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Monday, April 07, 2008

Christina Meldrum | MADAPPLE: What is a “crossover” book?

My first novel, MADAPPLE, is coming out this May from Alfred A. Knopf. The publisher sent out advance copies of MADAPPLE to book buyers and reviewers. A surprisingly large number of these readers have asked me: “Why is this a teen book?” “Did you write it for teens?” “Shouldn’t the book be categorized as adult fiction?” Truth be told, I didn’t write MADAPPLE for a specific audience. I just wrote the book I wanted to write. My editor sees MADAPPLE as a “crossover” book—that is, a book that spans the genres of adult literary fiction and young adult (“YA”). Yet, because of the way the publishing industry works, the book must be categorized as one genre or the other. Hence, it is being marketed as YA with the hope that it will reach adults as well.

When I was a teenager, J.D. Salinger, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Hermann Hesse, Harper Lee and Sylvia Plath were among my favorite authors. I was captivated by the antics of Harper Lee’s Scout. I identified with Salinger’s Franny. Were these authors thought of as YA authors? No. Yet, today, I think some of their books certainly would be categorized as YA. The question: Does it matter? The answer: I’m not sure.

As a teenager, I was transformed by literature. I was not yet juggling the responsibilities of job and family, and I was not entrenched in my belief system. Rather, I was curious about and welcoming of new experiences and ways of thinking. I longed to understand the world and my place in it. And I had time to be curious! Reading was a way to learn about the world. It also was a means of escaping the world, during those awkward teenage moments when I needed to escape. Even today, some of the books that are most dear to me are books I read first as a teen, including Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird, Salinger’s Franny & Zooey, Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment and Hermann Hesse’s Steppenwolf. Those books became part of the fabric of who I am as a person.

For this reason, when I first learned MADAPPLE would be published as a YA novel, I was excited—and somewhat overwhelmed. It seemed both an awesome and daunting opportunity. I was thrilled by the prospect of reaching a population of people for whom reading is potentially transformative, yet I felt the responsibility of this as well. MADAPPLE is arguably controversial. It certainly has mature themes. I tried very hard to address these themes with sensitivity. And I certainly did not write the book seeking controversy. That said, I did write the book with the hope that it would spur thought.

Like many first-time novelists, writing was not my day job. When I began writing MADAPPLE, I was a litigator. I spent my days formulating arguments for my clients, selecting and emphasizing those facts that supported my positions. In each case, opposing counsel would do the same, emphasizing the facts that behooved his or her client. In theory, truth somehow filtered through: the judge or jury would sort through the relatively extreme arguments and parse out what was fair and true. In actuality, each argument oversimplified reality, and the ending result, while perhaps as fair as was feasible, often had little to do with truth.

In writing MADAPPLE, I hoped to build on my experience as a litigator and explore ways in which we humans, in our attempt to understand the world, at times simplify it and thereby distort it. I wanted to think about how we create categories, based on what we want or have felt or believe is socially acceptable, and then divide the world into these categories.

Specifically, I wanted to explore the dichotomy between science and religion. As Aslaug, the protagonist of MADAPPLE, says, “Science describes the world, it doesn't explain it: it can describe the universe's formation, but it can't explain…how something can come from nothing. That’s the miracle.” Yet religion absent science also seems insufficient. If God exists, would not nature be a means by which to understand God? The more I researched the natural world in my writing of MADAPPLE, the more I appreciated Einstein's belief that genuine religiosity lies not in blind faith but in a “striving after rational knowledge.”

Ultimately, I hoped MADAPPLE would be a contemplation on faith: faith in God; faith in science; and the way in which faith can both open the mind and confine it. And I hoped Aslaug would be an embodiment of this contemplation on faith. An isolated girl whose daily existence is utterly dependent on the natural world—on foraging—and who interprets the world through this lens; but whose emotional life, due to extraordinary circumstances, becomes fueled by religion and mythology. When these two ways of seeing the world collide in Aslaug’s trial for murder, the reader must ask: Is the devil in the details, or is it God?

In the end, the categories fail: the answer is both.

To learn more about MADAPPLE, please visit my website at www.christinameldrum.com/.

Thanks for reading!
Christina Meldrum

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6 Comments:

At April 07, 2008 7:16 AM , Blogger Beth Fehlbaum, Author said...

Your book sounds fascinating. Like Madapple, my book also crosses genres-- both YA and General. I have received numerous messages from readers of all ages- male and female- who want to read it. It's gratifying-- and I get what you're saying, too, about your excitement that Madapple will have a YA audience, because literature IS truly transformative, especially for teens.
Good luck with your book.

Beth Fehlbaum, author
Courage in Patience, a story of hope for those who have endured abuse
http://courageinpatience.blogspot.com
Chapter One is now online!

 
At April 07, 2008 12:39 PM , Blogger Sara Reyes said...

personally, I like "crossover" books, it doesn't matter if they are adult to YA or mystery with fantasy, or romance and mystery.

I find it interesting when going to conferences there is a always a panel (or two or three) on "crossover" as a new phenomena. I'm getting too old and have been to too many conferences in the past 20 years. It's not so "new" anymore!

Do readers really only read in ONE genre? I have never met a reader who will honestly say they only read "xxx" In fact we were kidding one of our staunch book club members on Saturday night about her straying into "paranormal" aka vampires. Now she's reading "straight urban fantasy" with no romance at all. It's funny. This is a reader who wouldn't read a historical romance unless it was by Julie Garwood or Quick, that didn't last long either. In fact her list of "exceptions" became so long it was easier to just discount them all together and go for author voice descriptions. Which in fact is what I believe most readers really mean when they say they like a certain "type" of book. They fall in love or gravitate to a "voice" and then it doesn't matter if the "voice" is in mystery, thriller, romance, or fantasy labeled works, that particular reader will "love" it!

 
At April 07, 2008 3:55 PM , Blogger Christina said...

Dear Beth and Sarah,

Thanks so much for your comments. I agree with you that people rarely read one genre only. Thank goodness! I think the genre categorization by the industry sometimes limits access, though. When I was a teen, there was no distinction between YA and adult fiction, hence teens and adults often read the same books. I'm not sure if this still happens as much. I hope it does!

I look forward to reading your book, Beth. Thanks so much for your encouraging words!

Best,

Christina

 
At April 07, 2008 5:18 PM , Blogger Doug D said...

This is a story that can interest any age group. Lot's of so-called YA books explore issues that are relevant to many, regardless of age. Just because the protagonist is a teen does not mean that her circumstances or thoughts are exclusively interesting to teens. The themes in Madapple -- religion, relationships, personal freedom and choices -- are of universal interest and complexity. Telling the story through the eyes of a teenager may make the narrator perhaps a bit more direct or less self-conscicous. In fact, perhaps for that reason, teens have served as great narrators in many classic novels.

 
At April 07, 2008 5:24 PM , Blogger Christina said...

Thank you! Beautifully said!

 
At April 11, 2008 10:17 AM , Blogger Karen Harrington said...

This is a great post. I am always curious how authors feel about the genre assigned to them. And it's interesting to learn that sometimes it's not one of their original choosing. Looking forward to checking out Madapple.

All the best,

Karen Harrington

 

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