Anybody who knows me knows how I feel about labels. Applied to people. Applied to literature.
Still, those of us who write young adult fiction must, at times, face those who suggest that it is a lesser form, not nearly as important as the work written expressly for adults—a problem I discussed in a story for
Publishing Perspectives titled,
"Removing the YA Label: A Proposal, A Fantasy."(Those of us who write quote-unquote literary contemporary YA fiction must also endure the suggestion that John Green has singlehandedly ushered in
this genre's golden era, but that's a topic for another conversation, and we must be careful not to blame John Green for what is written about him.)
The problem with the YA-is-lesser assessment is that the YA writers I respect aren't writing down, aren't writing in haste, aren't writing with any less literary ambition than those who write novels for adults. We're just writing stories that happen to have younger protagonists at their heart; often we're writing "whole family" tales. Always, if we're serious about this stuff, if we're writing not toward known trends but toward felt story, we're writing as best as we can.
And so I will admit to feeling equal measures of joy and peace at finding
Going Over on the
Main Line Today list of 10 great beach reads by local authors. Not 10 YA books. Just ten books by authors ranging from Robin Black and Jennifer Weiner to Kelly Corrigan and Ken Kalfus. Ten books curated by Cathy Feibach of Main Point Books, who has made it her business, in this, the first year of her store's existence, to get to know who is writing what and to evaluate each book on its own terms.
I am honored. And I am looking forward to next Saturday, when I will drive down Lancaster Avenue and stop in Bryn Mawr and spend an hour signing both
Going Over and
Handling the Truth: On the Writing of Memoir in Cathy's store. My signing caps a full day of signings, the details for which are
here. And when I'm not signing, you can be sure that I'll be buying the books I want, seeing straight past their labels.
Many thanks today for
this shout-out from one of the best magazines our Main Line has to offer,
Main Line Today. I am less than good at many things, including generating brief summaries of my own work. This single paragraph is a gift. Thank you.
Dangerous Neighbors
By Beth Kephart (Egmont USA, 192 pages)
In her 12th novel, award-winning author and Main Line Today contributor Beth Kephart escorts readers into the world of 19th-century Philadelphia—onto the Centennial grounds, over the icy Schuylkill River, down Walnut Street and through Rittenhouse Square—as twin sisters Anna and Katherine experience love, tragedy and a coming of age. Set against the backdrop of the 1876 Exhibition, Dangerous Neighbors celebrates the often-mysterious bond between twins. Entertaining, haunting and unforgettable.
What a great description!
Wonderful.