Posts Tagged ‘young adult’

Cinderella story

Wednesday, May 21st, 2008

I’m doing official DelMio work, having picked up a copy of Walt Disney’s Cinderella, Retold by Cynthia Rylant. Rylant is a former Kent (Ohio) resident and a pretty well-known children’s book writer. She’s no Madonna, but there’s only room in this world for one Madonna, and Madonna has it.

Anyway, a story to file under “Small World,” it turns out that two of the six books we’re exploring for the Ohio Center for the Book have authors who not only knew each other but one helped the other get started in the publishing biz. Rylant had two small children a decade or two ago and she hired Angela Johnson to watch her kids. Various bios describe the job alternately as “nanny” or “baby sitter.” In any event, Rylant eventually discovered Johnson’s writing talent and helped shepherd the young writer through the publishing jungle. And then Johnson went and bought Rylant’s house when she and her partner, “Captain Underpants” author Dav Pilkey, moved out of Kent.

Johnson has a reputation for being a recluse. No listing in the phone book. No personal Web site or Facebook entry, apparently. She has been interviewed, but does not play the publicity game much. I guess she prefers to express herself through writing.

Dave Wilson is the Grand Pooh-Bah of Editorial Content at DelMio.com, a site developed by SunLit Communications LLC. He also is at times janitor, chauffeur, chief cook and bottle washer. Once upon a time he was a metro editor and copy editor at the Akron Beacon Journal. Send love letters and trash talk to dave.wilson@delmio.com. Or post a comment. Whatever.

Good news on the readership front

Friday, May 16th, 2008

I just posted a news item (click on news and scroll down to May 16) about the so-called YA (young adult) reader, readers age 12-18. Ask me, that’s a pretty vast gulf in readers. What appeals to most 12-year-olds is unlikely to appeal to most 18-year-olds. But it’s a growing segment, much to the delight of book publishers everywhere. And they’re starting to cater to the YA crowd, finding talented writers, setting up book groups and library/bookstore sections devoted to YA readers.

As I noted in the news feed, “The Kids Are Alright,” shamelessly stealing the phrase from The Who — one of my favorite all-time bands, by the way. Other faves are the Beatles, Stones, Led Zep, U2, R.E.M., (Akron’s own) The Black Keys, the White Stripes, and a quirky bunch out of Canada, The Arcade Fire. But I digress.

The feed quoted a recent Newsweek story about the resurgent YA book sector, and while that’s kind of biz-oriented, the real story is that teens are ignoring all the hand-wringing that nobody reads anymore, that we’re raising a generation video game zombies and that this country’s going to hell in a handbasket! Well, the kids are reading. At least some of them are, and they’re reading a lot.

Exhibit A: My son, Matt, who turns 13 in June, plowed through the entire Harry Potter series in two weeks. It was spring break. How much of it he absorbed, I can’t say. But still. There are times we have to pry the PlayStation controls out of his clenched hands to get him back to reading. Ya do what ya gotta do. Daughter Lindsey, 9, is following suit. She just finished her first Harry Potter book.

But it’s not just Harry. Matt loved the Series of Unfortunate Events, following the endless series of disasters bestowed upon the Beaudelaire children. He’s into the Chronicles of Narnia (yes , we plan to see the second movie, which is getting good reviews).

My wife, DeAnne, is especially persistent in making sure the kids read, and early on we read to them.

Curiously, my boy, the son of a writer, doesn’t much care for writing. Which kills me, of course. Then again, why would he want to follow in a family biz that had me working nights, weekends and holidays, and then laid me off? Maybe he’s the smart one.

Damn you, muse!! Damn youuuuuuuuuu!

The YA reader is thriving

Friday, May 16th, 2008

To borrow the title of an old song by The Who, “The kKids Are Alright.” Folks who desparage the current generation of kids as slack-jawed video game junkies aren’t seeing the whole picture (My son-to-be 13-year-old son is both a rabid gamer and voracious reader — he tore through the entire Harry Potter series in two weeks — ed.).

Says Newsweek: “Contrary to the depressing proclamations that American teens aren’t reading, the surprising truth is they are reading novels in unprecedented numbers. Young-adult fiction (ages 12-18) is enjoying a bona fide boom with sales up more than 25 percent in the past few years, according to a Children’s Book Council sales survey. Virtually every major publishing house now has a teen imprint, many bookstores and libraries have created teen reading groups and an infusion of talented new authors has energized the genre. ”

If you give them something besides dreary and often dreadfully written textbooks, many tweens and teens will read. Sometimes they just need a little encouragement, as in hitting the off button on the TV/game set.