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Should Writers Follow Trends in Children’s Publishing?

Emma Walton Hamilton / Uncategorized  / Should Writers Follow Trends in Children’s Publishing?

Should Writers Follow Trends in Children’s Publishing?

Every year at both the Southampton Children’s Literature Conference and at Picture Book Summit, whenever aspiring writers have a chance to ask agents or editors a question, they ask some variation of the same one: what’s hot right now?

The assumption behind the question is understandable… writers want to improve their chances of publication. But the problem with writing to trends is that the timeline between when a manuscript is acquired for publication and when the published book reaches shelves is usually a minimum of two years — often longer. By then, the trend will likely be over.

Why Trend-Chasing Rarely Works

Publishing moves at a glacial pace. A trend you notice today likely began years earlier. So if you begin writing specifically to capture the current market, you may end up arriving after the moment has passed. Worse, trend-driven writing often lacks the emotional authenticity that editors and readers respond to most.

So What Should Writers Pay Attention To?

Children’s book writers absolutely should remain aware of the marketplace. That means regularly reading current books in your genre, understanding industry expectations, knowing common word count ranges, understanding children’s developmental stages, and listening to the ongoing conversations in children’s literature. Market awareness is different from market chasing. One is professional, the other is reactive.

What Actually Lasts

Books with staying power tend to share certain qualities:
• Emotional truth
• Strong, fresh voice
• Universal themes
• Memorable characters
• Unique perspective
• Genuine heart
Children don’t connect to books because they are trendy. They connect because they feel seen.

The Best Compass: Curiosity

Rather than asking, “What’s selling?” try asking:
• What interests me?
• What won’t leave me alone?
• What emotional truth am I trying to explore?
• What book did I need when I was younger?

Those questions often lead to stronger stories. And paradoxically, books written from genuine passion frequently feel fresher and more original than books consciously engineered toward the market.

Remember, publishing Is cyclical. Trends ebb and flow, and the marketplace changes constantly. But powerful storytelling remains powerful storytelling. That never goes out of style.

Emma Walton Hamilton
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Emma Walton Hamilton
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