by Dr. Virginia Loh-Hagan
“Nonfiction” sounds so binary. Essentially, it refers to writing that is not fiction – with fiction serving as the standard. However, we, readers, know that the spectrum of books is way more than just two choices: (1) fiction or (2) nonfiction. We also know that fiction is not secondary to nonfiction. In fact, in many, many cases, the truth is stranger than fiction – and much more interesting (and in some cases, way scarier).
Nonfiction, or more specifically, informational texts, have been greatly elevated by the Common Core Standards, which focused on informational texts as learning resources. In the past several years, nonfiction has blossomed. It is fair to say that nonfiction is in its “heyday.”
Today’s nonfiction not only educates but it also entertains. I credit the late and great Kathleen Krull (1952-2021), for making nonfiction fun and “sexy.” She helped popularize nonfiction picture biographies. Her signature witty style was to add “juicy bits of gossip” to her subjects. She also interjected her own voice, which broke the nonfiction mold. She hooked readers with fun facts and a bit of sass.
Gone are the days of “boring” nonfiction. The following are the top five promising trends in children’s nonfiction.
- Today’s young readers read in pictures. (Just watch a kid swipe through Instagram. Images tell stories, way more than words can.) Nonfiction graphic novels continue to appeal to our screen-obsessed youth. This makes sense in a world of social media and streaming.
- Today’s young readers want to be “in the know.” They want to know things before anyone else. Nonfiction that addresses obscure or little-known fun facts excites a generation that has information at their fingertips. (The key to good nonfiction is when readers are hungry to learn more. We have all googled “facts” after reading or watching something.)
- Today’s young readers want to get a lot of content with as little reading as possible. (Think: Bite-size.) A trend in nonfiction is presenting information in chunks; for example, anthologies and collections are on the rise. Reading books from cover to cover is not necessarily the norm anymore. Readers like to flip through pages and learn something right away.
- Today’s young readers are activated. They are watching current events unfold and want to learn more. More and more nonfiction address issues related to racial justice, human rights, marginalized communities, and more. A trend that I, personally, love seeing is an increase in books about the Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) experience, which helps to combat escalating anti-Asian hate.
- Today’s young readers are, in many ways, the same as yesterday’s young readers. Gross and goofy will always be gold. Young readers love and have always loved humor. Today’s young readers also love all things “edgy.” (We have a popular culture that loves true crime, cults, and all kinds of whatnot.)
That stated, the key to any
good nonfiction is a good story. Fiction or nonfiction matters not. What
matters is being compelling. Find the story in nonfiction and tell it.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Dr. Virginia Loh-Hagan is the
author of more than 350 books for young readers. She likes to write about her Asian
American heritage and about anything on the odd side. Currently, she serves as the
inaugural Director of the Asian Pacific Islander Desi American (APIDA) Center
at San Diego State University. She is also the Co-Executive Director and
Director of Curriculum Development of The Asian American Education Project. In
addition, she is a former K-8 classroom teacher and university teacher
educator. She is committed to supporting equitable classrooms and to increasing
the voice and visibility of APIDA communities.
Edgy children's books? I'm a grandma who doesn't know much about edgy. I wouldn't know where to begin writing something edgy for kids. I guess I'll have to talk to some of the younger generation. I always enjoy a challenge!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this post - I'm taking note of the trends and always on the lookout for compelling topics!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the trends :)
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the importance of nonfiction and why readers like to read books with interesting and surprising facts, Dr. Loh-Hagan.
ReplyDeleteSuzy Leopold
Thank you for your post. I'm amazed at your resume! Congratulations on all of your achievements!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Dr. Loh-Hagan, for these insights into promising trends in children's nonfiction. It's good to be up-to-date on current trends.
ReplyDeleteYour observation that the way we label nonfiction as "not fiction" with fiction used as the standard is a good one. I immediately thought how many times I'd taught the difference between the two, perpetuating the binary labeling!
ReplyDeleteGreat insight. So helpful! Thank you. And I appreciate the shout-out to Kathleen Krull and her books.
ReplyDeleteTerrific upcoming trends especially: "Nonfiction that addresses obscure or little-known fun facts excites a generation that has information at their fingertips." This describes my upcoming book of outrageous facts--fun to write but a challenge to research with SO MUCH misinformation out there!
ReplyDeleteThose are promising trends!
ReplyDeleteThanks for these terrific insights - very promising, indeed!
ReplyDeleteGreat post, thank you for highlighting the trends.
ReplyDeleteLoved your advice in finding the "edgy" message in non-fiction. Great reminder that kids really want to know things but often prefer content visually. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteAdding drawings and labels could work in non-fiction other than in science. Thanks for the tip!
ReplyDeleteThank for sharing these trends.
ReplyDeleteI'm doing a panel discussion on nonfiction this year. This is so helpful. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteSo insightful! Thank you!!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the heads up on trends and remembering the great Kathleen Krull.
ReplyDeleteThank you. Sometimes the obvious is right here but we (I) don't see it until someone points thing out.
ReplyDeleteThank you for pointing out the trends. This insightful post will come in handy when I visit the library to sign out my next pile of books.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the reminder about the trends.
ReplyDelete