Young adult fiction, a bulleted summary

A glance at the most salient features of YA fiction

“Young adult” is an age category, not a genre. This is fiction for pre-teens and teens, from about the ages of 12 to 18. The category encompasses many genres — mystery, romance, horror, sci-fi — pretty much the same genres you’d see for adult fiction, but set in the world of teens and their concerns.

The focus for you as a reviewer is on all those things you’d consider for any novel — is the story compelling, is it developed well, does it follow genre conventions — but through the lens of that age group.

It’s helpful to contrast fiction written for young adults with that written for the middle-grade reader, ages 8 to 12. The distinctions between the two categories can help to sharpen the characteristics and boundaries of each.

Summary of characteristics

  • For ages 12 to 18

  • Length: typically 50,000 to 70,000 words

  • POV: typically first, reflecting the deep self-reflection these novels often explore

  • Main characters are typically between the ages of 15 to 18, with the majority of the other characters in that age group as well

  • YA encompasses nearly every genre: sic-fi/dystopian, crime/mystery, thriller, horror, fantasy, romance, historical, contemporary

  • No real content restrictions: this category can have much the same content as fiction for adults. It’s how that content is handled that makes it YA

    • Profanity and graphic violence are permissible

    • Romance, but not eroticism

  • The crises faced by the characters reflect what teens are going through emotionally

    • Their changing relationships and feelings, the deepening awareness, are all new. The feelings can be overwhelming, unmanageable

    • Everything in a teen’s life feels intense, electric

    • Perspective can be difficult to achieve: everything that’s happening feels important, every decision the teen makes can feel monumental, like it defines forever after

  • The challenges faced by the characters reflect what teens (and their friends) are facing

    • From bullying and spiteful gossip

    • To vacillating and difficult friendships as they and their friends grow and change

    • To (perhaps) drugs, assault, family trauma, deep depression or other mental illness

  • The focus is introspective, reflective, analytical

  • Characters seek to better understand themselves and the world, reflecting on and analyzing the relationships that radiate from that nexus like spokes on a wheel

    • Who they are and who they are in this new world

    • Who their friends are and how true and strong those friendships are

    • What’s going on around them, what the things that happen to them in the story mean for themselves and others

    • How they’ll fit into the world beyond family and friends

    • Who they they’ll become

    • Who they can face life with now, who they can partner with, what feels right

  • Friendships and other peer relationships are fiercely held, but can be unpredictable, even explosive; such relationships may well drive some of the conflict and angst of the story

  • The story explores the pain, and the joy, of growing up

  • The story must not talk down to readers