Are...are any of those actually YA series?
The hell?
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Are...are any of those actually YA series?
The hell?
Weetzie Bat is definitely YA, yes.
Isn't A Wrinkle in Time YA?
When I worked at Borders many of those were in Intermediate no YA.
I think A Wrinkle in Time is much more middle grade. Again, not that teens won't read them.
Speaking of Weetzie Bat, I just read the latest one, Pink Smog, and loved it. Even tho' part of it made me cry. (It hit some buttons I've been talking about in therapy.)
Yeah, we had L'Engle in my elementary school's library.
Weetzie Bat is definitely YA, yes.
I'd always thought it was a children's book series, huh. But I don't know anything about it, so there's that.
I do love that The Enchanted Forest Chronicles got a mention, though.
Earthsea was originally sold as children's, but certainly it gets read by teens (and adults).
Are there really hard-and-fast distinctions between YA and younger categories? Or is it just a marketing category?
There are, Consuela. You're not going to publish a first-person novel about a sixteen-year-old girl who gets pregnant as a middle grade book, for instance.
A lot of it is marketing, and certainly a lot of books cross over to many audiences, but most middle grade books are a) shorter, b) uses language geared maybe three or so years older than the audience, and c) features children as protagonists (usually).