Let's face it: some kids just don't like to read. Increasingly,
parents, teachers, librarians and editors are looking for books
that will appeal to reluctant readers.
When I was writing Best
Books for Kids Who (Think They) Hate to Read (Prima Publishing),
I read hundreds of children's books, old and new, that I thought
would fit the bill. I discovered that there are eight qualities
possessed by great books for reluctant readers and to my
surprise some of my childhood favorites didn't pass the test.
If
you can work at least three of the elements listed below into
your book, it will have a good chance of being loved by all kids,
even those to whom reading is a chore.
• Humor
Making kids laugh is essential to building a pleasant
association with reading. But you need to understand what tickles
kids' funny bones at different ages.
The humor in picture books
is broad and very visual. Easy readers (and some picture books
for ages 6 and up) begin to introduce verbal humor: wordplay,
puns, double meanings.
As kids move into the chapter book arena
they can handle jokes that need a setup and a payoff that's
played out over several scenes. Dialogue, how characters react to
each other, or the situation in which a character finds himself
may be innately humorous.
• Well-Defined Characters
Many kids want to identify strongly with
the characters in their books; for reluctant readers, this is
essential. It doesn't matter what the character looks like on the
outside (be it space alien, a clown or a talking frog), on the
inside this character needs to embody the perspective of the
reader.
This means the character is dealing with issues the
reader might face, or seeing the world in a childlike way. Book
characters must have multidimensional personalities with
strengths and weaknesses in order for the reader to care about
them and want to stick with them for the entire story.
In
nonfiction such as biographies, authors who find an element of
their subject's life that is relevant to the target audience have
a better chance of reaching reluctant readers.
• Fast-Paced Plot
Kids who love to read don't mind a story that
takes a few chapters to unfold, but reluctant readers don't have
that much patience. The action needs to start in the first
paragraph and by the end of the first chapter the reader should
know quite a bit about the main character and have a good idea
about the conflict or problem that character will face.
Subplots
are fine for chapter books and up, but too many will get in the
way of the forward movement of story. Keep the pages turning.
• Concise chapters
Ideally, each chapter should contain one clear
event (or one specific point in nonfiction) and have an arc of
its own (a beginning, middle and end). This makes reading even
one chapter a satisfying experience.
Chapters that end on a high
note in the action will make the reader want to see what happens
next. Episodic novels (where each chapter stands alone as a short
story) are also good bets for reluctant readers.
Richard Peck's A
Long Way from Chicago and Louis Sachar's Sideways Stories from
Wayside School are two middle grade examples.
• Kid Relevance
This applies to the themes and ideas that form the
basis for plots or how an author approaches a nonfiction topic.
These ideas should be relevant, meaningful, and applicable to the
reader's life.
Instead of conveying a lesson your adult
perspective tells you the reader needs to know, try using the
reader's frame of reference as a starting point. Write to your
audience, not at them. And remember, books can be just for fun.
• Suitable Text
Depending on the age and ability of the reader,
the text needs to be challenging but not overwhelming. Strive to
write your story as clearly as you can, using active sentences
and concrete nouns and verbs.
When writing for a broad age range
of reluctant readers (8-12, for example), make the vocabulary
accessible to the younger end, but the interest level appealing
to kids on the older end of the spectrum.
• Unique Presentation
Reluctant readers often choose nonfiction
over fiction because it speaks to their personal interests.
Finding a new or unusual slant to your topic helps keep that
interest alive. Humor doesn't hurt either. It's Disgusting - And We
Ate It! True Food Facts from Around the World by James Solheim
appeals to middle graders' love of the gross while sneaking in
some history on the side.
• Visual Appeal
Authors generally don't have much say in a book's
design, but author/illustrators might. Larger typeface, the
generous use of white space, and illustrations that elaborate
upon the text all help break up the string of words and make the
book less intimidating to read.
Laura Backes is the author of Best Books for Kids Who (Think They) Hate to Read from Prima/Random House. She's also the publisher of Children's Book Insider, the Newsletter for Children's Writers. For more information about writing children's books, including free articles, market tips, insider secrets and much more, visit Children's Book Insider's home on the web at Write4Kids.com.