Wednesday, September 24, 2014

Review: Writing Great Books for Young Adults



If you want to write, then by all means, you have got to read. 

Novels are a great start. They help maintain the vocabulary flowing and learn how to keep up paragraph and dialogue pace. But reading how-to write books can be a huge advantage.


Here is part of the books on writing I have read:


Writing Great Books for Young Adults outshines its competitors, by combining all of the writing themes together. Instead of focusing just on dialogue, it will have a chapter on the subject, and so on, making it a great start for aspiring writers. 

The main focus on YA literature comes from written examples and exercises. Brooks will ask you to go back in time to your teenage years and focus on your preoccupations. She also lists teen character traits, plots that involve family and school issues, as well as settings youth would most likely be chilling at. 

Although, adding a list of YA literature classes students may take in American Universities doesn't help us Canadians, she does explain the variety of awards (YALSA) YA books can merit as well as publishing houses, and manuscript format and submitting procedures. 

2 comments:

  1. Thanks for pointing this one out!!!
    I don't often search for books about writing (but I do enjoy them) and it is the genre I want to write in so I will add this to my wishlist because I really need it.. (Like the 100 other books on my pile, shhhsss..

    Irene @ www.icecoldpassion.com

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    1. Lol... it's a great time to read. With Nanowrimo coming up soon :D

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