YA. For awhile, I avoided it, erroneously believing that I was too old for it. I’ve since determined that you’re never too old for the things you enjoy and have truly embraced my fondness for YA. Most of my current adoration for the category is all the developments that have been made for it since I became the target audience, and it all comes down to one word: diversity. There is so much more of it in today’s YA books and it’s not just relegated to race or ethnicity. More light is being shed on gender identities other than cis, be it nonbinary, fluid, or trans. There’s more exposure to the different sexualities outside of hetero-, homo-, or bisexual. There are novels about asexuals, demisexuals, and even pansexuals, such as Technically, You Started It. The possibilities, much like human beings, are endless. More teenagers are feeling seen and heard because there are actually stories about them. While the (very valid) argument could be made that there have always been books about teenagers who identify this way, the difference here is that the stories are more mainstream and receiving that much deserved recognition. Growing up biracial, there weren’t a lot of girls that looked like me in the books I read. While I enjoyed reading The Baby-Sitter’s Club, as well as the various Sweet Valley and other serialized series fiction that saturated the shelves during the ’90s, the harsh truth is that they very rarely had people of color in them. Even if they did, it was limited, they were totally the token characters (sorry BSC Claudia and Jessi but I’m looking at you), and they were almost never mixed. And while there were PoCs in Stoneybrook, there were almost none to be found in Sweet Valley. Even Stoneybrook’s Jessi and Claudia were each the only one of their ethnicities in the town. To be blunt, there was no way in hell that an interracial family would have been accepted in either suburb because it wouldn’t have been accepted in the books at that time. Even in “higher” literary circles mixed people were given the short end of the archetype stick by being cast as the “Tragic Mulatto,” probably best identified in the main character in the 1949 movie Pinky. These characters were ones who were always at the epicenter of some terrible identity crisis either trying to pass as white, or breaking down mentally since they couldn’t handle what they were. The definition of mulatto is doubly insulting with what it represents, although the same can be said for all racial slurs. Needless to say this was not very encouraging to see growing up, and later in my college literature classes. With there being so many more options out there, the reading youth of today can pretty much throw the proverbial rock in a bookstore and land on a book where they can find a likable and non-stereotypical character that they identify with. Take Rick Riordan’s The Kane Chronicles; the protagonists are a biracial brother and sister with a white mother and black father, which is what my parents were. This is something that is called out numerous times in the books. It’s also mentioned that Sadie takes after their mother and Carter their father, which is something that often happens with biracial people. Genetics are funny like that. Other examples of biracial children in YA literature of today includes The Girl Who Fell From the Sky and The Sun is Also a Star. Again, there are more options available nowadays than I had growing up, and it is flat out amazing. Truth be told, I’m jealous of the young book dragons of today because they have so much to choose from. While I still appreciate and have fond memories of what I read growing up and will even occasionally reread them, they aren’t without their problematic themes. I live vicariously through the YA of today, because I know that if I had these options as a young bookish person, there are many parts of my life that may have been more than a touch easier for me. There would have been a fictional character that I could relate to. Critics of this change in the genre likely feel that it’s too much and that it is catering to a specific group just to sell books, and everyone is entitled to their opinion. However, these naysayers are also probably from a group that has never ever been marginalized. They probably have never felt unheard in any aspect of their lives. They’ve probably never have had to read a book, either assigned or recreationally, where there wasn’t always at least one person painted in a positive light that looked and acted like them that they could identify with. They don’t know how joyous it is for us who have had, at one time or another, had to check the “Other” box to finally see ourselves in popular fiction or what a wonderful feeling it is to be more than the token PoC, or sassy gay friend. They don’t know what it’s like to have a story focused on a character that looks like you where you don’t end up in a gang, hooked on drugs, or dead. So to them I politely say sit down, be quiet, and let us have our moment. We finally have a friend in a book to walk along the early, sometimes tumultuous, sometimes awkward path of those formative years with us.