Wednesday, November 21, 2012

New Adult Fiction On the Rise

New Adult Fiction.

These three words have been consistently tossed around the publishing industry for over a month now, but even I, someone deeply entrenched in the industry, is unclear exactly what it means. Until now, I had never even heard of the term, despite it first being coined in 2009. It seems that what is now "New Adult Fiction" is very similar to what I've always deemed "YA Crossover," with some differences.

To give us a better look at exactly what this "new" genre is though, GalleyCat has posted a cheat-sheet article, complete with free book samples:

Our Self-Published Bestseller List has been packed with books labeled as “new adult fiction,” a relatively new literary genre. To help GalleyCat readers, we’ve created a quick primer on new adult fiction, complete with free samples of books by leading adult fiction writers. 
The label was first used in 2009 when St. Martin’s Press hosted a contest looking for stories that could be marketed to both YA readers and adult readers. The contest described for new adult fiction as books “with protagonists who are slightly older than YA and can appeal to an adult audience.” 
Last week, new adult fiction author Cora Carmack landed a three-book deal, bringing the term into New York Times headline
To get a definition beyond that simple description, YALitChat.org founder Georgia McBride interviewed JJ, an editorial assistant who worked on the St. Martin’s writing contest. 
Here’s an excerpt:
there is a gap in the current adult market–the literary fiction market–for fiction about twentysomethings. You never stop growing up, I think, but little in the market seems to address the coming-of-age that also happens in your 20s. This is the time of life when you are an actual, legal adult, but just because you’re able to vote (in the US, anyway) that doesn’t mean you know HOW to be one. This is the first time when you are building a life that is your OWN, away from your parents and the family that raised you. It’s a strange and scary place to be. Just as YA is fiction about discovering who you are as a person, I think NA is fiction about building your own life. (Very generalised, of course.) I hope that the creation of this category will allow the adult market to develop and expand in similar ways the children’s market did. 
Free Samples of New Adult Fiction Authors Who Landed Book Deals 
Losing It by Cora Carmack 
Because of Low by Abbi Glines 
Slammed by Colleen Hoover 
Beautiful Disaster by Jamie McGuire 
Easy by Tammara Webber 
 Read the original post HERE

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