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The Rise of Suicide in YA Fiction and Exploring Personal Biases in Reading

February 9, 2015 |

Suicide and depression are two passion topics for me. Part of it is that I’m someone who suffers from depression — something I haven’t talked openly about because it’s very hard to talk openly about — and part of it is that when I was in high school, I knew more than one person who committed suicide. Though none of the people who did were close to me, those deaths still had an impact on me. Maybe what’s most vivid about them is how much silence had to surround them; the school shut down all avenues of grieving or discussion, with the thought that keeping quiet about what happened would prevent it from happening again. Whether or not that’s true or was the right choice is hard to say. 

Having worked with teens in the library, I know too well that suicide is something they experience in their lives, and it’s something that stays with them forever. Though they’re not one in the same, suicide and depression can often go hand-in-hand, so in many ways, it makes sense to talk about them in tandem. 

Last fall, I put together a resource and discussion guide to suicide and depression, which included a hefty reading list. I didn’t think about forthcoming titles much when I put it together, but over the last few months, I’ve noticed a steady increase in the number of YA titles that are exploring suicide head-on. 

It’s interesting to think about publishing trends in YA and what it is that might drive them. Without any research at all, I can call up 4 or 5 YA titles publishing between the start of the year and end of February where suicide is a major — if not the major — theme. While we know contemporary realistic YA has been in an upswing lately, what is it that made suicide bubble up as a common theme? 

My guess, at least in part, is the perennial popularity of Jay Asher’s Thirteen Reasons Why has spurred an interest in finding similar titles. Asher’s been a marvelous advocate for teens, and his book has been a staple of bestseller lists for years. 

I’m generally not someone who needs trigger warnings for reading material. Dark books work really well for me, since so often, they’re at an extreme where I don’t feel the need to ever look at my own life or experiences and try to compare. It’s easy to disconnect myself from the story and look at it as story. Other readers are far more sensitive than I am to tough topics, and for them, knowing ahead of time helps them make an informed decision about whether or not a book is the right read for them. It’s not about censorship, but about making an intelligent personal choice. 

But something’s changed recently, and I find myself almost needing to know a book is tackling the topic of suicide before I go into it. Not a trigger warning, per se, but I’ve found this is a topic I’m no longer able to read as easily as I used to. Maybe it’s having seen first hand with teens today how hard it is to deal with. Maybe it’s coming to terms with my reading preferences and habits and understanding this topic isn’t one that is enjoyable to me as a reader. Part of it may also be that my own thoughts and beliefs behind suicide don’t always mirror the way it’s presented in fiction, which comes as a result of being someone who struggles with an illness that has left me with uncomfortable, complicated, and messy feelings on the topic. 

In other words, it turns out this isn’t a topic I can divorce myself and my own experiences from when I’m reading. 

One of the best things about reading and talking about books is being able to put up a lens to your own biases. You discover new pages in your own story and in your own thinking that you didn’t realize were there before. Sometimes, you discover that what you thought you knew about yourself and your reading habits aren’t that at all; sometimes you discover your habits and preferences simply change and evolve as you grow and evolve. Where mental health books are still a deep and heavy part of my reading life — a topic I seek out and am always eager to read, think, and talk about — suicide is my wading zone. I need to know what’s out there, I need to give some of them a chance, but I don’t need to invest all of my time and energy into them when they don’t give back to me. They are, in many ways, like cancer books for me. A good premise can and does change my mind, but ultimately as a theme, it’s one I don’t seek out even though I’m seeing it with more frequency. 

While I’m no longer working in libraries with teens, thinking about how to share these titles with teens never strays from my mind. Last spring when a teen shared that her friend had committed suicide, I knew I needed to pull out books that might help those in the community grapple with their feelings. But rather than develop a “suicide books” display, I pulled together a larger display on hard topics in realistic fiction, which included mental health, sexual assault, eating disorders, suicide, and more. It felt too on-the-nose, too prying, to build around suicide specifically, even though books on suicide were — and are! — exactly what teens sometimes need and sometimes just want. It’s not that the topic is sexy to them, and in many cases it’s not something even relevant to their lives, but rather, it’s fascinating. It’s fresh to them. 

I’m curious if anyone else has noticed this uptick in suicide titles and if so, what do you make of it? What sort of opportunities or challenges do these books, when presented in a trend-like wave, present? More, I’m interested in hearing about your own reading biases and experiences with them — and I’m curious how it is you’re talking with teens about them. 

If you’re curious about specific titles, here are a handful of suicide-themed YA books out in the first few months of the year. Descriptions are from WorldCat, and if you know of others out early this year, feel free to leave them in the comments, too. 

All The Bright Places by Jennifer Niven: Told in alternating voices, when Theodore Finch and Violet Markey meet on the ledge of the bell tower at school–both teetering on the edge–it’s the beginning of an unlikely relationship, a journey to discover the “natural wonders” of the state of Indiana, and two teens’ desperate desire to heal and save one another

The Last Time We Say Goodbye by Cynthia Hand: After her younger brother, Tyler, commits suicide, Lex struggles to work through her grief in the face of a family that has fallen apart, the sudden distance between her and her friends, and memories of Tyler that still feel all too real.

When Reason Breaks by Cindy L. Rodriguez: Elizabeth Davis and Emily Delgado seem to have little in common except Ms. Diaz’s English class and the solace they find in the words of Emily Dickinson, but both are struggling to cope with monumental secrets and tumultuous emotions that will lead one to attempt suicide.

I Was Here by Gayle Forman: In an attempt to understand why her best friend committed suicide, eighteen-year-old Cody Reynolds retraces her dead friend’s footsteps and makes some startling discoveries.

My Heart and Other Black Holes by Jasmine Warga: Seventeen-year-old Aysel’s hobby–planning her own death–take a new path when she meets a boy who has similar plan of his own.

Playlist for the Dead by Michelle Falkoff: After his best friend, Hayden, commits, suicide, fifteen-year-old Sam is determined to find out why–using the clues in the playlist Hayden left for him.

These next two books — which I just finished back to back– have been really enjoyable but both also included suicide in them. Knowing that won’t change your experience with either, since it’s not integral to the plot, but seeing it pop up in consecutive reads when this was already on my mind was jarring.

Challenger Deep by Neal Shusterman: A teenage boy struggles with schizophrenia. (I hope they end up saying more than that in later descriptions, as this one doesn’t come out until April).

I’ll Meet You There by Heather Demetrios: Skylar Evans, seventeen, yearns to escape Creek View by attending art school, but after her mother’s job loss puts her dream at risk, a rekindled friendship with Josh, who joined the Marines to get away then lost a leg in Afghanistan, and her job at the Paradise motel lead her to appreciate her home town. 

Filed Under: book lists, depression, Discussion and Resource Guides, reading life, suicide, Uncategorized, Young Adult

A Pair of Audiobook Reviews

February 4, 2015 |


The FitzOsbornes in Exile by Michelle Cooper
What (almost) everyone is saying is true: this book is better than the first. It features the FitzOsbornes, the ruling family of the tiny fictional island of Montmaray, living in England after the Germans have bombed and then occupied their home. There, they must get used to a different way of life with their aunt (including the excitement and hazards of a London season and pressure to marry), while also figuring out a way to reclaim their home. Of course, it’s the late 1930s, and war is on the horizon – the readers know it, even if the characters try to deny it.

The FitzOsbornes’ attempt to get their country back seems so hopeless in this volume, it’s kind of sad to watch them try. Their main avenue is through the League of Nations, that oh-so-effective union of countries established after the end of World War I (read that in your sarcasm voice). It culminates in a pretty impressive scene where Veronica stands up in front of a bunch of white men and actually convinces them to do something about their situation. It’s empowering, even if it won’t really help much. Sophie’s voice is great, but overall I found Veronica a much more compelling character. There’s a tiny hint of romance plus some social complications to add to the political issues. Kathleen “Kick” Kennedy (plus some of her siblings) makes a cameo, which I thought was pretty interesting. This is a worthwhile second volume and I only wish the third was available on audio so I could finish up the trilogy.

The Sum of All Kisses by Julia Quinn
I was craving a romance novel, but I needed to do laundry. The solution: romance audiobook. I thought that when I got to the steamy bits of the book (and Julia Quinn books always have some steam), I may have to skip over them, or at least put headphones on, but I actually didn’t mind hearing them aloud. It was a little weird, but for some reason the female narrator made it less awkward. (My next romance audiobook pick has a male narrator and I quite frankly might just giggle my way through the steamier parts of that one. I am still in middle school, apparently.)

As to the actual book and the writing and all that, this is a decent one. It belongs to the Smythe-Smith quartet, an offshoot of the Bridgerton series. It’s not Quinn at her best. The conflict that keeps the two leads apart is so ridiculous, I actually said aloud to myself “This is stupid” many times. There was so much melodrama and hand-wringing and I just wanted to slap all of the characters sometimes. It seems like Quinn was really stretching to find a way to add tension to the romance where none logically existed. You’ve got to have that tension, or else you have a boring book, but I didn’t buy it here. The characters aren’t particularly memorable, and the book just didn’t have the magic that I remember from Quinn’s earlier books, but I can’t say it was a waste of my time to read. Isn’t that a rousing endorsement?


Both books borrowed from my library.

Filed Under: audiobooks, review, Reviews, Romance, Uncategorized, Young Adult

2015 Youth Media Awards: Reactions & Thoughts

February 3, 2015 |

 

Like so many other librarians across the country, I sat down in my pajamas to watch the live webcast of the Youth Media Awards yesterday morning. It was bright and sunny here in Texas, though a little cold (35 degrees is cold, don’t give me that look). Nothing like the snow that walloped Chicago, where the announcements were made. I have to admit I preferred being at home this year…mostly.

I’m so grateful that ALA does its webcast. The quality is pretty good, with clear sound and an up-close view of the podium and the slides, I just wish that we could have gotten some audience shots. It was so exciting to hear the shouts and cheers as crowd favorites were announced as winners; it would have been even nicer to see their reactions too! (Thankfully, there have been some awesome photos.)

This year was a fantastic year for diversity and thinking outside the box of a “traditional” award winner. The Newbery category encapsulates perfectly this idea. The winner (The Crossover by Kwame Alexander) is a novel in verse by a black writer featuring two black leads. Jacqueline Woodson garnered an Honor for her memoir in verse about growing up as a black girl in America (Brown Girl Dreaming), and Cece Bell won an Honor for her graphic novel memoir featuring a hearing-impaired heroine (El Deafo). That’s two books in verse, two nonfiction (-ish), one novel, one graphic novel, two books by and about people of color, one book by and about a disabled person – and all of them have an eager audience.

For a great breakdown of the diversity in the young adult awards this year, check out the Diversity in YA tumblr.

Speaking of El Deafo, this was a great year for graphic novels. It’s the first time a graphic novel was recognized with a Caldecott (This One Summer by Mariko and Jillian Tamaki with an Honor), which seems so strange that it’s taken this long, now that I think about it. It’s long overdue and I’m excited to finally read this book which has gotten so much critical praise. The Tamaki duo also garnered a Printz Honor for their book, the second time a graphic novel has gotten Printz love since American Born Chinese. Hidden, a great graphic novel about the Holocaust for very young children, also won a Batchelder Honor. Raina Telgemeier’s Twitter feed was a great one to read during the announcements. I see only more recognition for graphic novels in these “mainstream” awards in the future.

I’m not surprised at all by the Morris pick, and I know Kelly must be extremely happy about it. Gabi, a Girl in Pieces is a book I’ve heard so much about and it sounds like Isabel Quintero is a really exciting new talent. It will be interesting to see what she does next.

I loved that there were six Caldecott Honors! The more Honors the better, in my opinion. (I think the audience was a bit let down going from six Honors with the Caldecott to only 2 with the Newbery.) This is another moment I really miss no longer being the youth materials selector at my job; I hadn’t read any of the books that won Caldecott recognition.

I actually hadn’t read many of the winners at all. I had read Hidden, and I read most of Beyond Magenta, which got a Stonewall Honor. Other than that, there’s just a lot on my to be read list that I hadn’t tackled yet. I’ve already placed This One Summer and El Deafo on hold and am excited to read them. Separate is Never Equal by Duncan Tonatiuh (Sibert Honor and Belpre Honor) is on the Bluebonnet list this year, and I’ve read that one; it’s fascinating and tells a little-known story in the fight for integration.

I was thrilled with the selection of Sharon Draper for the Edwards, as well as Donald Crews for the Wilder. Both of those authors’ works continue to influence young people daily.

The only thing I’m a little disappointed by is the lack of SFF represented. I’m not surprised by it, and it’s more of a personal wish than a professional one, but I can’t help but remember what it was like for me as a kid knowing that if I had to read an award winner, it would be slim pickings in the genres I actually wanted to read. We’re definitely doing better with diverse voices and characters, which I freely admit is more important than SFF being better represented. But I do wish there were more SFF for those kinds of kids, and it’s not an either/or situation. This is one reason I’m so glad the Cybils exist! (Last year was much better for SFF, which was pretty awesome.)

What are your thoughts on this year’s winners? What do you wish had been honored and wasn’t? More importantly, what about next year??

Filed Under: book awards, Uncategorized, Young Adult

On The Radar: 8 YA Books for February

February 2, 2015 |

One of the most popular posts I do over at Book Riot is the round-up of upcoming YA fiction titles, and one of the most popular questions I seem to get on Twitter and in my inboxes is “what should I be looking out for in YA?” For a lot of readers, especially those who work with teens either in classrooms or in libraries, knowing what’s coming out ahead of time is valuable to get those books into readers’ hands before they even ask.

Each month, I’ll call out between 8 and 12 books coming out that should be on your radar. These include books by high-demand, well-known authors, as well as some up-and-coming and debut authors. They’ll be across a variety of genres, including diverse titles and writers. Not all of the books will be ones that Kimberly or I have read, nor will all of them be titles that we’re going to read and review. Rather, these are books that readers will be looking for and that have popped up regularly on social media, in advertising, in book mail, and so forth. It’s part science and part arbitrary and a way to keep the answer to “what should I know about for this month?” quick, easy, and under $300 (doable for smaller library budgets especially).

Here are 8 titles to have on your January 2015 radar. All descriptions are from WorldCat, and I’ve included short notes as to why the title was included. This is a particularly solid month for books by authors of color. 

 

I’ll Meet You There by Heather Demetrios: Skylar Evans, seventeen, yearns to escape Creek View by attending art school, but after her mother’s job loss puts her dream at risk, a rekindled friendship with Josh, who joined the Marines to get away then lost a leg in Afghanistan, and her job at the Paradise motel lead her to appreciate her home town.

Why: This one has had a good amount of publisher push behind it. It’s also quite timely, and it falls into the lesser-tackled issues of post-high school military service. 

Red Queen by Victoria Aveyard: In a world divided by blood–those with common, Red blood serve the Silver-blooded elite, who are gifted with superhuman abilities–seventeen-year-old Mare, a Red, discovers she has an ability of her own. To cover up this impossibility, the king forces her to play the role of a lost Silver princess and betroths her to one of his own sons. But Mare risks everything and uses her new position to help the Scarlet Guard –a growing Red rebellion–even as her heart tugs her in an impossible direction. 

Why: This one’s been pitched as being for fans of Game of Thrones but more than that, it’s one with a lot of publicity behind it from the publisher. It’s likely this is a book teen readers will be hearing about peer-to-peer. (Unrelated, but that bloody crown is great).

This Side of Home by Renee Watson: Twins Nikki and Maya Younger always agreed on most things, but as they head into their senior year they react differently to the gentrification of their Portland, Oregon, neighborhood and the new–white–family that moves in after their best friend and her mother are evicted.

Why: I’ve heard virtually nothing about this title, and it’s a diverse one that sounds like it takes on so many fascinating topics that it should be being talked about more. It looks like the author will be doing an event with Jacqueline Woodson in March, which might spark some buzz, as well. 

The Shadow Cabinet by Maureen Johnson: Rory, Callum and Boo are still reeling from a series of tragic events, while new dangers lurk around the city from Jane and her nefarious organization. 

Why: This is the third book in Maureen Johnson’s extremely popular “Shades of London” series, so it will be in high demand. There will be four books in the series, so this isn’t the conclusion yet. 

The Ruby Circle by Richelle Mead: After their secret romance is exposed, Sydney and Adrian find themselves facing the wrath of both the Alchemists and the Moroi in this electrifying conclusion to Richelle Mead’s New York Times bestselling Bloodlines series. When the life of someone they both love is put on the line, Sydney risks everything to hunt down a deadly former nemesis. Meanwhile, Adrian becomes enmeshed in a puzzle that could hold the key to a shocking secret about spirit magic, a secret that could shake the entire Moroi world.

Why: This is the sixth and final book in Richelle Mead’s popular “Bloodlines” series. 

Stone in the Sky by Cecil Castellucci: In this follow-up to TIN STAR, the desolate planet below the Yertina Feray space station is discovered to have overwhelming amounts of an invaluable resource, which suddenly makes the station a major player in intergalactic politics

Why: This is the second book in Castellucci’s duology, which began with Tin Star. It seems like there’s been a decline in science fiction in YA, but this series fits the sci fi bill perfectly. 

Dove Arising by Karen Bao: On a lunar colony, fifteen-year-old Phaet Theta does the unthinkable and joins the Militia when her mother is imprisoned by the Moon’s oppressive government.

Why: I’ve gotten not just a review copy of this one (and early on!), but I’ve been pitched it a couple more times on top of it. This is a debut novel by an author of color, and it’s science fiction — again, with what seems like a genre with fewer offerings than others within YA recently, it’s worth taking a good look at! 

When Reason Breaks by Cindy L. Rodriguez: Elizabeth Davis and Emily Daniels seem to have little in common except Ms. Diaz’s English class and the solace they find in the words of Emily Dickinson, but both are struggling with to cope with monumental secrets and tumultuous emotions that will lead one to attempt suicide.

Why: Aside from fitting the Emily Dickinson trend, this is a realistic debut YA by a Latina author. 

Filed Under: book lists, on the radar, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Printz and other Youth Media Award Predictions, 2015 Edition

January 29, 2015 |

It’s been a tough year for me in terms of keeping on top of Printz discussions and wanting to think about what the potential contenders for this year could be. You may or may not remember that after successfully petitioning to get on the Printz ballot and earning enough votes from my peers, I was elected to be a part of this upcoming year’s committee. But because of changes in YALSA policy, which essentially put a gag order on any sort of online discussion of eligible titles — meaning not even making book lists or recommending titles — I decided to step down from the committee.

This wasn’t an easy decision, but in time, it got easier. With work at Book Riot picking up and with knowing how much I enjoy talking about books here, on Book Riot, and in other online venues, it would be too hard for me to not talk about any 2015 YA titles at all. As much as it was a dream to do the Printz committee, personally and professionally, it’s more important for me to advocate for books and for readers. Keeping quiet for a year on every new book felt like a disservice.

And more, after thinking long and hard about the things I discussed in that post about stepping down, I chose not to renew my membership or continue involvement with YALSA. While I support those who are active and engaged with it, and while I will continue to talk up and champion the work members do, the organization as a governance doesn’t need my money or my time anymore. I’m finding far more value and personal/professional development in other venues.

All of that is to say at length what I said in the first sentence of this post: keeping on top of Printz talk has gone to the back burner for me. I’ve watched starred review sheets, and I’ve dipped in and out of reading the Someday My Printz Will Come blog. I had quite a bit to say about Grasshopper Jungle, but beyond that, I’ve been more of a lurker than a commenter. Even though I’ve not been super engaged, I do have to reiterate what I said last year: I think the 2014 crop of YA was weak. There were few standouts that screamed Printz. Many more debut novels screamed Morris to me, instead.

That said, I’ll definitely be in the audience on Monday for the Youth Media Award announcements, and because it’s a game I can’t stay away from entirely, I thought I’d throw out quickly some of the Printz titles I think have a shot, as well as a few titles I think may see honors in other categories.

Printz




This One Summer by Jillian Tamaki and Mariko Tamaki: This one just…I have a feeling about it. I suspect the fact it earned a pile of stars doesn’t hurt its cause, either. Admittedly, this is a book I felt more strongly about in terms of its art than I did its story, and I’m curious how this one holds up under multiple reads and with strong scrutiny. This book also graced a number of “best of” lists when 2014 came to a close.

Complicit by Stephanie Kuehn: Did this fall off people’s radar? I think it’s interesting we saw little talk about it throughout the year. I think this book is even better than Charm and Strange, and I think the writing is tighter, the story more gracefully woven, and it shows a little more experience than her debut. This got three starred reviews, and I suspect because Kuehn was a Morris winner last year, this will be talked about for a while by the committee.

 

I’ll Give You The Sun by Jandy Nelson: I was really underwhelmed by this one personally. I felt it was really overwritten, but it’s earned a pile of starred reviews and it showed up on numerous “best of” lists this year. It’s literary and it’s risky, probably especially in how it’s written.

Glory O’Brien’s History of the Future by A. S. King: An interesting phenomenon I noticed this year is that some titles seemed to have been forgotten about or weren’t talked up a whole lot in terms of their awards potential. The latest King book is one of them. Glory O’Brien earned 6 starred reviews and popped up on best of lists at the year’s end. But why aren’t more people talking about this one? I’m not 100% sold on this being a Printz title in a year where there are stronger books (I think King’s written better than this one), but this year, I think there’s a great shot for this particular title. While I know Printz doesn’t compare among titles, this is a standout.

Then there’s the Andrew Smith question I keep coming back to.

I’m not entirely sure why Grasshopper Jungle earned more attention this year than 100 Sideways Miles. We know Miles made the National Book Awards long list, but it’s Grasshopper Jungle that seems to be getting much more Printz buzz. I’ve not yet seen a really compelling essay — and I crave one — comparing and contrasting these two titles, their reception, and what they say about Smith’s risk taking and (sometimes) repetitive storytelling. (I’d also not mind a really great essay about his weakness in writing female characters, but that was sort of hashed out a bit in the comments on the Someday post).

Here’s where I say the thing that many might disagree with: I don’t think either of these are Printz titles this year.

I think Andrew Smith absolutely, positively has a Printz book in him. I don’t think either of these titles are it. Maybe it’ll be one of next year’s two titles. Maybe it’ll be a title after that. But I think both Grasshopper Jungle and 100 Sideways Miles are imperfect enough that they’re not going to go the distance. But the reason we keep hearing about them and the reason people keep talking about Smith and why he’s putting out two titles a year, one each from different publishers, is he’s talented, he’s prolific, and he’s doing some risky, innovating, and compelling story telling.

If I were to call out a potential dark horse for Printz this year, it’d be The Unfinished Life of Addison Stone by Adele Griffin. Depending on how Printz looks at age this year and how young they’ll go, I wouldn’t rule out a mention for Jacqueline Woodson’s brown girl dreaming. Same with Kwame Alexander’s The Crossover, which I would absolutely love to see get a mention from the Newbery Committee.

I also still stand by my comments from the predictions post in June that I think We Were Liars will fall apart on subsequent reads and won’t go the distance.

Morris Award


I’ve only read two of the Morris titles this year, so I can’t talk at length about their merits comparatively. But I can say my heart would love to see this one walk away with the award:

Schneider Family Book Award

The Schneider award, for those who aren’t familiar, honors a book that “embodies an artistic expression of the disability experience.” I haven’t read enough books that could be eligible this year, but I did read one I think absolutely fits the bill and would be surprised not to see honored:

Stonewall Award

The Stonewall honors works relating to the LGBTQ experience for children or teens. This is a category I feel like there are quite a few solid possibilities. I almost think there’s more to talk about here than there is for the Printz this year. The two standing out to me though are these two:
 

I could easily see this committee spending quite a bit of time with Grasshopper Jungle and I’ll Give You The Sun. I also think the non-fiction side of this award will be talking about Beyond Magenta.

What do you think? Big titles I’m missing out on? Titles I should be thinking about? Other categories that have standout titles? I’m looking forward to seeing what comes down on Monday — the YMAs are always a lot of fun to hear and even more fun to talk about afterward.

Filed Under: book awards, Uncategorized, Young Adult

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