Thursday, April 14, 2011

Young Adult Authors Moving to Writing for Adult Audiences

Publishing Weekly reports that more and more YA authors are writing books specifically for adults; this year, at least five bestselling authors are making the leap. And it will be the focus of a panel at BEA on May 25 starring many of the names below. Click here for more details. Oh, I wish I could at this one.

Author
Ellen Hopkins

YA claim to fame
Free verse novels Crank, Burned, Impulse, Glass, and others

Adult novel
Triangles (Atria, Oct.)

Same song, different verse?
Hopkins touches on familiar themes, e.g., infidelity and the trials of parenting teens.


Author
Melissa de la Cruz

YA claim to fame
The Blue Bloods series, about a group of elite Manhattan vampires

Adult novel
Witches of East End (Hyperion, June)

Same song, different verse?
De la Cruz shifts the action to the Hamptons, and witches stand in for vampires.


Author
Melissa Marr

YA claim to fame
The Wicked Lovely series, a modern faerie story with some glamour

Adult novel
Graveminder (Morrow, May)

Same song, different verse?
Graveminder deals with the supernatural, but favors zombies over faeries. And can I say that I've read it and it is wonderful. Add it to your list.


Author
Sonya Sones

YA claim to fame
Novels in verse What My Mother Doesn’t Know; ...Girlfriend Doesn’t Know

Adult novel
The Hunchback of Neiman Marcus (Harper Paperbacks, Apr.)

Same song, different verse?
Sones still writes in verse, but this heroine confronts menopause.


Author
David Levithan

YA claim to fame
The Realm of Possibility (poetry); collaborations with Rachel Cohn

Adult novel
The Lover’s Dictionary: A Novel (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, Jan. 2011)

Same song, different verse?
Love’s the focus, but with more adult issues.

1 comment:

We Heart YA said...

Hmm, I find that really interesting, because I know a bunch of adult authors who moved to write YA as soon as it was clear YA lit was exploding. You know, Alice Hoffman, James Patterson, etc. Maybe this new trend will be a good way to keep teens reading as they enter adulthood -- you know, because their favorite authors will still be writing books for them?