Workshop:
An Introduction to Writing for Children and Young Adults
“The
memories must turn to blood within us before the images, ideas, the sounds of
the heart can come forth.” Katherine Paterson
Hopefully you enjoyed working on the journal exercises
last week and are discovering a voice or theme that you want to develop. Don’t
worry if you are still not sure about an age for your personal voice. The other
side of voice is the story’s voice, which is usually heard through the
narrator. So first, it’s important to recognize the voices of each age
category, and then hear how they develop into genre, which we’ll look at next
week.

Voice-Age-Interest
Picture books: Tend to separate into two main categories age wise. Ages 3-6 are predominately the more familiar versions where the author and illustrator’s talent merge to create a visual and auditory voice that invites their readers into a new experience.
Easy
readers: Predominately for ages 7-9, 1,000-1,500 words.
For Pre-school-1st
grade there is often repetition and simple concepts.
For
2nd –3rd grades there is a more developed plot and more
complex sentences.
Chapter
Books: Age range usually stretches from 7-10, 40-80 pages,
1,500-10,000 words, usually 8-10 short chapters.
Middle-grade 9-12,
10,000-16,000 words, 64-150 pages, and usually contains cliffhangers, even for
the quiet stories.
YA 12 + can range from 120-150 pages on average, (to much
longer depending on genre and publisher) 16,000 words, and can address complex
subjects. Many houses differentiate between the lower age of 12 to 15 with some
subject and language boundaries, but accept more intensity with the upper end
of 15 to 18, as long as the material is pertinent to the story itself and not gratuitous.
Action Steps:
1.
Choose one memory
from last week’s action steps that really caught you by surprise and/or
intensity.
2.
Pick two age
categories from the list above. Find one publisher’s online catalogue and read
the blurbs for them. Notice which
ones you begin to skim over and which grab your interest.
3.
Now draft your
moment as a blurb for each of your two categories.
Share: Do
you find yourself leaning towards a particular age yet? Why? And are you
surprised?
Read deep, marcy
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