Gordon Korman on the joy of writing for young readers
CBC Radio | Posted: December 19, 2016 11:54 AM | Last Updated: December 19, 2016
It's hard to imagine a more prolific writer than Gordon Korman. He wrote his first book, This Can't Be Happening at Macdonald Hall, when he was in Grade 7, and since then he's written over 80 books that have sold more than 17 million copies around the world.
Shelagh spoke to Gordon Korman in 2013.
On writing for middle-grade readers
It's kind of funny. I started writing really young, and as I got older, I experimented with writing for teenagers. I assumed that because my characters were getting older as I was getting older, that at a certain point I would write an adult book. But it just kind of never happened. And now, I have zero interest in writing for adults. It might happen one day, but I love the kids' book world.
Changing trends and enduring stories
Trends change a little bit. These days there's a lot of fantasy and dystopian literature, and I think there's more of an emphasis on a lot being at stake — the future of the world is at stake, or saving humanity from Voldemort. That kind of stuff. But I still think that there's a lot of place for something really similar to what I started out with — a school-based, kind of funny book about realistic, believable characters that also happens to be a page-turner.
Gordon Korman's comments have been edited and condensed.