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Writing Difficult Topics for Young Readers: Balancing Truth and Hope

Emma Walton Hamilton / Uncategorized  / Writing Difficult Topics for Young Readers: Balancing Truth and Hope
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Writing Difficult Topics for Young Readers: Balancing Truth and Hope

One of the greatest challenges in writing for children and teens is addressing difficult subjects responsibly. Writers today are increasingly exploring themes such as anxiety, grief, trauma, mental health, racism, and neurodivergence, among many others, and writers sometimes wonder: How do you write honestly about hard things without overwhelming (or further traumatizing) young readers?

Children Can Handle More Than Adults Sometimes Assume

First, it’s important to know that young readers are often far more emotionally perceptive than adults give them credit for. Many kids are already navigating complex emotions and realities in their own lives, and books can provide recognition, validation, language, resources, and hope. The key is not avoiding difficult material.
The key is handling it responsibly, or as my friend Patricia McCormick often says, being a “responsible tour guide” for “other people’s children.”

Developmental Awareness Matters

It’s imperative that writers for young audiences understand the developmental stage of their readers. A picture book approaches emotional complexity differently than a middle grade novel, and a middle grade novel approaches it differently than YA. Some questions writers should ask include:
• What emotional tools does my reader realistically have?
• What vocabulary would feel authentic?
• What perspective can this protagonist genuinely understand?
• How much emotional distance is appropriate?

The answers to these questions will dictate what the protagonist feels, sees, and understands.

The Importance of Immediacy

Children’s and YA literature generally succeeds best when written with immediacy. The story unfolds as though it is happening right now, in real time, rather than through the lens of an adult looking back with wisdom. That immediacy helps readers feel emotionally connected, and allows them to make the journey of discovery alongside the protagonist. This might mean writing in present tense, but it can also be achieved with simple past – as long as the events of the story and the discoveries the protagonist makes unfold moment to moment, rather than looking back from the perspective of distance.

Why Hope Matters

Children’s and YA books can absolutely explore darkness. But the primary difference between these and adult novels is that books for a younger audience generally need to leave readers with something they can hold onto. While adults might read a novel that descends into a pit of despair and stays there because they admire the writing, books for children or young adults should leave the reader with a semblance of hope – of resilience, or insight, or possibility. Hope does not require a perfectly happy ending, but young readers need some sense that emotional survival is possible.

Sensitivity Readers and Trusted Advisors

Writers today increasingly work with an assortment of trusted advisors to help them navigate these waters. They might consult an expert on their subject to ensure the details are absolutely correct, or a child development specialist to ensure the topic is handled from an age-appropriate perspective. A newer position in the industry is the sensitivity reader – these are literary experts who share or have direct experience with the identity or experience of the protagonist or supporting characters, and can therefore advise as to whether the language is correct, appropriate, and accurate. This isn’t censorship – it’s responsible storytelling, especially when writing outside one’s own lived experience.

The Goal Is Not Protection From Emotion

Books are not meant to shield young readers from every difficult feeling. In fact, the best books can help young readers navigate being human. Sometimes the right story at the right time can make a child feel less alone, or point them towards resources and community that they didn’t know existed. That is one of the great gifts of children’s literature.

Emma Walton Hamilton
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Emma Walton Hamilton
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