Victoria Hanley loves to nurture emerging writers. She is a YA novelist published in 13 languages, and her books for teens have received awards and honors in the U.S. and abroad, including the International Reading Association Young Adults’ Choices list, the Colorado Book Award, the Kallbacher-Klapperschlange Award (Germany), Colorado Authors League Top Hand Award, Publishers West Silver Award, and New York Public Library Book for the Teen Age. Her work has also been placed on state award lists in Texas, Oklahoma, Utah, and Colorado and has earned a Carnegie Medal nomination in the United Kingdom.Visit her at www.victoriahanley.com.  
Wild Ink: Success Secrets to Writing
and Publishing in the Young Adult Market
Release date: May 1, 2012
Publisher: Prufrock Press
Buy: Amazon - Barnes & Noble - IndieBound
What do you need to know to break in to the flourishing young adult (YA) market? With humor and a solid grounding in reality, author Victoria Hanley helps readers understand the ins and outs of the YA genre, how to stay inspired, and how to avoid common mistakes writers make in trying to reach teens. This book includes unique writing exercises to help readers find their own authentic teen voice and dozens of interviews with YA authors, blogging experts, editors, and agents to give inspiration and guidance for getting published. Chapters include writing exercises and self-editing techniques tailored to YA, along with encouraging words on dealing with self-doubt, rejection, and lack of time.
If you’ve recently read The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, Twilight by Stephenie Meyer, or Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows   by JK Rowling, it won’t surprise you to hear that it’s not just teens   who are reading books in the YA genre. Recent surveys confirm that   adults  check out plenty of “teen” titles from the library—for their own  enjoyment.
Like   everything else in the publishing industry, the YA genre is rapidly   evolving. Once defined as stories for readers ages 12 and up, YA now   includes 3 categories.
The   12+ category is the most traditional, and it’s been around for a long   time. But 14+ (also known as Grade 9 – 12) is relatively new; it’s   reserved for stories about young characters grappling with pretty severe   hardships in more adult situations. For example, in Todd Mitchell’s The Secret to Lying (14+)   the protagonist almost destroys himself by creating a terrifying rift   between his inner and outer selves. In Amy Kathleen Ryan’s Glow (14+)   the teen characters are on a cross-generational journey on a  spaceship,  only to be thrown into pain and chaos when their ship is  attacked and  all the adults on board killed or captured. 
As dire as these situations are, they’re not any more challenging than those faced by Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games. The difference? Both The Secret to Lying and Glow include a sex scene, whereas The Hunger Games does not. Sex and/or profanity used to get YA books banned; now sex and profanity place a book into 14+. 
At   the same time, because today’s young people are exposed to a lot more   content much sooner than people a generation ago, many of the books  that  would once have been 12+ are being moved to the category of 10+. I   expect that this particular grouping of YA will soon change again and   end up merging with what is now known as Middle Grade (MG), which is   designated for ages 9 -12. 
Plenty   of books fall in the 12+ range, and all three categories are still  part  of the bigger umbrella of YA. (And just to keep things confusing,   different review services will sometimes put the same book into   different categories.)
As  a genre, YA contains some of the most dazzlingly well-written page  turners around (not that I’m biased). Whether you enjoy contemporary  realism, dystopian adventure, romance, sci-fi, fantasy,  horror, or some  other subgenre, there’s an excellent YA novel just waiting for you!










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