The American Booksellers Association kicked off its 14th Children's Institute in Schaumburg, Ill., on Saturday with a keynote that, to use highly professional language, was universally agreed to be an absolute banger. Leah Johnson, author of You Should See Me in a Crown and founder of Loudmouth Books, Indianapolis, Ind., moderated a freewheeling, high-energy panel featuring YA authors Elizabeth Acevedo (Anger Is Only a Shadow, Quill Tree Books, September 15), Jasmine Guillory (It's Only Dancing, Scholastic, October 6), and Nicola Yoon (Always One More Time, Delacorte, February 2, 2027). The keynote garnered laughs, snaps, applause, and a standing ovation.
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| (from l.) Elizabeth Acevedo, Jasmine Guillory, moderator Leah Johnson, Nicola Yoon. |
During ABA CEO Allison Hill's introduction, Johnson shimmied, danced, and strutted her way onto the stage. "It is a great honor for me to be up here doing this conversation," Johnson began. She continued: "Some of you have paid attention to the news that Taylor Swift may or may not be getting married at Madison Square Garden next week.... I'm going to tell you this: This is my Madison Square Garden. These three? This is my Taylor Swift."
"Everything I have done," Johnson said, "was made possible because writers like these three made it possible. They opened those doors, they wrote the stories, and they taught me that it was possible to tell stories for a living." When the three authors took the stage, Johnson asked a series of incisive, fascinating, and sometimes hilarious questions.
In the "tradition of naming the people who got us here," Johnson asked, "I would love to hear who the folks are who made space for your work." Yoon answered, "Toni Morrison, obviously. The Bluest Eye was the first time I realized you could put a Black girl in a book and have it be about her." And, of course, she added, Jacqueline Woodson. "Definitely Jackie Woodson," Guillory seconded. "Renee Watson, I love her books so much. And the queen! Meg Cabot!" Acevedo praised Woodson "for the books and for the literary citizen that she is. She opened the door and she holds it open. Julia Alvarez is someone I love. And Lucille Clifton, who is the godmother of every poem I've ever written. She's known for her brevity, so I should stop talking."
Johnson said she loves that each author's books are about defining yourself on your own terms. "Was that a conscious choice? Was it an underlying theme you wanted to pull out?" For Guillory, the plot is a conscious choice. "The underlying themes," though, "are never a conscious choice. It starts with the character." Acevedo, before responding, asked the other two authors if they outline. (Yes.) "Y'all seem organized," Acevedo said, "You outline. I can tell. You might be able to tell that I do not. The idea of knowing the theme in advance? Girl, I don't even know the character's names." This, Yoon said, "is why I hate first drafting. Because you don't know anything. The reason I have a career is because I can revise really well, not because I can draft." Yoon said she began Always One More Time with a question in mind: How do you love again after heartbreak? "The answer is that you've just gotta do it again and again and again."
The protagonists in these books, Johnson said, feel grounded in "the specificity of who they are. What are you writing toward? What are you trying to reach?" Acevedo spoke first: "I think that one thing that really moves me in bell hooks's writing is that she feels every single person should have a love ethic. How do I show up in love for you? I'm trying to think of the way to turn toward myself in a loving manner. How do you love the people around you enough to let them grow, even if that means they grow away from you?"
Johnson paused: "You ate that for real. Somebody jot that down."
Next, Johnson turned to individual questions. She asked Yoon, "How has your relationship to your own work changed since you've been curating other books?" (Yoon runs an imprint, Joy Revolution, with her author husband, David Yoon, at Penguin Random House.) Yoon replied, "We publish love stories by and about people of color, and they're fabulous books and I love every single author we've published. This imprint has been the best thing about my career. But I'm also really good at compartmentalizing, so when I read a book it's very different from writing a book."
Johnson asked Guillory why she wrote It's Only Dancing as a "sort of Dirty Dancing" homage. "I used to dance," Guillory said. "I love every dance movie. I wanted to write something with that energy but in book form because I mostly read when I was a kid. I also realized that I wanted the main character to be a grumpy irritable teenager and the love interest to be a cheerful cinnamon roll who likes to dance."
Johnson asked Acevedo about the role grief plays in Anger Is Only a Shadow. "I think it speaks to you as a reader," Acevedo replied, "that you're able to catch how much grief is in this book. I think when no one dies in a book, we don't take into account how someone is fundamentally changed. But in this book, we're watching characters fight against their vision of life changing and how they accept grief. But the book is funny! Also it's really funny!"
Finally, Johnson asked Yoon, Guillory, and Acevedo why they are writing YA now. For Guillory, "it feels like most important thing I can do right now is write books about teenagers of color, Black teenagers specifically. Sometimes I feel very impotent, and the thing I can do is write books for these kids that let them know they're worthy and valued and important." Acevedo wished she "was that calculated. Honestly, I just write what feels urgent. I look at my catalog of ideas and then start writing the next thing that I'm being driven to write. I think I'll probably always toggle between adult and young adult and poetry and prose and an Instagram comment." For Yoon, "I write the question that I have. I don't know the answer before I write the book but the questions are always urgent for me." --Siân Gaetano, children's and YA editor, Shelf Awareness