Know About YA Trends? Amy Alessio Does

I recently met Amy Alessio when she joined the still forming YA Chapter of Romance Writers of America. When I found out that she is both a YA writer and YA librarian I knew I had to hit her up for an interview.
As a librarian who works with young adults, you must  talk with teens a lot. What is most surprising about young adults as people  and/or as readers?
 I help run monthly clubs at the library including a Teen Corps  volunteer group, a Gamers Group, writing and drawing groups and more. We also  have three to five programs a week in the summer including swordfighting, CSI,  scavenger hunts, after hours, video game tournaments and art classes. I also had  the pleasure this summer of bringing five teens to the American Library  Association conference, where they spoke with me at a Young Adult Library  Services Association preconference.
 So I do indeed have the pleasure of talking with teens a great  deal. What surprises me is that anyone would want to work with any other age  group!  Honestly, I love my work. Teens today are extremely sophisticated about  their activities and their future, and they are passionate about helping improve  the world. I can barely keep up with my volunteer group's ideas about helping  the community. Also they are very technological, but that's no surprise. A big  surprise came when we realized that the library book circulation of teen  materials went up 70% each year after we started getting their input about all  services for their own age group. Taking their advice continuously brought in  more teens in droves.
 Do you see a strong relationship between teen trends  in say, clothes and music, and teen trends in reading?
 The public library is an equalizer. All types of teens come  in. So I may not see trends in clothing and music as much as someone who works  in retail or food which may appeal to markets within teens.  As downloadable  music became so popular in the last ten years, though, I notice teens do like  more action packed books. Their attention needs to be grabbed from page one to  hold them. They are used to everything instantly, from chatting to getting their  music and more. And they are more interested in the larger world and cultures  than perhaps before, as they are so connected to the entire world online.
 While these trends are more immediate and prevalent in teens,  I think both of these things resonate with adults also. I see adults with more  interest in Indian/Asian or African American authors with books like The Kite  Runner staying in book clubs years after publication. Also, adults want their  action sooner now too; why else would we see so many Prologues in books?
 How long will vampires be *hot*?
 (grin) I see no end in sight with the vampires. I have 40  copies of each of the Twilight series which still circulate constantly, plus  many more of The Vampire Diaries and more. The Vampire Diaries will be a new  show on the CW this fall, too, heightening the genre. Really, Vampires have been  around for several years, with Anne Rice, Buffy and Laurel K. Hamilton changing  the faces of the genre. Charlaine Harris certainly kept momentum going and is  more popular than ever with her TV show, too. An interesting vampire book will  always find teen readers.
 Predictions about upcoming trends?
Definitely I see more types of paranormal. I have to review  some Zombie books; that seems to be the new creature du jour. I have also seen  werewolves aplenty in adult books lately, which means they will hit teen soon  too.
 Steampunk is hitting teen now too. Kenneth Oppel really  started the trend for teens, and now I'm seeing lots more variations with time  travel into Victorian and Regency periods, too.
 To my delight, I am finding many more teen mysteriers and  thrillers, though still only a few teen traditional amateur sleuth series.  Mysteries are my passion, and I review teen ones for Crimespree magazine. (I  review all types of teen books for Teenreads.com too.) It used to be hard to  find teen mysteries. Now I'm seeing a lot more. It's the CSI effect - many teens watch those shows, too. How could they not, with the series being on every night  in some form?
 Amy has an awesome blog that covers vintage cookbooks. Here's what she had to say about where that interest came from.
Good question. My mother had great unusual cookbooks, though  she was not a huge fan of cooking. Both Grandmothers were, and I have recipes  from one. The other wrote nothing down. When I was younger I was fascinated with  the crazy Jello recipes in an old Jello cookbook and made several of them. I  took Square Meals by the Sterns from Mom and read it like a novel. That one  discusses vintage cookbooks and funny trends in them.
 My husband and I have always been into antique malls, and  usually spend birthdays and anniversaries touring several. I was drawn to the  vintage cookbooks over and over, and before I knew it, I had over 100. They are  inexpensive and fun, from the Pillsbury Bake-Off collections to the Betty  Crocker cooking/lifestyle guides. By the time I had 200 I was learning new  technologies for my work at the library. It's not easy trying to keep up with  teens technologically, but I do try. I wanted to teach myself blogging three  years ago, and needed a topic. I started writing about the cookbooks, and my  attempts to make some of those recipes.
 In January of this year, I took an online class on blog book  tours, and got serious about it, blogging much more often, inviting guests,  promoting the blog on food sites. The traffic has grown exponentially and I've  been invited to nine libraries this fall to talk to people about holiday  traditions in the vintage cookbooks. I have publications planned from it too for  folks who attend the programs. I use all this as an excuse to get  more cookbooks, of course!
 Amy is the author of "Missing Andy" a story in the MISSING anthology. Here's what she had to say about that:

The Missing Anthology was created when I asked Echelon Press CEO Karen Syed if she could publish an anthology benefiting missing persons organizations. There were several high profile ones in Chicago especially two years ago, and I wanted to do something. Karen agreed if I would edit it. I was happy to do so, and the stories in there are amazing. No one made a dime from that project; all monies were donated to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. I do have a story in there as well, "Missing Andy", about an antiques store owner who collects cookbooks and tracks down a missing teen...
Amy Alessio is a regular speaker at BEA, ALA, and Boucheron.
And you can follow Amy on Twitter.
Great interview, ladies! I love YA fiction. :)
ReplyDeleteMe too. Interesting about the zombies, I saw a call for zombie romances recently. Thnx for stopping by.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the nice comments! I do want to add that I meant Anne Rice, Laurel K. Hamilton and Charlaine Harris start and kept the vampires going for the adults, which then trickled down that topic to the teens. (This trend does go up also, as many adults love Stephenie Meyer the YA author, too.) I do have teens ask for these books, but Laurel especially is geared towards adults!
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to having Melissa guest blog on Vintage Cookbooks!
I know what you mean about the S Meyer. There are many adults who read the her books: I think its great when moms/aunts/even grandmas/ can enjoy the same books as the younger women in the family
ReplyDelete