Literature written for adolescents and young adults.
Sinònims
Examples for "ya"
Examples for "ya"
1But I did something today that I really need to tell ya.
2MANAGER: I'll tell ya bud-yercomin' around at a pretty good time.
3I dunno... a 'Hey, Captain, how ya doing?' will work just fine.
4Catch ya's later. However this was widely seen as a negotiating gambit.
5You know what John, it's good to see ya doing so well.
1The theme of teenage pregnancy is by now a well-established one in young adult literature.
2Music, sport and young adult literature have all been happily singing from this feminist hymn sheet for some time.
3There is a perception around that young adult literature is passe, that teenagers go straight from Goosebumps to adult authors.
4One of the great pleasures of young adult literature is that you get to imagine yourself as the most important person in the world.
1Ruth Fielding is a character that will live in juvenile fiction.
2Half a dozen poems there were; but of novels not one above the grade of juvenile fiction.
3Janice Day, the "Do Something" girl, is a character that will live long in juvenile fiction.
4One of these lists contained works in juvenile fiction; the other, biographies, histories, and books of a more instructive character.
5In general, except that he did not write juvenile fiction, his work in subject and style closely resembles that of his brother, Jacob Abbott.
1No library is complete without these valuable contributions to juvenile literature.
2Such flower-garlanded instruction was the best specifically juvenile literature which those primitive ages afforded.
3Mr. Jones, in his "Special reading lists," gives many such references to juvenile literature.
4Buying only " juvenile literature" they are of the smallest.
5That he confined himself for so long a time to juvenile literature can be easily accounted for.
1Charlotte Graham reviews new young adult fiction that deals with tough issues.
2YA books on death: is young adult fiction becoming too dark?
3Acclaimed writer of young adult fiction; his latest novel is Life: an Exploded Diagram.
4Nor is she the kind of feisty action heroine now common in young adult fiction.
5It also won the best young adult fiction award.
1It is also perfect for enthusiasts of teen and YA literature; from teachers and librarians, to parents and youth workers.
2That shouldn't have been radical, but at the time it was extremely radical because we'd never seen that in YA literature.
3It is for this reason that illness depiction in YA literature needs to go further by expanding into "survivor literature".
4There are some modern European countries without much challenging YA literature -Italy is one, I'm told -so it's never a forgone conclusion.
1Does the age of an author matter when writing YA fiction?
2Why YA fiction needs to embrace disability Read more We have shared some sad times.
3YA fiction has been around for a long time.
4The panelists spoke also about boundaries in YA fiction.
5A combination of junk YA fiction and classic YA fiction, I devoured everything I could find.
6People are not defined by their disease and it is this that should be reflected in YA fiction.
7So it's probably unsurprising that it was John Green who introduced me to the vast universe of contemporary YA fiction.
8Without denying the impact -especially financial -of those stories, it's important to note the vitality and diversity of YA fiction today.
9Yet like much YA fiction these days, this book ends with the promise of a conclusion, but no conclusion, and I found that frustrating.
10Read more Of course, it isn't just those who are sick who may benefit from these more realistic portrayals of cancer within YA fiction.
Translations for ya fiction