Book review
Teen fiction’s lasting impact
Why the genre has stuck with many women for years
Of all the books teens read during those formative years — required or for fun — some fade from memory like bad fashion choices while others carve a niche that lasts a lifetime.
In her latest book, “Paperback Crush,” Gabrielle Moss, author and lifestyle editor at Bustle, takes readers down pop culture memory lane, exploring the 1980s and ’90s preteen paperback genre. Think “Sweet Valley High” or “The Saddle Club” or the “Wildfire” romance series. She offers a researched and nostalgic look back at what made the genre so successful, from cover art and feminist themes to fan favorite authors and publishers.
The Chicago Tribune talked to Moss about what book still gives her the heebie-jeebies and why so many teen novels from those decades have stuck with her all these years. The following has been edited for length and clarity.
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It is a messed-up book. I had not seen it as a teenager, but reading it now (I’m 36) it was upsetting. But I think a lot of people were permanently affected by “The Face on the Milk Carton.” It definitely gave me a severe case of the heebie-jeebies. (In the Caroline Cooney novel, a teen girl finds out she was kidnapped as a young child, and the people she thinks of as her parents are not her biological parents.)
I think a lot of teens go through that stage where they’re like, “I’m nothing like my parents. How can they be my parents?” I remember reading that and thinking: “What if they’re not?” They are — we have since proved that they are — but in that moment in the culture there was so much constant talk about kidnappings. I remember having a home fingerprint kit from our local police station so just in case you got kidnapped, your parents would have your fingerprints.
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Were the answers to those questions always correct? Probably not. But I think it was a really worthwhile time to ask these questions. … With the caveat of V.C. Andrews. I don’t think V.C. was answering any important questions. I think most of us read her way too young. I don’t know what’s the right age to read V.C. Andrews — maybe age 30?