Maureen McGowan – Compliance Promo – Guest Post and Giveaway

Maureen McGowan – Compliance Promo – Guest Post

 

Guest Post-Black and Blue

An Ode to YA by Maureen McGowan

 If you talked to me five years ago, I’d have said, not only did I not read young adult fiction, I certainly had no plans to write it. I knew that publishers had started to acquire and publish more YA fiction, based on the success of Harry Potter, but I didn’t think that it was for me. I figured I’d have to tone down my voice, tame my storytelling style, reign in my ideas. No way did I want to write for “kids”.

I couldn’t have been more wrong.

The first (modern) YA novel I read was The Hunger Games and I was pretty much hooked after that. And I’m not the only adult who feels this way. Respected author, Nick Hornby (About a Boy, High Fidelity, etc.) said,

“I see now that dismissing YA books because you’re not a young adult is a little bit like refusing to watch thrillers on the grounds that you’re not a policeman or a dangerous criminal, and as a consequence, I’ve discovered a previously ignored room at the back of the bookstore that’s filled with masterpieces I’ve never heard of.”

And more recently, author and media guru, Chuck Wendig said in his blog article, 25 Things You Should Know About Young Adult Fiction,

“…some of the bravest, strangest, coolest stories right now are being told in the young adult space.”

And these two quotes encapsulate my own awakening. YA books are about teens, but they aren’t just for teen readers.

YA books are no longer juvenile. They’re no longer just for kids. And they sure aren’t like the books shelved in the teen section when I was a teen.

In fact, I realized my thinking about writing YA Fiction was backwards. Adult fiction was forcing me to reign in my voice and color inside genre lines. By writing YA fiction I could write whatever I wanted. I could blend genres. I could be sweet or passionate or brutal. I could be sweet and passionate and brutal within the same book!

I love how daring, challenging and well-written many YA titles are, but I think it’s the genre blending I love the most about today’s YA Fiction. My series, The Dust Chronicles, (Deviants, October, 2012, Compliance, June, 2013, Glory, June 2014) blends sci-fi, fantasy, dystopian, paranormal, spy-thriller, adventure, romance and even a dash of horror. But ultimately the books are (I hope) exciting fast-paced reads that raise both heart rates and interesting questions, without being heavy-handed or pedantic.

If I’d tried to publish these books as adult fiction, editors would have told me that there wasn’t enough focus on the romance to shelve it there, there isn’t enough science for the sci-fi aisle, not enough fantasy for that aisle, and they’re not nearly gory enough to be horror. Editors would have told me that I couldn’t write about a heroine, who’s done the things my 16-year-old heroine has done…

But in YA, none of those things were a problem. At all.

And based on my reader reviews on Amazon, the majority of my readers so far are adults, and many of them male. (The reviews from the men, often start with, “I thought I was going to hate this, but…”) Yes, I would love to capture more of the teen girl reader market, because they are so passionate about books, but I’m thrilled that adults are reading and loving my work.

So, my message to you, gentle readers, is: If you haven’t yet read any YA Fiction, you should give it a try. You don’t know what you’re missing!

A variety of suggestions from my favorites: The Hunger Games, Blood Red Road, Forest of Hands and Teeth, The Fault in Our Stars, Code Name Verity, Angelfall and, oh, perhaps one of my books. 🙂

Compliance, that just came out, is the second book in a trilogy, but also works as a standalone title.

 

 

 Compliance
Book 2 of the Dust Chronicles series
Release Date: June 4, 2013

Compliance800
Links to order Compliance: Amazon / Barnes & NobleThe Book Depository

NOTE: Deviants, the 1st book in The Dust Chronicles series, is on sale at Amazon Kindle for $1.99 during the month of June. 

Haven Equals Safety. This slogan is emblazoned on the minds of every Haven employee. But for Glory, life inside Haven is anything but safe. She must hide her Deviant gift–the ability to kill with her eyes–or face death. Training to be a Compliance Officer, expected to hunt her own kind, she secretly works undercover to save fellow Deviants, but when people she trusts turn against her and a powerful member of Management takes her under her wing, Glory questions everything she believes and can no longer tell her allies from her enemies.

 

About the authorMaureen-8068-LR-Color
Maureen McGowan
always loved writing fiction, but side-tracked by a persistent practical side, it took her a few years to channel her energy into novels. After leaving a career in finance and accounting, she hasn’t looked back.

Aside from her love of books, she’s passionate about films, fine handcrafted objects and shoes. Maureen grew up in various Canadian cities and her previous career moved her to Palo Alto and Philadelphia, before she settled in Toronto, Canada where she attends the Toronto International Film Festival each year.

You can find her online at her website (www.maureenmcgowan.com).
On Facebook (www.facebook.com/MaureenMcGowanBooks)
On Twitter (www.twitter.com/MaureenMcGowan)
To make sure you catch the latest news, join her newsletter list. (http://eepurl.com/AlgIb)

Giveaway-White and Blue

Maureen has graciously offered one lucky member of The Reading Cafe a signed copy of her new release, Compliance.

1.  You must be a member at The Reading Cafe. If you are not a member, please register using the Log-In at the top of the page, or by using one of our social log-ins.

2.  If you are using a social log-in e.g. Twitter, please leave your email address along with your comment.

3.  Giveaway open to US & Canada Only

4.  Contests runs from June 16 to June 19, 2013

 

 

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19 thoughts on “Maureen McGowan – Compliance Promo – Guest Post and Giveaway

  1. Maureen, thanks you for this wonderful Guest post. I totally agree that YA is for adults too. This past year I have read so many wonderful YA books, that fast became some of my favorite reads, like Hunger Games, Divergent, Graceling, Deviants, just to name a few, and I know at this moment I am forgetting some.

    • Thanks for having me, Barb! I can’t believe I didn’t put Divergent on my list. Loved that book. Graceling I was less enamored with for some reason… I think I’m in the minority there. A YA fantasy I did love was Girl of Fire and Thorns.

      • Maureen, welcome to TRC. One new YA I discovered, since I did a review, and it was different, is The Rules of Disappearing by Ashley Elston. It is not dysotopian, but it was an excellent book. If you want to try another YA. 🙂

        • Oh! I haven’t even heard of that one. Will look it up. Have you read A.S. King. Her books are also awesome. Most are realistic contemporaries. I particularly loved This is Vera Dietz. Ask the Passengers won the LA Book Prize last year. She’s very good. (And an awesome person.)

  2. Great guest post Maureen. I have had some issues with YA lately -everything seems to revolve around a love triangle. I will definitely check out your series. Sounds like some great adventure

    • Yes… there are a lot of love triangles. I think maybe because they often happen in our teenage years. I was in the middle of two different ones as a teen. Well, one of the boys was in both triangles, but at different times he had different rivals… And I was basically crazy looking back at it. But when you’re 15-16, you don’t always look at things the way you would as an adult.

  3. Hi Maureen and welcome back to The Reading Cafe. Love the guest post premise because YA is quite the hot genre. There are many varying opinions on the YA storyline but your series sounds amazing. Congratulations.

    • Thanks, Sandy! YA books are really diverse, I think, but there has been a huge wave of popular ones in the dystopian genre. I admit that my book has elements of that… but I think it has more adventure and is faster paced than most of them. It’s less about the dystopia… The dystopian is more like the setting.

  4. I enjoyed the post and learning more about Maureen and her books. I have never paid attention to the label YA, if the book sounds good and I hear good things about it, I’m all for reading it, no matter what the label is. Actually if there isn’t a bunch of gratuitous sex, all the better in my opinion. I have Deviants on my TBR so I guess I need to read it soon so I’ll be ready to read Compliance.

  5. nice to meet you maureen. i dont read ya, but your post makes me relook at that choice. ill have to check out some of the books you and barb mentioned.

  6. Great guest post Maureen. I can’t say I have read any YA books of late, Its where to find the time. But congrats on your new read Maureen, and I do have you marked down. Love the hair mine has the purple .

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