Since then, Mary has gone on to become an agent extraordinaire, author of one of the most popular children’sindustry sites, and now, author of the upcoming WritingIrresistible Kidlit: The Ultimate Guide to Crafting Fiction for Young Adult and Middle Grade Readers*:
Writing for young adult (YA) and middle grade (MG) audiences isn't just "kid's stuff" anymore--it's kidlit! The YA and MG book markets are healthier and more robust than ever, and that means the competition is fiercer, too. In Writing Irresistible Kidlit, literary agent Mary Kole shares her expertise on writing novels for young adult and middle grade readers and teaches you how to:
- Recognize the differences between middle grade and
young adult audiences and how it impacts your writing.
- Tailor your manuscript's tone, length, and content to
your readership.
- Avoid common mistakes and clichés that are prevalent in
YA and MG fiction, in respect to characters, story ideas, plot structure
and more.
- Develop themes and ideas in your novel that will strike
emotional chords.
I was intrigued by her new book both because she’d personally
inspired me with her advice, and also because of how much her advice and
knowledge already resonates on her popular website, KidLit.com.
Of course, there are a ton of other writing resources out there. So what
makes this one so special?
MK: I took the Donald MaassWRITING THE BREAKOUT NOVEL approach and integrated novel excerpts from
thirty-four books that I think are some of today's best. So I'm not just
talking about voice in an abstract way, I'm showing writers examples of it,
and, better yet, how each specific example works and why. Those next few
steps are often missing in writing guides that stop at simply being
prescriptive. I've also interviewed some published authors and big house
editors to round out my own advice, so I hope to bring writers something bigger
than just me on my soapbox.
I found it an engaging and interesting read,
not just for honing craft but also for its great introduction and summary about
the start of the MG and YA boom to set the stage for breaking into the
children’s industry as a whole. The book follows the same straight-forward and
in-depth style found on Mary’s website with some really fun notebook doodle
designs to set the mood. But most importantly, it steps beyond what any one post
on a blog or website could answer by tackling some of the toughest questions on
voice, revision, authenticity and even career-minded market writing with
thorough examples and explanations. I’ve only just scratched the surface of
these tricky subjects here on my own blog, and I know that while I was reading
there seemed to be a constant mantra in my head of: Yes. Yep. Check. Yep.
And it’s not just a guide for writing; true to the spirit of that
same energetic and inspiring agent I sat next to all those years ago, what Mary
hopes readers (writers) will take away from this book is more than advice; it’s
the urge not to feel stuck by what you’ve got but to take risks and make the
most of opportunity to go out there and MAKE IT HAPPEN:
MK: In assigning exercises
and covering the bases of the biggest craft issues, I hope to inspire writers
to go back to the drawing board, experiment, and play with their work. Too
often, we get locked into the words we've written because they're already there
and anything is better than a blank page. We lose that sense of
creativity. You are making everything up when you write. There's shouldn't be a
sense of "it has to be like this" or "I can't do it
this way." Of course you can. And sometimes it's that play that we indulge
in once we get over ourselves and break our own boundaries that results in the
best writing.
So check it out! It’s
definitely a resource I recommend.
Thanks for the recommendation - just downloaded it!
ReplyDeleteThis is wonderful! I love the bit about hoping. That's the thing that really got me to make my final decision to sign with my agent; she had this amazing optimism just leaking out of her pores when she called to offer representation.
ReplyDelete