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Crossover Readers

A lot of publicity has gone to the newly recognized audience of “crossover readers,” an audience that only really emerged into the mainstream with the success of Harry Potter. Crossover readers returning to (or discovering) YA fiction are now an audience to be reckoned with, and some publishers are even experimenting with marketing to an audience that might be outgrowing YA books and wants titles more reflective of those in-between years that exist now from the time at which you finish high school and the time you truly declare your independence.

It’s great that this crossover audience is getting some attention. But what’s interesting is that as we talk about adults crossing over to a genre aimed at teens, there is a group aged 10-14 (or, depending on who you talk to, 8-12) that most people refer to as “tweens” (which is a term I hate). And that group is crossing over to read not just YA fiction targeted at a teen audience of ages 15 and up, but adult novels. This isn’t new. YA fiction didn’t always exist, and the books that did weren’t necessarily the ones that rang the bells of these kids, who are maybe not quite ready to leave the children’s section completely (there are some extremely awesome books for middle grade readers)but are also ready to strike out for the books their parents have hidden in a box in the back of their closet. Today when we think of middle grade students and horror, Goosebumps is what usually comes to mind, but oh my gosh, do you have any idea how many kids between 8 and 12 have read Stephen King’s IT? I asked a group of women on Facebook what book had scared them the most as a kid, and one of them said IT, which she had read at age 8 (when asked if she would give it to her kids at that age, she gave me a resounding NO). Erin Morgenstern, on NPR’s Risky Reads, wrote about reading IT first at age 12 (link here). If you read through the comments, you’ll see how young kids often are when they start reading Stephen King. One commenter said “I went straight for Stephen King in fifth grade.” Another commenter started reading King at age 9. I myself remember reading IT when I was about 12… so, you see, those older readers in the children’s section of the library, are getting their books from everywhere. Morgenstern’s article appeared as part of a series by NPR called PG-13: Risky Reads, in which authors discuss the books that, as teens, changed their lives. Some of these are definitely YA, some would be considered adult fiction, but, in spite of the title of this series, many of these books were also read by kids much younger than 13.

This NPR series reminds me a lot of a book by Lizzie Skurnick, Shelf Discovery, that I read some time ago– it actually has covered some of the same books. Shelf Discovery was compiled from a column at Jezebel called Fine Lines (archives are at the bottom of the article), where she (and some others) write about fiction read by this same age group–middle graders and teens– mostly titles girls in that age group would have read as they grew up in the 60s, 70s, and 80s Crossing over directly from children’s books to adult fiction at that time really isn’t all that uncommon, and that may be why there are so many challenges to books for children and teens. It’s nice to pretend that each kind of reader stays sorted into their little box, and it’s true that some will take the path we expect, or direct them on, or that marketers try to push them on. But really, each reader is different, every kid is different, and there is no sudden revolution, just a world of books and assorted related media that lead in a multitude of ways to discovering who you are as a reader, and who you are in life.

Am I saying that as librarians, educators, and parents, we should be handing our eight year olds Stephen King? No, absolutely not. But many of you probably remember reading books like Flowers in the Attic and The Grounding of Group Six before you were fifteen, and it’s good to remember that kids aren’t getting their books just from the library, and to remember what it was like to be that age and read the books in that box under the bed, when you look at and think about your own young reader. And, as an elementary school librarian recently asked me (to paraphrase) “They’re beyond Goosebumps-, and ready for something more– what can I give them next?”

Back to School: Robert Louis Stevenson– Yet Another Reason to Read the Classics

When you think of classics in the horror genre– and by classics here I mean mostly horror titles that are no longer under copyright– there are names that come easily to mind. Edgar Allan Poe, Bram Stoker, and Mary Shelley, or at least the movies based on their books, are surely familiar to most people. H.P. Lovecraft, in spite of his influence, is a little more obscure to the general public, but most people with even a passing knowledge of horror fiction probably recognize his name. Chances are you can find their works easily, if not actually in the high school classroom, at least in the high school library… and certainly, you should be able to get them at the local public library!

But there are also authors that might surprise you, at least a little. My introduction to Robert Louis Stevenson was A Child’s Garden of Verses. You know,

How do you like to go up in a swing,
Up in the air so blue?
Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing
Ever a child can do!

That the author of idyllic children’s verse and such boys’ adventure novels (yes, I know girls read them and love them, too) as Treasure Island and Kidnapped could take the turn of imagination he did to write “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde” intrigues me, but as with many other iconic monsters that have taken hold in our own imaginations, Jekyll and Hyde have taken on life of their own, and I suspect the average person hasn’t noticed the author is the same, if they’ve read the original story at all. Stevenson’s imagination turned in this direction more than once, though, and I thought I’d share a story today that the folks at HorrorHomework.com posted online, which illustrates the perils and horrors of trying to impress the wrong teacher, and of bowing to peer pressure. And so I present to you Robert Louis Stevenson’s gruesome and disturbing “The Bodysnatcher”(It’s possible that you may have to listen to Christopher Walken reading “The Raven” as well, but, while it distracts from the reading experience, it’s definitely worth a listen).

Enjoy!

 

Real Life Horrors, Continued

These past few days have been difficult ones that involve a lot of soul-searching.

I remember the shock of Columbine. It wasn’t the first, or the last, school shooting in this country. Teenagers have turned on their classmates and teachers with guns enough for it to be the subject of books, both fiction and nonfiction, for a long time. A few months ago, I wrote about one of these, Stephen King’s Rage, that he originally wrote in 1966, while he was actually still in high school himself. After Rage was found in the possession of a school shooter many decades later, King had the book pulled from publication. He spoke about his reasoning, and his thoughts on school shooters, at a conference of the Vermont Library Association (click here to see what he said) and called for an examination of our country’s culture and violence. Columbine, and so many other school shootings (and attempted school shootings), all took place in high schools and middle schools. They were shootings by teenagers of teenagers– classmates and teachers. And there is both fiction and nonfiction out there on school shootings, written for teens, parents, activists, and counselors.

What happened on December 14 is different. The real life horror that took place at Sandy Hook Elementary is unimaginable. In writing about real life horrors not that long ago, I made picture book recommendations that might help in discussing some of the terrible things that exist in this world with children. So many of those titles are about events far away or long ago– there is nothing about the possibility of someone walking into a child’s school to commit such a horrifying act. And it’s not just because I couldn’t, or didn’t, think of it. A search of Amazon shows just one book for young children (recommended for grades 3 and older) that even touches on the topic: The Berenstain Bears and No Guns Allowed by Stan and Jan Berenstain. I hope someone writes something for younger kids, and for their families, to help them through this very uncertain and scary time. I have a kindergartener and first grader myself, so this hits very close to home for me, and I wish there were more resources to turn to. Although at this point you have probably talked to your kids about the events at Sandy Hook Elementary if you plan to do so, here are a few resources I have discovered that may be helpful.

When You Are Done Hugging Your Kids Too Tightly, Elmo Will Help You Figure Out What To Say Nextfrom Upworthy.com

Tragic Events in the News— tips for talking to your kids from Mr. Rogers

Talking to Children About the School Shooting from Psychology Today

One of the life saving individuals of Sandy Hook Elementary was Maryann Jacob, a library clerk who called the office when the intercom clicked on and learned immediately of the shooting(she was interviewed by the Boston Herald here). She got the class of fourth graders in the school library to safety, and ran across the hall to warn another class. Then she ran back to the library to stay with her class. So many people put their lives on the line to save others– it’s truly amazing that this selflessness outweighed the instinct for survival.

My heart goes out to everyone affected by this tragedy. No one, child or adult, should ever have to face, or live, real-life horror.