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books

  • STACKED
  • About Us
  • Categories
    • Audiobooks
    • Book Lists
      • Debut YA Novels
      • Get Genrefied
      • On The Radar
    • Cover Designs
      • Cover Doubles
      • Cover Redesigns
      • Cover Trends
    • Feminism
      • Feminism For The Real World Anthology
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      • Challenges & Censorship
      • Collection Development
      • Discussion and Resource Guides
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    • So You Want to Read YA Series
  • Review Policy

Microtrends in YA Fiction

June 13, 2014 |

Written by: Kelly on June 13, 2014.

I’ve written a couple times about “microtrends” in YA fiction (here and here). What’s a microtrend? It’s an element that has popped up in more than one novel in recent memory that is strange enough to stand out but not a big enough component of multiple stories to be a proper trend. They’re interesting coincidences that stand out because they’re just odd enough to be memorable. 

Here’s a look at a few microtrends I’ve noticed recently. Some of them have made me scratch my head and others aren’t necessarily weird but interesting commonalities. I’m only looking at books published in 2014, and I’m positive I might miss additional titles that could fall into any of these mini trends, so if you can think of others published or publishing this year that fit, I’d love to know. All descriptions are from WorldCat unless otherwise noted.

Interestingly, some of these novels fit more than one microtrend. 

Stuck In An Elevator

Elevator romances seem to be popping up. It’s a trend I’m surprised hasn’t been seen more frequently. In each of these books, it’s a chance meeting in an elevator that allows a pair of characters to develop a relationship that may have otherwise never happened.

Elevated by Elana Johnson: The last person seventeen-year-old Eleanor Livingston wants to see on the elevator—let alone get stuck with—is her ex-boyfriend Travis, the guy she’s been avoiding for five months. Plagued with the belief that when she speaks the truth, bad things happen, Elly hasn’t told Trav anything. Not why she broke up with him and cut off all contact. Not what happened the day her father returned from his deployment to Afghanistan. And certainly not that she misses him and still thinks about him everyday. But with nowhere to hide and Travis so close it hurts, Elly’s worried she won’t be able to contain her secrets for long. She’s terrified of finally revealing the truth, because she can’t bear to watch a tragedy befall the boy she still loves. (Description via Goodreads). 

The Geography of You and Me by Jennifer E. Smith: Sparks fly when sixteen-year-old Lucy Patterson and seventeen-year-old Owen Buckley meet on an elevator rendered useless by a New York City blackout. Soon after, the two teenagers leave the city, but as they travel farther away from each other geographically, they stay connected emotionally, in this story set over the course of one year. 

Like No Other by Una LaMarche (July 24): Devorah is a consummate good girl who has never challenged the ways of her strict Hasidic upbringing. Jaxon is a fun-loving, book-smart nerd who has never been comfortable around girls (unless you count his four younger sisters). They’ve spent their entire lives in Brooklyn, on opposite sides of the same street. Their paths never crossed . . . until one day, they did. When a hurricane strikes the Northeast, the pair becomes stranded in an elevator together, where fate leaves them no choice but to make an otherwise risky connection. Though their relation is strictly forbidden, Devorah and Jax arrange secret meetings and risk everything to be together. But how far can they go? Just how much are they willing to give up? (Description via Goodreads). 

The Name Lucy

I think I’ve only ever known one person in my life named Lucy. But it appears Lucy is quite the name in YA this year. And it’s not like it’s only been this year, either — Sara Zarr’s The Lucy Variations, published in 2012, also featured a main character named Lucy. 

#Scandal by Sarah Ockler (June 17): When pictures of Lucy kissing her best friend’s boyfriend emerge on the world of social media, she becomes a social pariah after the scandal rocks the school.

The Geography of You and Me by Jennifer E. Smith: Sparks fly when sixteen-year-old Lucy Patterson and seventeen-year-old Owen Buckley meet on an elevator rendered useless by a New York City blackout. Soon after, the two teenagers leave the city, but as they travel farther away from each other geographically, they stay connected emotionally, in this story set over the course of one year. 

Love, Lucy by April Lindner (January 2015): While backpacking through Florence, Italy, during the summer before she heads off to college, 17-year-old Lucy Sommersworth finds herself falling in love with the culture, the architecture, the food…and Jesse Palladino, a handsome street musician. After a whirlwind romance, Lucy returns home, determined to move on from her “vacation flirtation.” But just because summer is over doesn’t mean Lucy and Jesse are over, too. Inspired by E.M. Forster’s A Room with a View. (Description via Goodreads). 

Chantress Alchemy by Amy Butler Greenfield (sequel to Chantress): Lucy, a chantress who works magic by singing, is called to court to find a lost instrument of Alchemy. But her magic isn’t working properly. 

In A Handful of Dust by Mindy McGinnis (September 23): In a barren land, teenage Lucy is taken away from the community she has grown up in and searches the vast countryside for a new home. 

Sublime by Christina Lauren (October 14): Lucy and Colin discover they have a connection on the grounds of the private school they attend, but Lucy has a startling secret. 

How to Meet Boys by Catherine Clark: Best friends Lucy and Mikayla are ready for the best summer of their lives, but when Mikayla falls for a boy from Lucy’s past they realize their perfect summer might be over before it starts. 

Quarantine: The Burnoutsby Lex Thomas (third in the “Quarantine” series): In this final installment of the Quarantine trilogy, David and Will are alive, but on the outside of McKinley High, while Lucy is the last of the trinity left inside to deal with Hilary, who will exact revenge before taking over McKinley High

The Nickname Noodle/s


It’s been a slower reading year for me, but this one caught me because it’s been in two books I’ve read this year: a character who has been nicknamed Noodle or Noodles. 

When I Was The Greatest by Jason Reynolds: Ali lives in Bed-Stuy, a Brooklyn neighborhood known for guns and drugs, but he and his sister, Jazz, and their neighbors, Needles and Noodles, stay out of trouble until they go to the wrong party, where one gets badly hurt and another leaves with a target on his back.

How It Went Down by Kekla Magoon (October 21): When sixteen-year-old Tariq Johnson dies from two gunshot wounds, his community is thrown into an uproar. Tariq was black. The shooter, Jack Franklin, is white. In the aftermath of Tariq’s death, everyone has something to say, but no two accounts of the events line up. By the day, new twists and turns further obscure the truth. Tariq’s friends, family, and community struggle to make sense of the tragedy, and of the hole left behind when a life is cut short. In their own words, they grapple for a way to say with certainty: This is how it went down. (Description via Goodreads). 

Audrey Hepburn


A pair of books are coming out this year that are inspired by or feature Audrey Hepburn. Maybe she’s this year’s Jane Austen? Both titles are fiction. 

Being Audrey Hepburn by Mitchell Kriegman (September 16): Lisbeth comes from a broken home in the land of tube tops, heavy eyeliner, frosted lip-gloss, juiceheads, hoop earrings and “the shore.” She has a circle of friends who have dedicated their teenage lives to relieve the world of all its alcohol one drink at a time. Obsessed with everything Audrey Hepburn, Lisbeth is transformed when she secretly tries on Audrey’s iconic Givenchy. She becomes who she wants to be by pretending to be somebody she’s not and living among the young and privileged Manhattan elite. Soon she’s faced with choices that she would never imagine making – between who she’s become and who she once was.

Oh Yeah, Audrey! by Tucker Shaw (October 14): Months after the death of her mother, sixteen-year-old Gemma Beasley and friends she met through her Tumblr page meet in New York City to celebrate the life and style of Audrey Hepburn and her famous character, Holly Go Lightly. 

Genies


The magical/mythical element of choice this year is the genie. I know very little about genies nor their historical and cultural contexts, so I can’t say much to what it might mean, if anything. I just know it’s an element of at least three books this year. 

Exquisite Captive by Heather Demetrios (October 14): Nalia, a gorgeous, fierce eighteen-year-old jinni, is pitted against two magnetic adversaries, both of whom want her–and need her–to make a their wishes come true. 

The Fire Artist by Daisy Whitney (October 14): As an elemental artist, Aria can create fire from her hands, stealing her power from lightning–which is dangerous and illegal in her world–but as her power begins to fade faster than she can steal it she must turn to a modern-day genie, a Granter, who offers one wish with an extremely high price.

The Fire Wish by Amber Lough (July 22): When a princess captures a jinn and makes a wish, she is transported to the fiery world of the jinn, while the jinn must take her place in the royal court of Baghdad. 

Estate Sales


I can say I never knew anyone as a teen who went to estate sales. I also lived in the suburbs where there were no such things as estates to go to sales at. Garage sales? Sure. Rummaging? Sure. But estate sales? Not so much. But this year at least two YA novels feature the estate sale. 

Everything Leads To You by Nina LaCour: While working as a film production designer in Los Angeles, Emi Price finds a mysterious letter from a silver screen legend which leads her to Ava, who is about to expand Emi’s understanding of family, acceptance, and true romance.

To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before by Jenny Han: Lara Jean writes love letters to all the boys she has loved and then hides them in a hatbox until one day those letters are accidentally sent. 

Perks of Being A Wallflower Comparisons

I’ll do another round up of “meets” pitches in a future post, but I mentioned to a friend recently that I think comparisons to Stephen Chbosky’s The Perks of Being A Wallflower will be the next trend after the comparisons to TFIOS and Eleanor & Park. 

The comparisons or the note that the book would be ideal for fans of Perks come from Edelweiss descriptions. This is a small sampling of the titles I’ve seen with this comparison. I know there are others. 

The Anatomy of a Misfit by Andrea Portes (September 2): Outside, Anika Dragomir is all lip gloss and blond hair—the third most popular girl in school. Inside, she’s a freak: a mix of dark thoughts, diabolical plots, and, if local chatter is to be believed, vampire DNA (after all, her father is Romanian). But she keeps it under wraps to maintain her social position. One step out of line and Becky Vilhauer, first most popular girl in school, will make her life hell. So when former loner Logan McDonough shows up one September hotter, smarter, and more mysterious than ever, Anika knows she can’t get involved. It would be insane to throw away her social safety for a nerd. So what if that nerd is now a black-leather-jacket-wearing dreamboat, and his loner status is clearly the result of his troubled home life? Who cares if the right girl could help him with all that, maybe even save him from it? Who needs him when Jared Kline, the bad boy every girl dreams of, is asking her on dates? Who? (Description via Goodreads).  

Play Me Backwards by Adam Selzner (August 26): A promising and popular student in middle school, Leon Harris has become a committed “slacker” but with graduation approaching and his middle school girlfriend possibly returning to town, Leon’s best friend Stan, who claims to be Satan, helps him get back on the right track–for a price.

Twerp by Mark Goldblatt (which is, interestingly, a middle grade book, not young adult): In Queens, New York, in 1969, twelve-year-old Julian Twerski writes a journal for his English teacher in which he explores his friendships and how they are affected by girls, a new student who may be as fast as Julian, and especially an incident of bullying.

Love Letters to the Dead by Ava Dellaira: When Laurel starts writing letters to dead people for a school assignment, she begins to spill about her sister’s mysterious death, her mother’s departure from the family, her new friends, and her first love.

Are there other microtrends you’ve noticed this year worth noting? 

Filed Under: microtrends, trends, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Comments

  1. Dahlia Adler says

    June 13, 2014 at 2:05 pm

    I have to give a shoutout to another fantastic genie YA coming out next month – THE FOURTH WISH by Lindsay Ribar. I'd never have thought I'd be into a genie trend until I read and loved its predecessor, THE ART OF WISHING, but now I'm super into the idea! Enjoyed THE FIRE WISH and very much looking forward to the others!

    The big microtrend I've noticed is the whole "Girl lives her life by using X as a guide" – POPULAR by Maya van Wagenen; THE ART OF LAINEY by Paula Stokes; LOVE AND OTHER THEORIES by Alexis Bass, etc. All books I've enjoyed or look forward to, so certainly not complaining!

    • admin says

      June 13, 2014 at 2:53 pm

      These are GREAT ones! The "girl live her life by…" is really interesting, given that bucket lists have ALSO become a thing again lately.

    • Jennifer Malone says

      June 16, 2014 at 11:06 am

      I second Dahlia- THE ART OF WISHING is what hooked me on genie books. I haven't read it yet but I picked up an ARC at BEA called I WISH by Elizabeth Langston that is also about a genie and was a beta reader for the ah-mazing book BECOMING JINN by Lori Goldstein, out early next year. I'd say genies are a big trend and I, for one, am loving it!!

  2. Liviania says

    June 13, 2014 at 2:51 pm

    Bad Houses by Sara Ryan and Carla Speed McNeil was a New Adult graphic novel last year that featured estate sales.

    And there are estate sales in the suburbs. It doesn't require an "estate" as in a large property. They're just more common in areas with lots of old people. The "estate" is their property being sold off after they die. (Every once in awhile you get an estate sale due to the person moving to assisted living, divorcing, or foreclosure, but it is usually the person is dead.)

    • admin says

      June 13, 2014 at 2:53 pm

      I forgot about Bad Houses, but you're right!

      Growing up, I never heard the term "estate sale." I know it's broader than what I think it is, but it brings an image of wealth to me (even though it's not limited to that!).

    • Liviania says

      June 15, 2014 at 1:19 am

      I guess I grew up around them, because I've always associated them with dead old people rather than wealth.

    • Jenna says

      June 15, 2014 at 4:47 pm

      I think in the past I would have associated them with wealth, but now it just seems to be like Liviania says: dead old people. Someone dies and the family needs to get rid of all of their household goods. There's just SO MUCH STUFF that a lot of time they'll hire a company that specializes in estate sales to take care of it. I's basically just a huge garage sale with fancier name. I went to one last year where they were even selling houseplants and canned food.

Microtrends in YA Fiction

August 26, 2013 |

Written by: Kelly on August 26, 2013.

Last fall I did a post about microtrends in YA fiction, which talked about themes or topics that were popping up in a few YA books at the same time, even if the stories weren’t necessarily comparable or read alikes to one another. I thought it would be fun to revisit this post again, with a new crop of microtrends I’ve noticed in YA fiction over the last year.

All descriptions come from WorldCat or Goodreads.

Reality TV


Reality television as the backdrop or premise of a YA novel isn’t entirely new. But what’s been interesting is that a couple of the books here look at the effects of reality television on the main characters, rather than on the characters being involved with reality television as the story unfolds. 

Reality Boy by AS King (out in October): An emotionally damaged seventeen-year-old boy in Pennsylvania who was once an infamous reality television show star, meets a girl from another dysfunctional family, and she helps him out of his angry shell. 

Taste Test by Kelly Fiore: While attending a New Hampshire culinary academy, North Carolina high schooler Nora suspects someone of sabotaging the academy’s televised cooking competition.

You Look Different in Real Life by Jennifer Castle: Five teens starring in a documentary film series about their ordinary lives must grapple with questions of change and identity under the scrutiny of the camera.  (Okay, technically, this is a documentary film series but it plays out like “reality television” would).



Flash Point by Nancy Kress: Amy had dreams of going to college, until the Collapse destroyed the economy and her future. Now she is desperate for any job that will help support her terminally ill grandmother and rebellious younger sister. When she finds herself in the running for a slot on a new reality TV show, she signs on the dotted line, despite her misgivings. And she’s right to have them. TLN’s “Who Knows People, Baby–You?” has an irresistible premise: correctly predict what the teenage cast will do in a crisis and win millions. But the network has pulled strings to make it work, using everything from 24/7 hidden cameras to life-threatening technology to flat-out rigging. Worse, every time the ratings slip, TLN ups the ante. Soon Amy is fighting for her life–on and off camera.

Pizza, Love, and Other Stuff that Made Me Famous by Kathryn Williams: Although sixteen-year-old Sophie has grown up working in her family’s Mediterranean restaurant in Washington, D.C., she is not prepared to compete on the new reality show, Teen Test Kitchen, when her best friend Alex convinces her to audition. 

These aren’t the first reality show based YA novels, of course. Older titles, for those who love this storyline in their books, include: 

  • Reality Check by Jen Calonita
  • L.A. Candy series by Lauren Conrad
  • The Real Real by Emma McLaughlin and Nicola Kraus
  • Stir It Up by Ramin Ganeshram

Eat, Pray, Love for Teens


Two books recently were either pitched as — or further compared to in some capacity — Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love. In other words, these are female-led stories where the main character goes on some kind of adventure to find herself. I know that’s a pretty generic description, so I get why creating the comparison to Gilbert’s book actually says more about the story. But do teens get that reference? I’d be curious about that. 

Return to Me by Justina Chen: Always following her parents’ wishes and ignoring her psychic inner voice takes eighteen-year-old Rebecca Muir from her beloved cottage and boyfriend on Puget Sound to New York City, where revelations about herself and her family help her find a path to becoming the architect she wants to be.

The Year of Luminous Love by Lurlene McDaniel: Eighteen-year-olds Ciana Beauchamp, Arie Winslow, and Eden McLauren of Tennessee rely on their close friendship as they face serious problems the summer before they start college, from parents’ illnesses, to cancer, to two loving the same cowboy.

Physics


When’s the last time you read about physics for fun? That’s popped up a couple of times in young adult fiction this year. Either the main character likes physics or there’s a literary reason behind the use of physics in tying the story together in some way.

Charm & Strange by Stephanie Kuehn: A lonely teenager exiled to a remote Vermont boarding school in the wake of a family tragedy must either surrender his sanity to the wild wolves inside his mind or learn that surviving means more than not dying.

The Theory of Everything by Kari Luna: When fourteen-year-old Sophie Sophia journeys to New York with a scientific boy genius, a Kerouac-loving bookworm, and a giant shaman panda guide, she discovers more about her visions, string theory, and a father who could be the key to an extraordinary life.

Sticky Fingers


Who knew that kleptomaniacs were so abundant in YA fiction? I think this is an interesting thread running through recent titles, actually, and I think part of my interest is that it’s maybe a bit of an under-explored theme in YA fiction in recent years. 



Death of a Kleptomaniac by Kristen Tracy:  A sixteen-year-old girl with the uncontrollable urge to steal is trapped in limbo with three days before her funeral to find redemption and true love.

Life After Theft by Aprilynne Pike: Jeff is the new guy in school and the only one who can see Kimberlee, a ghost with a lot of (stolen) baggage. To help her move on, Jeff must return everything she stole when she was alive. But being Kimberlee’s accomplice turns into more than he bargained for when his crush and the cops get involved.

Trinkets by Kirsten Smith: When three Lake Oswego High School girls from different social groups, good-girl Elodie, popular Tabitha, and tough Moe, meet in a rehabilitation group, they discover they have much more in common than shoplifting.

Want a few older books featuring teen shoplifters? 

  • Living on Impulse by Cara Haycak
  • Klepto by Jenny Pollack
  • Blonde of the Joke by Bennett Madison
  • Crimes of the Sarahs by Kristen Tracy

Wandering Mothers


I’ve read many books this year where the mother just sort of disappears. But these books are a little more specific in how they’re disappearing. For two of the stories, it’s about never wanting to settle and taking the child on the road with them from an early age. For one of the stories, it’s about abandoning the family to find herself (which happens later in one of the other stories, too, just when you think mom has figured out how to settle).

Friday Never Leaving by Vikki Wakefield (September 10): Friday Brown and her mother Vivienne live their lives on the road, but when Vivienne succumbs to cancer, 17-year-old Friday decides to search for the father she never knew. Her journey takes her to a slum of orphans and runaways, ruled by a charismatic leader named Arden. 

Meet Me at the River by Nina de Gramont (October 15): Stepsiblings Tressa and Luke, close as children, fell in love as teens, and neither the disapproval of those around them nor even Luke’s death can keep them apart as long as Tressa needs him.

September Girls by Bennett Madison: Vacationing in a sleepy beach town for the summer, Sam is pursued by hordes of blonde girls before falling in love with the unusual DeeDee, who compels him to uncover secrets about the community’s ocean-dwelling inhabitants.

Emily Dickinson is the new Jane Austen


Where once we couldn’t go through a publisher’s catalog without stumbling across an homage to Jane Austen (okay, we still can’t), now it seems that Emily Dickinson has become a hot commodity in YA fiction. 

And We Stay by Jenny Hubbard (January 2014): Sent to an Amherst, Massachusetts, boarding school after her ex-boyfriend shoots himself, seventeen-year-old Emily expresses herself through poetry as she relives their relationship, copes with her guilt, and begins to heal.

Death, Dickinson, and the Demented Life of Frenchie Garcia by Jenny Torres Sanchez: Struggling to come to terms with the suicide of her crush, Andy Cooper, Frenchie obsessively retraces each step of their tumultuous final encounter and looks to the poetry of Emily Dickinson for guidance.

Emily’s Dress and Other Missing Things by Kathryn Burak: A new girl in Amherst, Massachusetts, comes to terms with her mother’s suicide and her best friend’s disappearance with the help of Emily Dickinson’s poetry–and her dress.

Nobody’s Secret by Michaela MacColl: When fifteen-year-old Emily Dickinson meets a charming, enigmatic young man who playfully refuses to tell her his name, she is intrigued–so when he is found dead in her family’s pond in Amherst she is determined to discover his secret, no matter how dangerous it may prove to be.

The Cold War Kids

I’ve talked extensively about books set in the 80s for no particular reason, but there’s a few that have come out or are coming out shortly that are set in the 80s because of one specific reason: the Cold War. The bonus of this setting — which is, at times also the drawback — is that it allows the story to be set abroad. It’s a bonus since it’s always great to have more books set outside the US but it’s a drawback because if the historical background isn’t complete enough in the book, it can easily distance the reader (remember that today’s teens likely don’t get much in their history classes beyond World War II, so the context and heft of the time period can be harder to understand).

Dancer, Daughter, Traitor, Spy by Elizabeth Kiem: After a harrowing defection to the United States in 1982, Russian teenager Marya and her father settle in Brooklyn, where Marya is drawn into a web of intrigue involving her gift of foresight, her mother’s disappearance, and a boy she cannot bring herself to trust.

The Boy on the Bridge by Natalie Standiford: It is 1982 and nineteen-year-old Laura Reid is spending a semester in Leningrad studying Russian, but when she meets Alyosha she discovers the dissident Russia–a world of wild parties, underground books and music, love, and constant danger.

Going Over by Beth Kephart (2014): In the early 1980s Ada and Stefan are young, would-be lovers living on opposite sides of the Berlin Wall–Ada lives with her mother and grandmother and paints graffiti on the Wall, and Stefan lives with his grandmother in the East and dreams of escaping to the West.

The Cold War is a less-explored time frame within YA fiction, but it’s not entirely new, either. A couple of older titles include:

  • Rose Sees Red by Cecil Castellucci
  • Life: An Exploded Diagram by Mal Peet (at least one of the timelines is during the Cold War)

Have you noticed any other microtrends over the last year? Others I’ve seen include schizophrenia and obsessive compulsive disorder, as well as books set on islands (which I’ve written about before but may revisit since it’s continued to be a popular setting). Or maybe can you think of other books out in the last 12 months which might fit any of the trends I’ve listed above? 

Filed Under: trends, Uncategorized, Young Adult

Comments

  1. Liviania says

    August 26, 2013 at 2:19 pm

    Another one for physics: When We Were in Love (and the world was flat)

    For wandering mothers: (perhaps) Where The Stars Still Shine

    Also, "Who Knows People, Baby–You?" is a terrible TV show name. Who would watch that?

    • admin says

      August 26, 2013 at 7:56 pm

      Nice one on physics!

      I decided not to include Where the Stars Still Shine in the wandering mothers, though I debated it, because the purpose behind her wandering was a little different (as in, malicious) than it was with the three mothers in the books above. But it would kind of fit!

  2. Rachelia says

    August 30, 2013 at 4:43 pm

    The trend that surprised me most is "Emily Dickinson is the new Jane Austen". I hadn't heard of many of these books but I'm definitely checking them out now.

    One I've noticed, particularly in YA historical fiction this year is the topic of spiritualism. Born of Illusion, In the Shadow of Blackbirds, The Dark Between.

    • admin says

      August 30, 2013 at 4:45 pm

      OH yes, that's a GREAT microtrend that's popped up!

Microtrends in YA Fiction

October 18, 2012 |

Written by: Kelly on October 18, 2012.

I love when small trends in YA books emerge. A lot of the time, the books have nothing to do with one another in terms of plot, but there are common elements that still somehow tie them together. I’ve been keeping note of some of the interesting microtrends from this year and last, and I’d love to hear if you can think of other small trends or other books that fit into any of the trends below.

All descriptions come from WorldCat and/or Goodreads. 

Amish

There is a whole subset of Amish fiction, but that’s not what I’m talking about. I’m talking about books outside the “Amish fiction” genre. Worth noting is that all of these books came out before the TLC show Breaking Amish, but I’m curious to see if that brings out more of these types of stories.

The Hallowed Ones by Laura Bickle: Amish teen Katie smuggles a gravely injured young man, an outsider,
into her family’s barn despite the elders’ ruling that no one can come
in or out of the community while some mysterious and massive unrest is
wreaking havoc in the “English” world.

A World Away by Nancy Grossman: Sixteen-year-old Eliza, an Amish girl, goes to work for an “English”
family as a nanny to two young children, and must then choose between
two entirely different ways of life.

Temptation by Karen Ann Hopkins: But I love Noah. And he loves me. We met and fell in love in the
sleepy farming community of Meadowview, while we rode our horses
together through the grassy fields and in those moments in each other’s
arms. It should be Rose & Noah forever, but it won’t be. Because
he’s Amish. And I’m not.

Genderless Characters

These books do something neat and something incredibly challenging from the writing and reading perspective: they’ve developed main characters who don’t identify as either male nor female.


Brooklyn, Burning by Steve Brezenoff: Sixteen-year-old Kid, who lives on the streets of Brooklyn, loves
Felix, a guitarist and junkie who disappears, leaving Kid the prime
suspect in an arson investigation, but a year later Scout arrives,
giving Kid a second chance to be in a band and find true love.

Every Day by David Levithan: Every morning A wakes in a different person’s body, in a different
person’s life, learning over the years to never get too attached, until
he wakes up in the body of Justin and falls in love with Justin’s
girlfriend, Rhiannon.

Circus Tales

Both of these books came out this year, and I wonder how — if any — influence there was with Erin Morgenstern’s The Night Circus.

Circus Galacticus by Deva Fagan: Trix’s life in boarding school as an orphan charity case has been hard,
but when an alluring young Ringmaster invites her, a gymnast, to join
Circus Galacticus she gainss an entire universe of deadly enemies and
potential friends, along with a chance to unravel secrets of her own
past.

Wonder Show by Hannah Barnaby: Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, step inside Mosco’s Traveling
Wonder Show, a menagerie of human curiosities and misfits guaranteed to
astound and amaze! But perhaps the strangest act of Mosco’s display is
Portia Remini, a normal among the freaks, on the run from McGreavy’s
Home for Wayward Girls, where Mister watches and waits. He said he would
always find Portia, that she could never leave. Free at last, Portia
begins a new life on the bally, seeking answers about her father’s
disappearance. Will she find him before Mister finds her? It’s a story
for the ages, and like everyone who enters the Wonder Show, Portia will
never be the same.

That Time I Joined the Circus by J. J. Howard (April 2013): After her father’s sudden death and a break-up with her best friends,
seventeen-year-old Lexi has no choice but to leave New York City seeking
her long-absent mother, rumored to be in Florida with a traveling
circus, where she just may discover her destiny.

“The Turn of the Screw” Retellings

Retellings aren’t really news or all that trendy (think of how many Jane Austen or Bronte sister books have been retold for modern times), but I find this one on Henry James’s “The Turn of the Screw” to be an interesting one. I think part of it is because if you’ve read one, you have a good idea where the next book’s twist will happen. You’re pre-spoiled in a way.

The Turning by Francine Prose: A teen boy becomes the babysitter for two very peculiar children on a
haunted island in this modern retelling of The Turn of the Screw.

Tighter by Adele Griffin: Based on Henry James’s “The Turn of the Screw,” tells the story of Jamie
Atkinson’s summer spent as a nanny in a small Rhode Island beach town,
where she begins to fear that the estate may be haunted, especially
after she learns of two deaths that occurred there the previous summer.

Tales of “The Furies”
The Furies have been showing up, both in the traditional sense of their mythology and through re-worked story lines.

Fury by Elizabeth Miles: After high school junior Emily hooks up with her best friend’s
boyfriend, and football quarterback Chase’s life spirals out of control,
three mysterious Furies–paranormal creatures that often assume the
form of beautiful women–come to town to make sure that Emily and Chase
get what they deserve.

Starcrossed by Josephine Angelini: When shy sixteen-year-old Helen Hamilton starts having vivid dreams
about three ancient, hideous women and suddenly tries to kill a new
student at her Nantucket high school, she discovers that she is playing
out some version of an old tale involving Helen of Troy, the Three
Furies, and a mythic battle.

Furious by Jill Wolfson (April 2013): After becoming the Furies of Greek mythology, three angry high school girls take revenge on everyone who deserves it.

Vengeance Bound by Justina Ireland (April 2013): Amelie Ainsworth longs to graduate from high school and live a normal
life, but as an abused child she became one of the Furies, driven to
mete out justice on the Guilty, and lives on the run from the murders
they commit.

Flapper era
I don’t call this a recent trend, since it’s an era that made an appearance in Anna Godbersen’s recent “Bright Young Things” series and Jillian Larkin’s “Vixen” series. But there have been a few titles tackling the flapper era with both a nod to the flappers but with less emphasis on “Gossip Girl”-esque drama.


The Diviners by Libba Bray: Seventeen-year-old Evie O’Neill is thrilled when she is exiled from
small-town Ohio to New York City in 1926, even when a rash of
occult-based murders thrusts Evie and her uncle, curator of The Museum
of American Folklore, Superstition, and the Occult, into the thick of
the investigation.

Debutantes by Cora Harrison: It’s 1923 and London is a whirl of jazz, dancing and parties. Violet,
Daisy, Poppy and Rose Derrington are desperate to be part of it, but
stuck in an enormous crumbling house in the country, with no money and
no fashionable dresses, the excitement seems a lifetime away. But a
house as big and old as Beech Grove Manor hides many secrets, and Daisy
is about to uncover one so huge it could ruin all their plans – ruin
everything – forever.

Born of Illusion by Teri Brown (June 2013 — no cover yet): Anna Van Housen is
thirteen the first time she breaks her mother out of jail. By sixteen
she’s street smart and savvy, assisting her mother, the renowned medium
Marguerite Van Housen, in her stage show and séances, and easily
navigating the underground world of magicians, mediums and mentalists in
1920’s New York City. Handcuffs and sleight of hand illusions have
never been much of a challenge for Anna. The real trick is keeping her
true gifts secret from her opportunistic mother, who will stop at
nothing to gain her ambition of becoming the most famous medium who ever
lived. But when a strange, serious young man moves into the flat
downstairs, introducing her to a secret society that studies people with
gifts like hers, he threatens to reveal the secrets Anna has fought so
hard to keep, forcing her to face the truth about her past. Could the
stories her mother has told her really be true? Could she really be the
illegitimate daughter of the greatest magician of all? 

Set in the 1980s or 1990s
This is another trend I don’t think is new but it’s one I keep coming across and find worth noting — and I guess technically it’s not a microtrend, either, since there are a good number of books featuring settings in the 1980s and 1990s. In fact, I bet I could have written an entire blog post on this trend alone. What trips me up about these books is I can’t call them contemporary but it makes me feel a little weird calling them historical, too — a couple would easily be historical though because they tackle historical events. Also a lot of the time the setting isn’t interesting for me as a reader. It seems like it serves as a convenience either through the author’s own experience or as a means of avoiding dealing with the plot holes that technology could bring. Not always, but often.

Eleanor & Park by Rainbow Rowell (March 2013): A sweet, moving novel about two misfits finding love in the most unexpected of places.

The Summer I Learned to Fly by Dana Reinhardt: Thirteen-year-old Drew starts the summer of 1986 helping in her mother’s
cheese shop and dreaming about co-worker Nick, but when her widowed
mother begins dating, Drew’s father’s book of lists, her pet rat, and
Emmett, a boy on a quest, help her cope.

Running Wide Open by Lisa Nowak: Cody Everett has a
temper as hot as the flashpoint of racing fuel, and it’s landed him at
his uncle’s trailer, a last-chance home before military school. But how
can he take the guy seriously when he calls himself Race, eats Twinkies
for breakfast, and pals around with rednecks who drive in circles every
Saturday night? What Cody doesn’t expect is for the arrangement to work.
Or for Race to become the friend and mentor he’s been looking for all
his life. But just as Cody begins to settle in and get a handle on his
supercharged temper, a crisis sends his life spinning out of control.
Everything he’s come to care about is threatened, and he has to choose
between falling back on his old, familiar anger or stepping up to prove
his loyalty to the only person he’s ever dared to trust.

 Bitter Melon by Cara Chow: With the encouragement of one of her teachers, a Chinese American high
school senior asserts herself against her demanding, old-school mother
and carves out an identity for herself in late 1980s San Francisco.

The Miseducation of Cameron Post by Emily M. Danforth: In the early 1990s, when gay teenager Cameron Post rebels against her
conservative Montana ranch town and her family decides she needs to
change her ways, she is sent to a gay conversion therapy center.

The Future of Us by Jay Asher and Carolyn Mackler: It’s 1996, and less than half of all American high school students
have ever used the Internet. Emma just got her first computer and Josh
is her best friend. They power up and log on–and discover themselves on
Facebook, fifteen years in the future. Everybody wonders what their
Destiny will be. Josh and Emma are about to find out.

 
Paper Covers Rock by Jenny Hubbard: In 1982 Buncombe County, North Carolina, sixteen-year-old Alex Stromm
writes of the aftermath of the accidental drowning of a friend, as his
English teacher reaches out to him while he and a fellow boarding school
student try to cover things up.
Taking Off by Jenny Moss: In 1985 in Clear Lake, Texas, home of the Johnson Space Center, high
school senior Annie Porter struggles with her desire to become a poet,
but her resolve to pursue her dream is strengthened when she meets
Christa McAuliffe, the first teacher to go into space.

Other Words for Love by Lorraine Zago Rosenthal: In 1985 Brooklyn, New York, sixteen-year-old artist Ari learns about first love.

Yesterday by CK Kelly Martin: After the mysterious death of her father and a sudden move back to her
native Canada in 1985, sixteen-year-old Freya feels distant and
disoriented until she meets Garren and begins remembering their shared
past, despite the efforts of some powerful people to keep them from
learning the truth.

Serial Killers
Sometimes it’s the main character and sometimes it’s someone closely related to the main character.


I Hunt Killers by Barry Lyga: Seventeen-year-old Jazz learned all about being a serial killer from his
notorious “Dear Old Dad,” but believes he has a conscience that will
help fight his own urges and right some of his father’s wrongs, so he
secretly helps the police apprehend the town’s newest murderer, “The
Impressionist.”

Velveteen by Daniel Marks: Velveteen was murdered at 16, but that’s not her real problem. Life in
purgatory is hard work when your side job is haunting the serial killer
who killed you. 


Henry Franks by Peter Adam Salomon: While a serial killer stalks his small Georgia town, sixteen-year-old
Henry tries to find the truth about the terrible accident that robbed
him of his mother and his memories, aided by his friend Justine but not
by his distant father.

Have any titles published in the last two years to add to any of these trends? Have you seen any other microtrends worth nothing? Or are any of these trends you’d like to see more of? 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Comments

  1. Liviania says

    October 18, 2012 at 5:22 am

    Another genderless one: Between You & Me by Marisa Calin (although it's a genderless secondary character)

    and another flapper: Sirens by Janet Fox.

    • admin says

      October 18, 2012 at 3:41 pm

      Good ones!

  2. Gabrielle Prendergast says

    October 18, 2012 at 3:39 pm

    Sci-fi "Twinning" is a weird micro trend with Dueled by Elsie Chapman, Beta, by Rachel Kohn and What's Left of Me by Kat Zhang

    • admin says

      October 18, 2012 at 3:41 pm

      Oh that's a good one! I've done a post on siblings and noted out the abundance of twins in the last year or so (http://www.stackedbooks.org/2012/05/display-this-sibling-stories.html) but the sci-fi angle is definitely a micro-trend.

    • Justina! says

      October 18, 2012 at 7:54 pm

      You can also add Linked to the Sci-Fi twinning list.

    • Gabrielle Prendergast says

      October 19, 2012 at 3:46 am

      Oh dear, the GR blurb makes me laugh "Linked will make you question what it really means to be human." Honey, EVERYTHING makes me do that.

    • Christina says

      October 23, 2012 at 7:08 pm

      Bahaha, I love that comment. That's fantastic.

  3. yabooknerd says

    October 18, 2012 at 7:58 pm

    Teen assassins seem to coming up

  4. Christina says

    October 23, 2012 at 7:08 pm

    For circuses, Pantomime and I believe that Terry Pratchett's latest offering (Digger, I think) is also about circuses.

    Flappers: Larkin's series and Anna Godbersen's both got this trend kicked off, I think.

  5. admin says

    October 25, 2012 at 2:15 am

    "Drain You" by M Beth Bloom is set in the 90s (yes, commenting on my own post for future reference).

  6. admin says

    October 27, 2012 at 11:58 pm

    "Small Damages" is set in 1995, and "Bitter Melon" by Cara Chow is set in the 1990s.

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