Q&A with Eric Red discussion

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Don't Stand so Close
Taking risks in a Y/A novel.
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Eric
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Jul 10, 2012 04:11PM

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A lot of the responsibility has to do with the morality of the piece and the author being sure his or her theme has the right human values. That's more significant than the amount of sex or violence required to tell certain stories. Sometimes graphic is good, but many of times it's not how you show it, it's how you don't show it, because then the audience or reader films in the blanks and their own imagination can be much more powerful.
There's also a peculiar double standard in America where strong levels of violence are acceptable in current pop culture but sex is taboo to a surprising degree, even though it's less harmful. Not so outside the US. Probably the puritanical heritage in this country.
There's also a peculiar double standard in America where strong levels of violence are acceptable in current pop culture but sex is taboo to a surprising degree, even though it's less harmful. Not so outside the US. Probably the puritanical heritage in this country.

Just the reverse, seems to me. It's interesting that many of the books popular with Y/A readers like the Harry Potters, Hunger Games and others deal thematically with young people being brave facing the threat of utter annihilation, or having to kill their friends to survive. That seems to be in the mythological consciousness of teenagers today, who seem a more hard-nosed generation than ours. I worry sometimes whether kids today have no childhoods.