Blog

Filling the Gaps in Middle Grade

Middle Grade Authors

The middle grade market has been a bit discouraging lately. Perhaps you read about The Middle Grade Slump in a recent Mixed-Up Files post. Well, we’re back to let you know about two gaps in the middle grade market that present an opportunity for authors.

According to agent Kelly Dyksterhouse of the Tobias Agency, “Right now there is a need for middle grade novels that bridge the gaps between age categories.” Dysterhouse identifies two areas where books are needed to help kids transition from one category to the next. 

Early Middle Grade

According to Dyksterhouse, there is a need for “younger middle grade novels for readers who are ready to move on from chapter books but who might find the 40k+ word count that has become so common in middle grade intimidating.” 

Does this sound familiar? It’s reminiscent of an opinion piece that appeared in Publisher’s Weekly about a year ago. Melissa Taylor, founder of the Imagination Soup blog, wrote an article titled “It’s Not Me, It’s You: The Argument for Shorter Middle Grade Books.” 

According to Taylor, “When looking at a book with a lot of pages, children might be intimidated, they might prefer quicker stories, they might be struggling readers, and/or they might have attention issues, among other factors.”

Early middle grade literature might be just what these reluctant readers need. Tara Lazar recently featured PJ Gardner’s post Early Middle Grade Needs You, Says PJ Gardner on her blog. Gardner says that “Early Middle Grade is where we start to lose young readers, and I think that’s directly tied to the limited number of books aimed at them.”

Cover of early MG book

Gardner encourages authors to think creatively about how they can target this early middle grade audience. She says these books should include straightforward stories told in 5,000-10,000 words. For Gardner, there are just two major keys – “create believable characters and craft dynamic plots.” 

Think of popular series like Judy Moody, Dog Man, and Geronimo Stilton. These shorter, more concrete books can form a bridge between chapter books and traditional middle grade novels.

Upper Middle Grade

So, what’s the second gap in today’s middle grade market? Dyksterhouse says we need “upper middle grade novels for readers who are ready to engage with deeper themes, tougher subject matters and more complex stories but are not yet ready for the intensity of YA that has increasingly focused on characters aged 17-18+ and experiences they encounter.”

This may sound familiar. School Library Journal’s Teen Literary Toolbox recently highlighted the same need in a guest post by author and middle school language arts teacher Laurie Morrison. Morrison’s piece is titled “Why We Need More ‘Developmentally Relevant’ Upper MG Romance.” 

Let’s pause for a moment and break down the term “developmentally relevant.” Morrison says she discovered this term when library media specialist Steve Tetreault posted it on social media. She immediately embraced it as an alternative to the term “age appropriate,” which can invoke a connotation of judgment. 

For Morrison, the words “age appropriate” do not “honor the fact that two kids who are the same age will have completely different life experiences, perspectives, and comfort levels with different kinds of content, and it raises the question of who, exactly, gets to decide what’s appropriate.” So, what kinds of “developmentally relevant” books are we talking about? 

Upper middle grade books target readers ages 10-14 whose interests have grown beyond the literature written for 8-to-12-year-olds but who aren’t quite ready for the culture and content of YA. Morrison says that kids in this range are hungry for books that are relevant to them.

Leslie Zampetti, literary agent and owner of Open Book Literary agrees. She reflects on her years as a librarian, when she met younger readers who sought genres similar to what their older siblings were reading. However, they wanted stories that were relevant to their experiences and situations. 

“Conventional wisdom is that young readers prefer to ‘read up,’ focusing on older characters,” Zampetti acknowledges. “But my experience was that it’s more nuanced: often, confident and mature readers want to read up, and publishing tends to focus on those readers. Less confident or sophisticated readers want to read books with characters their own age, facing events and emotions new to them and similar to what they’re experiencing.”

Keeping Pace book cover

Morrison echoes Zampetti. In her classroom, Morrison encounters a number of kids in the 11-14 age range who are eager to read romance novels. While most are not ready for YA literature, they crave romance tropes that are relevant to (and dare I say appropriate for?) their age and experience.

Morrison lists books like Nashae Jones’s Courtesy of Cupid, and Wendy Wan-Long Shang’s Bubble Trouble, as well as her own Keeping Pace, as examples of books that fit this much-needed niche.

Authors may be wondering if the publishing industry is as hungry for these upper-middle grade books as the young readers seem to be. According to Zampetti, yes. She affirms that “editors and agents are definitely looking for ‘developmentally relevant’ books, whether classified as upper middle grade or ‘middle school’ or young YA.”

Good News for Authors

If you’re a middle grade author who’s feeling a bit discouraged these days, take heart. You may want to start brainstorming some ideas for straightforward stories that would fit into the early middle grade category. Or perhaps you want to ponder ways some popular tropes can become relevant to upper middle grade readers.

The good news is that opportunity exists. There are gaps to be filled at both ends of the middle grade spectrum. By addressing the need for books that bridge the transitions into and out of middle grade, we just might be able to engage young readers and reverse the slump.

Join the Mixed Up Files — We are looking for a few good bloggers!

Confetti

From the Mixed Up Files

Hello to all of our amazing subscribers, readers, and fellow middle-grade children’s book enthusiasts!

THANK YOU for helping us to achieve:

#3 on the 100 Best Middle Grade Book Blogs and Websites in 2024 on Feedspot

https://books.feedspot.com/middle_grade_book_blogs/

                                                        Confetti

A few fun facts:

The Mixed-Up Files blog has been running continuously for 12 YEARS, since 2012

During that time we have had almost 1.2 MILLION views

Our average views per month run between 6,000 and 10,000 

We are constantly contacted by many trade publishers who request interviews for their authors

 

Our posts include:

  • Author interviews  of exciting new trade and educational middle grade books (both fiction and nonfiction)
  • A weekly STEM Tuesday blog that provides writing tips, activities, and focus on STEM/STEAM books
  • A fabulous We Need Diverse Middle Grade (WNDMG) monthly post
  • Editor and agent interviews
  • Writing tips
  • Book lists
  • Giveaways and MORE!

 

Book piles with kids sitting on top

 

We are looking for NEW BLOGGERS! This opportunity is open to authors, writers, teachers, librarians, or anyone who is excited about trade middle grade books. If you love talking about middle grade books,  giving tips to authors, want to support the We Need Diverse Middle Grade team, or interview awesome agents and editors, WE NEED YOU!

Our bloggers are eligible to have their books highlighted in a new release post,  a cover reveal, and even an interview post. And every post you write will be seen by thousands of people, too.

 

To Apply, please fill out the Google form Here –>  https://forms.gle/hfZDPLBm1t8V2naKA

 

Let’s keep this blog going by continuing to shine the spotlight on everything that’s AWESOME about Middle Grade! A focus like this is needed more than ever!!

For any questions, please contact us below.

 

We LOVE Middle Grade Books!!! Pile of Middle Grade Books

 

 

Interview with author Shifa Saltagi Safadi on her book Kareem Between

Welcome to Mixed-Up Files Contributer Shifa Safadi!

It is my extreme pleasure to interview Shifa Safadi for the blog today. Shifa is a regular contributer to the blog. Her sunny-bright disposition and optimistic attitude are infectious. She exhibits a continual commitment to her culture, her community, and children. I couldn’t have asked for a better partner on this journey to highlight fiction for middle graders by diverse authors, and I am honored to talk to her about her new release KAREEM BETWEEN!

All about Shifa

Shifa started off in the kidlit book space as a Muslim Book Reviewer. As a new mother, she wanted her kids to be proud of their Arab American and Muslim identity. She believed that books were the best way to connect with them at bedtime and help them feel seen.

All the beautiful books she collected and adored wok eup her childhood dream of writing books. After a little soul-searching and a lot of hard woork, here she is, writing her own books for young children, seeing her dreams come true, and loving every minute of it!

Oh my gosh, I love every single review I have seen of KAREEM BETWEEN. I am so so flattered to have my words read and loved. I have been getting a lot of positive reviews and reactions, and a memorable moment was getting a Kirkus star! I jumped up and down like a kid again!

And also, I love when readers appreciate the football! I want kids who love sports to just adore the football aspects and geek out at all the references and NFL facts.

What is your biggest motivator?

 

Writing for Muslim kids is my biggest motivation as a writer. Growing up as a Muslim American, I honestly felt so out of place for so long. I wondered how to find my place in my world, and it made me doubt if I would ever belong. Add rising islamophobia into it, a Muslim ban in 2017, and prevalent stereotypes- I feel even more impassioned to provide books for Muslim kids to see themselves in, and books that provide a window for all readers to peek into what it’s like to be a Muslim kid.

Impacting Perception

Muslim and Catholic

How do you hope your work can impact the Muslim community? How do you hope your work can impact perceptions of Muslims?

 Words are so powerful.

I know for myself, the first time I ever read a Muslim book, I was an adult. I remember crying- like I could not believe that I was seeing a main character who was a Muslim who was NOT A VILLAIN. Unfortunately, popular media for so long has shown Muslims and Arabs as terrorists and inhumane and oppressed, that to see them shown as normal humans for me was so unexpected.

I want it to be expected.

A diverse group of children on a white ...I want it to be the norm.

I want young readers now to grow up normalizing that Muslims and Arabs are human- that they have stories and voices and words worth listening to. And I want Muslim readers to feel seen and worthy, knowing that they matter.

For readers who aren’t Muslim or Arab, I want them to really examine the inner stereotypes that society has popularized about us. Do hijabi women seem oppressed? Do Arabs seem uneducated? Do Muslim men with beards scare people? Do we all live in deserts?

The answer is no, obviously, because generalizations and boxes are wrong.

Need Diversity in Children's Literature ...

I want stereotypes challenged.

I want people to re-examine their own inner implicit biases and challenge their own selves to think beyond the boxes. And to meet my characters and realize that Muslims and Arabs have stories and lives and emotions and lived experiences that are similar and relatable to ANY reader.

 

Writing from the Heart

Do you try to be original or to deliver tried and true stories?

How to Write a Great Story in 5 Steps | GrammarlyI write from my heart- and because of that, I always have to dig deep into a part of myself to bring stories to life. There’s a piece of me in each book I make- and even though fiction is not true, there is an element of truth in the stories I tell. These are stories that feel real because they CAN be real. And I want that to be inspiring to readers by making them feel completely immersed in the story.

 

Inspiration

What author inspired you?

One of my biggest author inspirations is S. K. Ali.

Q & A with S.K. Ali

 

That Muslim book I read as an adult? It was by her. I love how she writes such beautiful Muslim stories and devotes her time to making sure they feel loved by the Muslim community.
I hope my stories are received well too!

 

 

As an author, what would you choose as a mascot/avatar?

I would probably choose a football for this book KAREEM BETWEEN.

a touchdown mean in American football ...

But as a whole, with all my books, maybe a mosaic heart box. I pour Islamic representation into my books and I love Islamic art- and of course mosaic is so reminiscent of Islamic architecture in my birth country, Syria.

Handmade 6-inch Mosaic Heart - Mixed Media

The heart is because I write from my heart and I hope to touch reader’s hearts too!

 

You can keep up with Shifa and all her exciting projects here.