage, manipulated and used.
(There's another look on this from Saxey at lightningbook, who was also in the Brighton audience!)
Thanks for this!
ReplyDeleteI loved Elizabeth Goudge's children's books, and re-read them passionatly, and I will never forte the day when I was 12ish and my mother let me know that up in the adult section there were more, many more, books by her....
ReplyDeleteFor many reasons, thanks for this
Sounds like a wonderful panel, lucky you for being able to get there! Nice to see an Aussie there - Garth Nix is definitely a YA(and children 's) writer, though there's some argument about a recent one.
ReplyDeleteCatcher In The Rye is often called the first YA novel. It's the one teens used to read to be rebellious, though these days it's the one they hate because they had to read it for school. ;-)
But you're right to say the age of the POV character doesn't necessarily make it a children's or YA novel. I'm currently reading Seraphina, a lovely novel, but is it YA just because the heroine is 16? I have my doubts. Too much history and politics and too little actually happening so far(I'm halfway through)for it to excite any of the teenagers I work with. Robin Hobb's Assassin trilogy has a fifteen year old hero, but isn't YA, I would argue.
And I have read books marketed as YA with a hero who is in his twenties.
I don't care, and my young library users don't either, as LNG as the book has what they want to read.
Oh how I wish I had been there! Susan Cooper! Neil Gaiman! Holly Black. I am lime green with envy.
ReplyDeleteKate, people are green with envy when others get to meet YOU! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for this, it's really interesting on the content and approaches that might constitute YA. And I must give 'The Bird in the Tree' a go.
ReplyDeleteI was in the audience for the same panel, and remembering the 1980s (when YA definitely existed as a category as well as in terms of individual texts) - I waxed nostalgic here: http://lightningbook.wordpress.com/2013/11/10/young-adult-fiction-in-the-eighties/
Hope you don't mind if I add a link to your piece at the end of mine!
Thanks, Saxey - I just read your post and I couldn't agree more - especially about Jan Mark!
ReplyDeleteI love Elizabeth Goudge's books, and it upsets me when I see them dismissed (if they get talked about at all) rather sniffily as 'domestic fiction'. So I was very happy to discover a mention of them in your post.
ReplyDelete(and I'm of the same opinion as Kate Forsyth - I'd have loved to have been there!)