Categories
What's Up in YA

New Queer YA Comics, Adaptation News, and More!

Hey YA Fans!

Let’s catch up on the fast-and-furiously coming YA book news. There has been some big stuff in such a short period of time since the last news round-up.

 

For Caraval fans, you’ll want these great enamel pins. $11 and up.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you later this week, where we’ll talk with several YA authors who write horror about why it is teen readers love to be scared.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

😍 Your YA Ebook Deals Are Here!

Hey YA readers!

Let’s sink our reading teeth into some delicious ebook deals this weekend. Deals are active as of Friday morning.

Since it’s October, there will be a nice collection of spook-tacular reads in this round-up.

Kiersten White’s The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein is $2. Best believe I’m grabbing this one!

Joelle Charbonneau, who is prolific, wrote the standalone Time Bomb in 2018. You can grab it for $3.

The Star-Touched Queen, Roshani Chokshi’s debut, is $3.

Want a YA version of Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None? You’ll love Gretchen McNeill’s Ten. $2.

This is going to look like a pricey pick for ebook deals but roll with me. The entire first volume of Julie Kagawa’s The Iron Fey series — five books! — are $15.

Looking for a serial-killer tinged thriller? I Hunt Killers by Barry Lyga will serve you well. $3.

Want another thriller option? Caleb Rohrig’s White Rabbit is $3.

Nic Stone’s Odd One Out is $2.

Kekla Magoon’s fantastic How It Went Down — which has a companion title coming out soon — is $3.

I loved Winifred Conkling’s Radioactive, a nonfiction title about Iréne Curie and Lise Meitner, and you can pick it up for $3.

I haven’t read this one, but the cover always catches my eye. True Letters From A Fictional Life by Kenneth Logan is $4.

Hearts Unbroken by Cynthia Leitich Smith is $3. An #OwnVoices Native story about race, about love, and about standing up for what you believe in.

Philip Pullman’s The Book of Dust is $3.

Last, but not least, Reneé Ahdieh’s The Wrath and the Dawn is $3.50.


Enjoy your weekend with a new book or two, and we’ll see you again on Monday!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

📚 Seven More 2020 YA to TBR ASAP

Hey YA Readers!

Gotta love all of those sweet little acronyms. The best part is that as YA readers — and readers more broadly — we know what they all mean.

Let’s take a peek at some rad-sounding YA books that’ll hit shelves next year to get on your TBR now. Since I haven’t read them — I’m a reader who doesn’t like to go more than a month out or so — I’m using Goodreads descriptions. But you better believe I’m super eager to get my 2020 reading on.

I’ve included a mix of all genres, so there’s something here for every kind of reader. We Are seeing an interesting title theme in 2020 as well.

Camp by LC Rosen (May 26)

Sixteen-year-old Randy Kapplehoff loves spending the summer at Camp Outland, a camp for queer teens. It’s where he met his best friends. It’s where he takes to the stage in the big musical. And it’s where he fell for Hudson Aaronson-Lim – who’s only into straight-acting guys and barely knows not-at-all-straight-acting Randy even exists.

This year, though, it’s going to be different. Randy has reinvented himself as ‘Del’ – buff, masculine, and on the market. Even if it means giving up show tunes, nail polish, and his unicorn bedsheets, he’s determined to get Hudson to fall for him.

But as he and Hudson grow closer, Randy has to ask himself how much is he willing to change for love. And is it really love anyway, if Hudson doesn’t know who he truly is?

Dear Universe by Florence Gonsalves (May 12)

Dear Universe,
Sorry for interrupting you with my presence, but I’m wondering if you could have my back for once. I recently had a massive chin zit and a period stain you could see from space and my boyfriend kissed someone else and also my dad is dying faster than usual. If you could show up during my last English class so I can graduate and like achieve my potential or something, I’d appreciate it.

It’s senior year, and Chamomile Myles has whiplash from traveling between her two universes: school (the relentless countdown to prom, torturous college applications, and the mindless march toward an uncertain future) and home, where she wrestles a slow, bitter battle with her father’s terminal illness. Enter Brendan, a man-bun- and tutu-wearing hospital volunteer with a penchant for absurdity, who strides boldly between her worlds—and helps her open up a new road between them.

Mermaid Moon by Susan Cokal (March 3)

This is just a children’s tale; would you wreck your ship for it? 
Would you drown for a mere mother’s story?

Sanna is a mermaid — except her mother was landish, not seavish. The undersea witch who delivered her cast a spell that made her people, and her mother, forget her birth. Sanna longs to find her mother so much that she apprentices herself to the witch, learns the magic of making and unmaking, and fashions herself a pair of legs to go ashore on the Thirty-Seven Dark Islands, the nearest anyone can remember to where they left her mother. There, Sanna stumbles into a wall of white roses and a community desperate for a miracle — and into a baroness who would do anything to live forever. From the author of the Michael L. Printz Honor Book The Kingdom of Little Wounds comes an original fairy tale of belonging, sacrifice, choice, hope, magic, and mortality.

Spindle and Dagger by J. Anderson Coats (March 10)

This rich literary novel follows Elen, who must live a precarious lie in order to survive among the medieval Welsh warband that killed her family.

Wales, 1109. Three years ago, a warband raided Elen’s home. Her baby sister could not escape the flames. Her older sister fought back and almost killed the warband’s leader, Owain ap Cadwgan, before being killed herself. Despite Elen’s own sexual assault at the hands of the raiders, she saw a chance to live and took it. She healed Owain’s wound and spun a lie: Owain ap Cadwgan, son of the king of Powys, cannot be killed, not by blade nor blow nor poison. Owain ap Cadwgan has the protection of Saint Elen, as long as he keeps her namesake safe from harm and near him always.

For three years, Elen has had plenty of food, clothes to wear, and a bed to sleep in that she shares with the man who brought that warband to her door. Then Owain abducts Nest, the wife of a Norman lord, and her three children, triggering full-out war. As war rages, and her careful lies threaten to unravel, Elen begins to look to Nest and see a different life — if she can decide, once and for all, where her loyalties lie. J. Anderson Coats’s evocative prose immerses the reader in a dark but ultimately affirming tale of power and survival.

We Are Not Free by Traci Chee (June 9)

From New York Times best-selling and acclaimed author Traci Chee comes We Are Not Free, the collective account of a tight-knit group of young Nisei,  second-generation Japanese American citizens, whose lives are irrevocably changed by the mass U.S. incarcerations of World War II.

Fourteen teens who have grown up together in Japantown, San Francisco.

Fourteen teens who form a community and a family, as interconnected as they are conflicted.

Fourteen teens whose lives are turned upside down when over 100,000 people of Japanese ancestry are removed from their homes and forced into desolate incarceration camps.

In a world that seems determined to hate them, these young Nisei must rally together as racism and injustice threaten to pull them apart.

We Are The Wildcats by Siobhan Vivian (March 31)

A toxic coach finds himself outplayed by the high school girls on his team in this deeply suspenseful novel, which unspools over twenty-four hours through six diverse perspectives.

Tomorrow, the Wildcat varsity field hockey squad will play the first game of their new season. But at tonight’s team sleepover, the girls are all about forging the bonds of trust, loyalty, and friendship necessary to win.

Everything hinges on the midnight initiation ceremony—a beloved tradition and the only facet of being a Wildcat that the girls control. Until now.

Coach—a handsome former college player revered and feared in equal measure—changes the plan and spins his team on a new adventure. One where they take a rival team’s mascot for a joyride, crash a party in their pajamas, break into the high school for the perfect picture.

But as the girls slip out of their comfort zone, so do some long-held secrets. And just how far they’re willing to go for their team takes them all—especially Coach—by surprise.

A testament to the strength and resilience of modern teenage girls, We Are the Wildcats will have readers cheering.

We Didn’t Ask For This by Adi Alsaid (April 7)

Central International School’s annual lock-in is legendary. Bonds are made. Contests are fought. Stories are forged that will be passed down from student to student for years to come.

This year’s lock-in begins normally enough. Then a group of students led by Marisa Cuevas stage an ecoprotest and chain themselves to the doors, vowing to keep everyone trapped inside until their list of demands is met.

Some students rally to their cause…but others are aggrieved to watch their own plans fall apart.

Amira has trained all year to compete in the school decathlon on her own terms. Peejay intended to honor his brother by throwing the greatest party CIS has ever seen. Kenji was looking forward to making a splash at his improv showcase. Omar wanted to spend a little time with the boy he’s been crushing on. Celeste, adrift in a new country, was hoping to connect with someone—anyone. And Marisa, once so certain of her goals, must now decide how far she’ll go to attain them.

Every year, lock-in night changes lives. This year, it might just change the world.


Thanks for hanging out, y’all. We’ll see you on Saturday with some rad ebook deals.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

✨ Harry Potter Goodies Galore!

Hey YA Fans!

I’ve talked before about how Harry Potter is the perfect series for helping define the difference between “middle grade” and “YA” books. The first three books are in the middle grade category, while the following books nudge into the YA category.

Which is why I’m highlighting the series today, but in a different way.

I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but there have been so many recent announcements about Harry Potter goods you can buy this season. It makes sense: not only is it back-to-school time, but the holidays are coming and people are making their wish lists.

Let’s take a peek at some of the awesome Harry Potter lines hitting stores now or in the very near future. I’ve pulled a single image from each collection, then linked to either the announcement or the storefront.

This is in no way comprehensive, but a way to do a little drooling (or shopping or wish list making).

Blackmilk School’s Out Collection

This collection is stunning. If you’re in the market for outerwear or athletic wear (or athleisure), the Australian-based Blackmilk collection for Harry Potter is just [chef’s kiss].

Funko Harry Potter Strategy Game

It’s Funko Harry Potter, but in the style of a strategy game. This one comes out next week, but you can preorder it now. It looks really neat.

 

Harry Potter x Danielle Nicole

It is impossible to pick just one of the incredible purses and totes in the Harry Potter x Danielle Nicole line. But get a load of the Howler one above! So, so many options here, including bags in every Hogwarts House color scheme (especially great if you want to have Potter pride but in a way that doesn’t scream that you have a Harry Potter themed bag).

Hallmark

True story: my first ever job was at Hallmark during ornament season which at the time was three specific drop times — July, September, and November (and not to date myself, but I did that job before Harry Potter was popular, so there were no HP goods). Harry Potter ornaments have been part of their line for a while though, and each year they add new ones to the collection.

 

Hot Topic

Hot Topic has always been a mainstay for Harry Potter goods and their current line up is fabulous and cozy. The thing most noteworthy about Hot Topic’s collection is that it’s one of the most size-inclusive, so those of us who are outside straight sizing can also share our love of all things HP.

 

Jujube x Flying Keys

Whether you need a tote, a backpack, or a fanny pack, this Flying Keys collection from Jujubee has got you covered. The inside material is also highly designed.

LEGO Advent Calendar

Do you need a LEGO Harry Potter advent calendar? I bet you do.

 

Mini Boden x Harry Potter

If you wear kid sizes or know someone who does, then I am exceptionally envious of the fact this Mini Boden collection of Harry Potter clothing can be in your life. This is so cute I had to include a photo of multiple kids wearing the items.

Pandora x Harry Potter

There’s not an image of any items from the collection yet, but fans of Pandora jewelry rejoice: there is a Harry Potter x Pandora collection dropping in November.

 

Pottery Barn Teen

This velvet Slytherin robe is just one of the awesome finds in the Pottery Barn Teen Harry Potter collection. There are all kinds of bedroom goods here, from Daily Prophet themed sheets to Golden Snitch bean bag chairs.

Vans

Need some new kicks? You can select from so many options in the Harry Potter x Vans collection.

Vera Bradley

Since this collection doesn’t release until mid-2020, there aren’t yet images to share. But if you love Vera Bradley or various kinds of bags (totes, purses, duffle, etc.), keep your eyes peeled.


I’ll just mention here that my birthday was yesterday, and I wouldn’t mind seeing that Slytherin velvet robe mysteriously showing up at my house. . .

Thanks for hanging out, y’all, and Monday you’ll be treated to a newsletter from a guest writer.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

All 👏Of 👏The 👏YA 👏Book 👏Talk👏

Hey YA Readers!

As you’re enjoying today’s edition of the newsletter, I’m spending the week soaking in as many books as possible on vacation. Vacation as in, time off on my couch with a pile of books. AKA, the best thing in the world.

And how am I deciding what to read this week? I’m pulling titles from some of the awesome YA book talk that’s gone down on site over the last month.

Let’s catch up together.


Thanks for hanging out, y’all, and we’ll see you later this week!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

Snap Up Sweet YA Ebook Deals

Hey YA readers:

Your ebook deals are here! There’s something for every kind of reader here. Treat yourself to a book or two or ten while they’re on the cheap.

Deals are current as of Friday, September 20.

Grab the first book in the Charlotte Holmes series, A Study in Charlotte, by Brittany Cavallero for $2.

Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu is still $3 and worth reading before the film next year.

The first book in Julie Kagawa’s Talon Saga series, Talon, is $2. This is for high fantasy fans (and dragon fans!).

Laura Ruby’s award-winning Bone Gap is $3.

For A Muse of Fire by Heidi Heilig, the first in a fantasy duology featuring a main character who has a mental illness, is $2.

Do you know the story of Claudette Colvin? Grab Phillip Hoose’s biography Claudette Colvin: Twice Toward Justice for $3 and get to know her and her role in Civil Rights.

Joelle Charbonneau is prolific, and you can get to know her work with Dividing Eden if you don’t already know it. $2.

Bettna Restrepo’s Illegal, about a teen girl who crosses the border, came out before there was significantly more attention brought to these stories in YA, but you can grab it now for $2 (and should!).

Want a romp? Kathy Parks’s The Lifeboat Clique, about a group of teens trapped together on a lifeboat and the cliques that stick around even in a disaster, is $2.

the gilded wolves roshani choksiRoshani Chokshi’s The Gilded Wolves is $3. This was a fun one with some gorgeous writing.

Need a horror fantasy with romance? The Hearts We Sold by Emily Llyod-Jones is $3.

This roundup features a ton of books with a real magical, lush bent to them, and Leslye Walton’s The Strange and Beautiful Sorrows of Ava Lavender is another. $3.

So is Laini Taylor’s gorgeous Strange The Dreamer. $3.

As is Renée Ahdieh’s The Wrath and The Dawn for $3.

Grab Maggie Stiefvater’s The Raven Boys for $3.

Last, but not least, I adored Tasha Kavanaugh’s Things We Have In Common, and while it’s an adult book, it’s an Alex Award winner — awarded to a book with particularly good teen appeal. $3.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you again on Monday!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

📚 New YA for Hispanic Heritage Month

Hey YA Readers!

September 15 officially kicks off the month-long celebration of Hispanic Heritage Month. Over on Book Riot, we’ve highlighted some awesome Mexican superheroes this year, and last year, some of our Latinx writers shared their favorite Latinx authors.

We’ve seen an array of awesome Latinx authors publishing in YA this year, too, so let’s take a peek at some of the 2019 Latinx YA books that have hit shelves. Because my own reading has been embarrassingly slow on this front, I’ve pulled from Goodreads descriptions — but you better believe my TBR is long, long, long. I have marked with a * the ones I’ve read and highly recommend (unmarked means I haven’t read it yet, not that it’s not worth your time!).

This isn’t comprehensive, but rather a look broadly at a number of titles across genres.

Barely Missing Everything by Matt Mendez

Juan has plans. He’s going to get out of El Paso, Texas, on a basketball scholarship and make something of himself—or at least find something better than his mom Fabi’s cruddy apartment, her string of loser boyfriends, and a dead dad. Basketball is going to be his ticket out, his ticket up. He just needs to make it happen.

His best friend JD has plans, too. He’s going to be a filmmaker one day, like Quinten Tarantino or Guillermo del Toro (NOT Steven Spielberg). He’s got a camera and he’s got passion—what else could he need?

Fabi doesn’t have a plan anymore. When you get pregnant at sixteen and have been stuck bartending to make ends meet for the past seventeen years, you realize plans don’t always pan out, and that there some things you just can’t plan for…

Like Juan’s run-in with the police, like a sprained ankle, and a tanking math grade that will likely ruin his chance at a scholarship. Like JD causing the implosion of his family. Like letters from a man named Mando on death row. Like finding out this man could be the father your mother said was dead.

Soon Juan and JD are embarking on a Thelma and Louise­–like road trip to visit Mando. Juan will finally meet his dad, JD has a perfect subject for his documentary, and Fabi is desperate to stop them. But, as we already know, there are some things you just can’t plan for…

Brief Chronicle of Another Stupid Heartbreak by Adi Alsaid

The summer after senior year is not going as eighteen-year-old Lu Charles expected: after her longtime boyfriend unexpectedly breaks up with her, Lu can’t write a single word, despite the fact that her college scholarship is tied to her columnist job at hip online magazine Misnomer. Then, she meets Cal.

Cal’s ever-practical girlfriend Iris is looking ahead to her first year of college, and her plans do not include a long-distance boyfriend. When Lu learns that Cal and Iris have planned to end their relationship at the end of the summer, she becomes fascinated and decides to chronicle the last months the couple will spend together.

The closer she gets to the couple, the more she likes them, and the more she wants to write about them. The summer unfurls, and Lu discovers what it really means to be in love. On the page, or off it. The book is touching exploration of love and how it shapes us both during a relationship and after it has ended.

Dealing In Dreams by Lilliam Rivera

At night, Las Mal Criadas own these streets.

Nalah leads the fiercest all-girl crew in Mega City. That roles brings with it violent throw downs and access to the hottest boydega clubs, but the sixteen-year-old grows weary of the life. Her dream is to get off the streets and make a home in the exclusive Mega Towers, in which only a chosen few get to live. To make it to the Mega towers, Nalah must prove her loyalty to the city’s benevolent founder and cross the border in a search for a mysterious gang the Ashé Ryders. Led by a reluctant guide, Nalah battles other crews and her own doubts, but the closer she gets to her goal, the more she loses sight of everything—and everyone— she cares about.

Nalah must do the unspeakable to get what she wants—a place to call home. But is a home just where you live? Or who you choose to protect?

*Don’t Date Rosa Santos by Nina Moreno

Rosa Santos is cursed by the sea-at least, that’s what they say. Dating her is bad news, especially if you’re a boy with a boat.

But Rosa feels more caught than cursed. Caught between cultures and choices. Between her abuela, a beloved healer and pillar of their community, and her mother, an artist who crashes in and out of her life like a hurricane. Between Port Coral, the quirky South Florida town they call home, and Cuba, the island her abuela refuses to talk about.

As her college decision looms, Rosa collides – literally – with Alex Aquino, the mysterious boy with tattoos of the ocean whose family owns the marina. With her heart, her family, and her future on the line, can Rosa break a curse and find her place beyond the horizon?

*The Griefkeeper by Alexandra Villasante

Seventeen-year-old Marisol has always dreamed of being American, learning what Americans and the US are like from television and Mrs. Rosen, an elderly expat who had employed Marisol’s mother as a maid. When she pictured an American life for herself, she dreamed of a life like Aimee and Amber’s, the title characters of her favorite American TV show. She never pictured fleeing her home in El Salvador under threat of death and stealing across the US border as “an illegal”, but after her brother is murdered and her younger sister, Gabi’s, life is also placed in equal jeopardy, she has no choice, especially because she knows everything is her fault. If she had never fallen for the charms of a beautiful girl named Liliana, Pablo might still be alive, her mother wouldn’t be in hiding and she and Gabi wouldn’t have been caught crossing the border.

But they have been caught and their asylum request will most certainly be denied. With truly no options remaining, Marisol jumps at an unusual opportunity to stay in the United States. She’s asked to become a grief keeper, taking the grief of another into her own body to save a life. It’s a risky, experimental study, but if it means Marisol can keep her sister safe, she will risk anything. She just never imagined one of the risks would be falling in love, a love that may even be powerful enough to finally help her face her own crushing grief.

The Grief Keeper is a tender tale that explores the heartbreak and consequences of when both love and human beings are branded illegal.

The Truth Is by NoNieqa Ramos

Fifteen-year-old Verdad doesn’t think she has time for love. She’s still struggling to process the recent death of her best friend, Blanca; dealing with the high expectations of her hardworking Puerto Rican mother and the absence of her remarried father; and keeping everyone at a distance. But when she meets Danny, a new guy at school–who happens to be trans–all bets are off. Verdad suddenly has to deal with her mother’s disapproval of her relationship with Danny as well as her own prejudices and questions about her identity, and Danny himself, who is comfortable in his skin but keeping plenty of other secrets.

*With The Fire on High by Elizabeth Acevedo

With her daughter to care for and her abuela to help support, high school senior Emoni Santiago has to make the tough decisions, and do what must be done. The one place she can let her responsibilities go is in the kitchen, where she adds a little something magical to everything she cooks, turning her food into straight-up goodness. Still, she knows she doesn’t have enough time for her school’s new culinary arts class, doesn’t have the money for the class’s trip to Spain — and shouldn’t still be dreaming of someday working in a real kitchen. But even with all the rules she has for her life — and all the rules everyone expects her to play by — once Emoni starts cooking, her only real choice is to let her talent break free.

Bonus: Woven In Moonlight by Isabel Ibañez (January 20, 2020)

Ximena is the decoy Condesa, a stand-in for the last remaining Illustrian royal. Her people lost everything when the usurper, Atoc, used an ancient relic to summon ghosts and drive the Illustrians from La Ciudad. Now Ximena’s motivated by her insatiable thirst for revenge, and her rare ability to spin thread from moonlight.

When Atoc demands the real Condesa’s hand in marriage, it’s Ximena’s duty to go in her stead. She relishes the chance, as Illustrian spies have reported that Atoc’s no longer carrying his deadly relic. If Ximena can find it, she can return the true aristócrata to their rightful place.

She hunts for the relic, using her weaving ability to hide messages in tapestries for the resistance. But when a masked vigilante, a warm-hearted princess, and a thoughtful healer challenge Ximena, her mission becomes more complicated. There could be a way to overthrow the usurper without starting another war, but only if Ximena turns her back on revenge—and her Condesa.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you on Saturday for some great YA ebook deals.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

PS: I was a guest on the SSR Podcast this week, where I reread Cynthia Voigt’s Homecoming. If you want to tune into the show where neither of us loved the book, you can listen here!

Categories
What's Up in YA

👻✏️ A Former YA Ghostwriter Tells All

Hey YA Readers!

I’m so excited for this guest post today. I’ve been fascinated with ghostwriting since college, but it really intensified when I read an in-depth article about it in The New Yorker back in my days as a teen librarian (I can even tell you I was working the reference desk at the branch library on a Wednesday night, as the memory is so vivid). Since then, I’ve highlighted ghostwriting in YA quite a bit, but the real thing I wanted to read about the work of ghostwriters was something I could never figure out how to make happen.

Until now.

Morgan Baden is a YA author, whose new book The Hive hit shelves earlier this month. Prior to this book, though, she worked both in social media at Scholastic and as a ghostwriter. Though she won’t share what books (coughYouLikelyKnowThemcough), she was happy to talk a bit about why she chose to do it and what she learned from the experiences.

Without further ado, Morgan!


I was in a hotel room in Chicago in the middle of a business trip, about to dive in to some deep dish and beer that I’d room serviced (#conferencelife), when I got the email I’d been waiting for.

“Here’s the outline!” it read, all exclamation points and urgency. I’d understand why in the next sentence: “The deadline is five weeks from today.”

And that’s when I closed my laptop, sipped my beer, and thanked my lucky stars this was a ghostwriting job, where the hardest part of writing –for me, the plot – was already handled.

My journey to ghostwriting was unexpected. A few months before this particular five-week deadline, I hadn’t even fully realized what ghostwriting was, how it worked, or, especially, how prevalent it was. But when I received an email from a book packaging company asking me to sample for them, I jumped at the chance. I was an aspiring novelist with half a dozen unfinished manuscripts littering my backyard, none of which I’d been able to advance beyond a few thousand words. I was eager to actually finish a book. I just wasn’t sure how.

In my own writing, I struggled with plot. Even now, I like a slow burn; I like to linger on scenes and characters. Is there a candle burning on a mantle in my story? You better believe I’m going to tell you all about the shadows it casts, even if that candle has nothing to do with the story.

Eventually I realized that all that lingering was effectively stopping my manuscripts in their tracks. My characters weren’t doing anything. No wonder I couldn’t get past the 10,000-word mark! I needed to learn how to advance a plotline, how to pace a full-length book. I needed to get into a scene, and then get out of it – in a way that helped the story move forward.

Enter: ghostwriting. After several samples over the course of a few months, that book packager offered me a ghostwriting deal. For my first job, I wrote a book in a long-running, bestselling series. That night in my Chicago hotel room, I nearly cried when I saw the deadline – how was I going to write 50,000 words in five weeks while working my full-time job? – but my tears dried up when I saw the 30-page outline attached to the email. Because as I read it, I realized I could do this. I had all the tools right in front of me, the book laid out like a map.

That outline would prove instrumental not just in helping me write (and finish) the book (on time!), but also in helping me see how a book is constructed. It had chapter breakdowns and motivations; it listed all the major plot points, but still offered me space to explore. It even spelled out certain jokes I’d need to include in the book. The mechanics of the story were there; I just needed to write the thing. And so I did – early in the mornings before work, and late into the nights after work. And that first job turned into two, and then into more.

Is ghostwriting weird? A lot of people I tell about it seem to think so. But my career in corporate communications taught me early on that writing is often a group effort; that, in some ways, ghostwriting is a part of any career that includes content creation. I’m used to helping other people craft messages that will never have my name attached to them, whether it’s ghostwriting memos from CEOs, speeches from celebrities, or blog posts from other authors. My career required that I master other people’s voices. And ghostwriting enabled me to do that on a bigger scale, and with more creativity.

These days, I don’t ghostwrite much. Once I could see how a book came together, once I figured out that plot wasn’t something to avoid but rather embrace, I was able to finish my own manuscripts. Ghostwriting was, to me, my own kind of master class in fiction.

But sometimes, when I’m stuck in the murky middle of a new manuscript, or when I’m approaching the end of one and realize there are countless threads I forgot to tie together, I get a pang for my old ghostwriting days. It’s a beautiful thing, to be handed a beginning, middle, and end of a story. It’s refreshing to just be able to write, and to leave the worrying to someone else.

***

Morgan Baden is the co-author of THE HIVE (with her husband, Barry Lyga) and author of several ghostwritten novels for young adults. She has 15 years’ experience in corporate communications, where she managed social media strategy for iconic children’s brands. She resides in New Jersey with her husband and two children and is the co-host of Writing in Real Life, a podcast series about writing, parenting, publishing, and books. Find her at morganbaden.com.



Huge thank you to Morgan!

Thanks for hanging out, y’all, and we’ll see you later this week.

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

Brazilian Censorship, 35 Years of SWEET VALLEY, and More YA News

Hey YA Fans!

Summer is back in full swing in the midwest this week, as well as in New Orleans, where I’m at for a few days. A nice reminder that actual summer goes until the end of September, eh?

It might be summer outside, but it’s fall in publishing. That means we’ll be seeing huge book releases each week, as well as exciting news. Let’s dig into the latest in YA news.

This Song-Covey sisters t-shirt is adorable. Grab it for $29 and up.


Thanks for hanging out, and we’ll see you on Monday!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.

Categories
What's Up in YA

Campus Life, YA Style: YA Books Set In College

Hey YA Fans!

September is the start of (many) school years, and it’s when (most) college students head back to campus. Although YA books tend to focus on high schoolers — they are, after all, the bulk of teenagers — college-set YA continues to be a growing area. It makes sense. Not only are many freshman college students still teenagers, but many teens who are still in high school like reading about characters who are slightly older and “wiser” than them (“wiser” because as anyone knows, that’s debatable, especially in YA books!).

Find below a small collection of YA books featuring college-age characters who are either on break from their school year or who are diving headlong into their campus lives. This is obviously not comprehensive, but it is a nice taste of those college stories.

A few years back, I worked on a committee which put together a list of great reads for college-bound students. The list was discontinued, but I pulled together a new list last year. It features a wide array of great books for those who are life-long learned, including plenty of YA titles.

American Panda by Gloria Chao

Mei skipped a grade and is now 17 years old and a college freshman at MIT. While her parents are hoping she becomes a doctor and remains proud of her Taiwanese heritage, Mei doesn’t find herself following their dreams for her. She hates germs, and she’s falling for a Japanese classmate. Everything for her changes when she reconnects with her estranged brother.

Emergency Contact by Mary HK Choi

Penny is ready for college to bring her something different. Settled into University of Texas, Austin, it doesn’t take long before her life crashes into Sam’s — and their relationship grows stronger and stronger via text messages. Their connection deepens as they share the realities of their lives and thoughts, all without seeing each other.

Freshmen by Tom Ellen and Lucy Ivison

This is the one book on the list I haven’t read, but I wanted to include it because it’s a look at a college freshman who wants to redefine herself and another college freshman with no intention to make himself different and how their lives intersect. This one is supposed to be funny, even though it takes on some Big Topics, and it’s been comped to Emergency Contact.

Little Fish: A Memoir From A Different Kind of Year by Ramsey Bayer

This graphic memoir, told in illustrations, lists, and collages, follows Ramsey as she leaves her small town in Michigan to become a college freshman at an art school in a big city. This one nails the weird feelings of big change, as well as the ways that freshmen do — and don’t — cope well with it.

Mariam Sharma Hits The Road by Sheba Karim

Not technically set during the school year, I’ve included this one because the main character just finished her freshman year and has returned home for the summer. Her best friend from high school is in trouble — she’s a model and her image just got plastered in a big way, and now her very conservative parents are furious. Mariam and Umar, another high school friend, devise a plan to rescue their friend from her parents via a road trip. A fascinating look at how friendships change after high school, as well as a much-needed addition to the canon of YA road trip books featuring teens of color.

Roomies by Tara Altebrando and Sara Zarr

A powerhouse duo of YA writers each write through the voice of an incoming freshman as they email back and forth prior to the start of their college careers. Along with the basics of who will bring what, we get a deep dive into the lives they will leave behind when they head off to school.

An Off Year by Claire Zulkey

So what about the kids who don’t go to college after high school? There are surprisingly few books about kids who go into the trades or begin a work life. This isn’t either of those. Instead, this is a book about a girl who, once she gets to her college campus, decides she needs to take a year off. This is a year where almost nothing happens to Cecily, but where she gets to witness the world around her shifting — even if she herself isn’t ready to embrace it.

We Are Okay by Nina LaCour

This quiet, award-winning novel is one of the few that truly captures what my own experience of loneliness freshman year of college was like (though for different reasons). Marin’s best friend is coming to see her over the winter break at her dorm, and from here, we’ll see slowly why Marin left her West coast home for the East coast, why she lost touch with her best friend, and why it is she has become so lonely.

Wrecked by Maria Padian

Pink book covers are an unintentional theme here. Padian’s novel, told in two voices, takes place during freshman year on a college campus. A sexual assault is the centerpiece of the story, as two characters who are not involved in the crime attempt to figure out what happened, as well as what resources are available to them and the victim. A powerful, real, and authentic look at what is — and is not — available to students on college campuses when it comes to sexual assault.

(I don’t know about you, but I sometimes think were I able to go back to college, I’d enjoy it so much more now as an adult than I did as an 18-year-old!).


Thanks for hanging out, y’all, and we’ll see you later this week!

— Kelly Jensen, @heykellyjensen on Instagram (note the new name!) and editor of (Don’t) Call Me Crazy and Here We Are.