picklematrix
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 1, 2018
- Messages
- 466
It has always been a fairly intuitive definition. A book is YA simply because thats the overall feel of the reading experience, though there are a few trends I've noticed.
As far as I can recall, the main characters are generally young adults or teens in every YA book I've ever read.
Building on that, YA, for me, has connotations of a fairly straightforward story and arc for the protagonist, along with a fairly clear divide between 'good' and 'evil' within the story.
Moral ambiguity is somewhat rare. Nihilism seems to be rarer still. The themes tend to revolve more around idealism, love, friendship and things like that, and I expect to read a YA title in a matter of days, if it is well written.
As far as I can recall, the main characters are generally young adults or teens in every YA book I've ever read.
Building on that, YA, for me, has connotations of a fairly straightforward story and arc for the protagonist, along with a fairly clear divide between 'good' and 'evil' within the story.
Moral ambiguity is somewhat rare. Nihilism seems to be rarer still. The themes tend to revolve more around idealism, love, friendship and things like that, and I expect to read a YA title in a matter of days, if it is well written.