Tuesday, September 18, 2012

New Adult

I was having this very lively discussion about the category (which refers to demographic, as opposed to genre, which refers to content) of "New Adult."

New Adult is supposedly (more on why that qualifier in a sec) a category that would cater to the 19 - 30 category (ish). So filling a gap between the experiences of the mostly high school characters of YA and the largely 30+ protags of "Adult" fiction. Sort of like the Chick Lit of the 90s did--these books would be about "finding one's way" or whatever. But with some other stuff thrown in with the stilettos.

That's not to say that there isn't or wouldn't be a lot of crossover between all of those categories, or that 19 - 30 year old people aren't "adults." It's just an acknowledgement that most people in those age groups have different concerns and life stuff than most 30+. That's what I think, at least.

Now, for that "supposedly," above. New Adult didn't exist as a term until about 5 years ago, when someone in the Biz literally made it up. Not that there's anything wrong with that. Every other category had to be made up at some point. But this is a new one, and it's had a hard time getting any traction.

Why?

Well, the biggest reason is that the categories used by agents and editors to describe something correspond directly to the categories in bookstores and libraries (yes, those are standardized!). This is because the hundreds of bookstores and libraries across the country (and digital retailers, too) order books based on codes called BISACs. They look like this:

FIC009050FICTION / Fantasy / Paranormal  

or


FIC043000FICTION / Coming of Age   


There are a lot of those. But there can't be too many, because if every subgenre and every potential age group delineation was coded, the codes would stop being useful. If everything got its own unique code...well, that's called an ISBN. And it's unique to each title. And there are millions of individual titles published each year. The whole point of grouping them is to make that number more manageable.

Adding a new category means that this entire system has to change--from how the bookstores arrange their shelves to how the publisher registers copyright. That, my friends, is not simple.

So the term "New Adult" hasn't really captured the hearts and minds of agents and editors because it doesn't exist in the Real World. Definitely the wholesalers and retailers don't use it. Readers don't know what it is, for the most part. Many view it as a cumbersome addition, fraught with the implication that 20-somethings "can't" read adult fiction for some reason (there's a reason Chick Lit is dead--it was boring and condescending after a while. Not all 20-something ladies are Carrie Bradshaw).

So, for now at least, calling a submission "New Adult" to an editor would be like calling it...Elephant In The Corner Fiction (it's, like, suspenseful, but for people who don't like surprises!). It means something, but it doesn't mean anything, really. It can't be sold in to retailers as what you're calling it. And that is a no-no!

All valid points, although I tend to think New Adult could be a real thing...BUT not without a huge shift in a huge system. It might seem like an update in a computer system, but it actually affects every link of the chain.

Questions? Comments?


6 comments:

  1. My comment: Narrowing books further is not good. Let's stop trying to fit things into little boxes.

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  2. I don't think we need a new category. I agree with Dan above, that the last thing we need is more narrowing. (It took me ten minutes to find a new release at B&N the other day, because they have the YA section divided into Teen Paranormal Romance, Teen Fantasy, Teen Science Fiction, etc.)

    On the other hand, I think that the "Young Adult" category is changing to be more broad. Look at that article that made the rounds the other day, about how the majority of YA readers are adults. Look at that book "Easy" by Tammara Weber, which quickly became an e-book bestseller. Look at "Where She Went," which features two college age protagonists. YA used to mean high school only, and I think *that* is what's changing.

    And I'm personally all for it.

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  3. Thanks for this I've been dying for an explanation since I've been seeing a lot of agents/small presses with calls for NA so I wasn't sure. Although, as a 21-year-old I wouldn't mind an actual category like NA. :)

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    1. I know! As an also-young-but-not-that-young twenty-something, it actually is a market opportunity!

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  4. Thanks for the advice. My ms's protagonist is a 22 year old, so this question has been bugging me for a while. Would you suggest I query my ms as an adult novel then?

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    Replies
    1. A lot more goes in to the delineation between YA and Adult, so it's hard to say for sure. But tentatively yes.

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