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Colored Papers
Susan Stoderl

Writer's Life | Writers Helping Children Cope | Writing Middle-Grade Books

Updated: Oct 24

children ballooning at the ocean
Quote by Maurice Sendak

There is a good reason to write and read children’s fiction for ages 8-12. Writers of middle-grade fiction can help children cope with overwhelming situations they feel are beyond their years and abilities. Children of all ages—whether you are three or ninety-three. It would be a human fallacy to believe that the child is completely gone even at an advanced age. It is the human condition. Encounters with loss of love, death, losing that prize you coveted, and not getting to go to summer camp or the school you wanted, are just a sample of childhood dilemmas.


Parents divorce, grandparents die, and sometimes there is not enough to eat, or money to pay the bills. Sometimes, parents have to work so hard, that a child is often alone. Perhaps, they have a medical or mental condition that makes their life difficult.


What can help with the resolution of these events or feelings is a book that takes them on an adventure or solves a mystery. Maybe it replaces boredom with excitement. Snarkiness is useful. It can address what a child wants to say to a bully or an adult. It can teach them to look at an embarrassing situation and then come to laugh about it.


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