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Re: What does "young-adult literature" mean? DomA Send a noteboard - 08/09/2010 06:29:33 PM
I've always thought it was more properly in the teenaged bracket, i.e. 13-18.

And do you read YA books? If yes, are you outside the "target" age group?


It's a marketing gimmick, really. It's meant to flatter kids who are anything but "young adults" and seek to give the impression that litterature is closer to adult literature than to children literature.

I don't think the term is so well defined either. The age group seems to vary from publisher to publisher. 12-14 to 17-18 seem to be the usual ranges. 21 sounds like a stretch, though sometimes it seems like the teenage years are stretching from both ends decade by decade.

I prefer our (French)denominations. Everything is "Youth literature", and then you differentiate from children lit. and books for teenagers. What we call "young adults" (not really for books, but it's used often in marketing lingo) refers to young adults, ie: the 18-30 or 18-25 crowd.

Do I read any? On occasion, for fun or work, and I'm way outside the target age.
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What does "young-adult literature" mean? - 08/09/2010 05:08:54 PM 1007 Views
Re: What does "young-adult literature" mean? - 08/09/2010 06:29:33 PM 605 Views
Hm - 09/09/2010 12:56:32 PM 697 Views
Re: Hm - 09/09/2010 08:45:28 PM 739 Views
books marketed to teenagers - 08/09/2010 06:56:21 PM 632 Views
I agree with this pretty much. - 08/09/2010 10:12:23 PM 591 Views
Harry Potter and Twilight - 09/09/2010 03:55:52 AM 728 Views
I've always thought the age labels on children's books were silly, and these are no exception. - 09/09/2010 10:19:02 AM 574 Views
Agreed. *NM* - 09/09/2010 11:07:09 AM 242 Views
I think it could be how we use the term young adult in the US - 09/09/2010 02:27:38 PM 545 Views

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