Makes sense, and I don't think you used the wrong words either. It really was a question into your goal that you seemed to have set.
Guess that the main gist that I was trying to get to you, is that 60k figure is actually a little short on the length of most YA books that I've read over the years. Seems most of the more popular (and throwing out Harry P books because they were massive) clock in around 300 pages and 90k on words. I'm also not saying that you need to increase the word count just to match this, if you've told your story, you've told your story. So please don't take what I'm trying to say in a personal manner, I'm not trying to attack or tear down what you are doing. And yeah, I went and looked at the page count on many that are in my personal collection, because I wanted to make sure I was remembering what I thought I was remembering.
Oh no, don't worry, I didn't take that way. I get where you're coming from. Word count is a really fickle thing. And it seems the appropriate, acceptable average word count varies from book to book and person to person.
This article on Writer's Digest, for example, says the average YA length is between 55,000 - 69,999, and ideally no higher than 80k.
This site says the same (no higher than 80k).
This one says 55k-70k. Going by those three examples, mine should be right in the sweet spot.
From what I've researched, Twilight and Harry Potter seem to be the exceptions, not the norm.
Keep in mind, too, that this book is also intended to be BOOK ONE of a 2-part series. I've known from the beginning what the
exact last sentence of BOOK ONE will be. I know most series deal in trilogies, but again, like the two-part manner that I'm playing with in this first book, the dual nature plays a big role both in the story and the book presentation. I'm doing something VERY different from Dill.
I'm also planning on shopping this one around to other publishers. In fact, I may even look for an agent on this one.[DOUBLEPOST=1466311790,1466311455][/DOUBLEPOST]
Why, eh?
..I mean, why only your "first?"
EDIT: Do you feel like your first two books are inappropriate for the "YA" crowd?
--Patrick
I'm...honestly not sure. I think that's part of why it's been hard to sell and promote Dill. He's such a weird, niche product. He doesn't really fall under any categories for Young Adult fiction, even though his best audience would
probably be teen and young adult. The first book, though, has a LOT of innuendo that I'd hate to see a parent have to explain to their young reader. There's a line about a pearl necklace, for example. My niece read that line when she was 12. I told her she'd understand when she was older. Then she went and GOOGLED what it meant, came back and smacked me, saying, "That's so gross! Why would you write that?"
This new one is most assuredly aimed at a teen/young adult market.
Interestingly enough, many people have told me they felt my overall writing style would be best suited in Young Adult fiction.