Specificity Over Authenticity

Do

Let the irrelevant detail take up as much space on the page as it would in a teenager’s actual thought process. Don’t rush past it to get to the point.

Avoid

Cutting the specific weird thing because it slows the narrative down. The specific weird thing is the narrative, in these moments. It is the character.

From My Work

The Unpolished Emotional Response

Do

Trust that readers will feel the emotion even when the narrator can’t name it. The reader is often ahead of the narrator in these moments, and that gap is where the connection lives.

Avoid

Emotional monologues where teen narrators explain exactly what they’re feeling and why. Real teenagers say “whatever” and mean twelve things by it.

From My Work

Self-Deprecation as Character Revelation

Do

Make the self-deprecation specific to this character. “I’m so awkward” is generic. “Don’t screw this one up… Kathleen” said to a mirror, using the full name, before a job nobody else has ever had to do at sixteen, is specific.

Avoid

Self-deprecation that’s played for charm. The teenager who is charmingly self-deprecating in a way that makes them more appealing reads as written. The one who is genuinely, specifically mortified by themselves reads as real.

From My Work

The Adult Reader Problem

Do

Let the adult reader be ahead of the narrator. That dramatic irony is one of the most powerful tools YA has, and it only works if the narrator is genuinely, convincingly limited by their age.

Avoid

The teen narrator who seems to understand everything that’s happening around them. A teenager who reads adult social dynamics with perfect accuracy isn’t a teenager. They’re an adult in a teenager’s body, and readers feel that immediately.

From My Work

Final Thoughts

Extras