Renay is Crazy!, or Nerds Heart YA Round-Up and Nerds Heart YA 2010?

I never imagined whining about the fact that a book tournament was ego-stroking books that needed no more ego stroking would result in this. I had no idea, none, zilch, no clue. I am in awe and touched and honored that this idea spread so far and reached so many people (like the authors! Oh gosh guys Drew Ferguson commented on my blog excuse me while I go have a fangirl attack. WHO NEEDS EDWARD CULLEN WHEN YOU HAVE YA AUTHORS.)

The winner of the tournament was My Most Excellent Year, although going into this I wanted to be clear that winning was subjective—as all reading was. The point was to read these books we might not have otherwise read. It was a haphazard project, because on top of doing it and running a very complicated writing exchange and working full time at $dayjob, I dropped the ball a lot (oh ffffff was there more than one ball? I feel like I dropped 1,000 of them, if you were a judge and I dropped your ball I am so sorry).

I dropped the ball in organization, especially. Foreign YA, YA with POC, just to name a couple, were not very well-represented. The process for choosing the books was hard, too, because we all had different opinions. There were many books nominated that deserved to be on the list, and there were many books overlooked that deserved to be on the list.

People have been making noise about Nerds Heart YA 2010 and to them I say: maybe. I’m not sure, for as much fun as I had, I worry that the same issues will crop up. How do we make the nomination process better? How do we evaluate which books didn’t get enough attention? What, really, is our scope? This is the question we need to answer. For instance, if we chose to make our scope book blogs in general, how does that change the process? If we say: what books didn’t get very much love on book blogs last year? Is that more helpful than trying to guess at sales statistics we don’t have access to and word of mouth?

I love that Nerds Heart YA put GLBTQ YA on the map in a very real, focused way, because I don’t see it reviewed often and when I do oftentimes it reads like the summary was lifted from a publishers website with no citation (boy, can we have a Blogging With Integrity site for that?) and most of the reviews spend copy time talking about how the book has gay characters but it’s still totally okay and it doesn’t matter that they’re gay!

Man, I am tired of reading reviews that are basically defenses of reading a book where people make out with someone of the same gender. I’m not kidding! If Nerds Heart YA shows one thing, it’s that these books are good and no one has to apologize for liking them, or defend them like the book can’t stand on its own unless TEH EVIL GAY inside the pages has been declawed with a warning that it’s there, but it’s okay because you’re warned about the gay! You’re safe.

Seriously, GLBTQ YA can be enjoyed, characters can be identified with…it’s all the same, if people step outside their comfort zone.

I would love for Nerds Heart YA to do that with other books that don’t get picked up: books with minority characters, books by minority authors who don’t get the same publisher push as their white counterparts, and I could go on and on and on. Again, I return to the scope issue: what is our scope?

As for Nerds Heart YA 2009: I loved it and was super glad to be a part of it. It taught me a lot about thinking outside the box, and working with people so very different than me, and uhhh trying to match people with books so they didn’t hate me forever and ever? The judges were great, super awesome folks who went above and beyond—because also, this project was about supporting these authors.

Honestly, everyone did a wonderful job, and I feel lucky to even know these people who made this small, tiny, almost insignificant idea I had not only plausible, but a reality. I am benefitted in my corner of the book blog community, endlessly, endlessly, to know such rockstars. Thanks so much, guys.

For those following at home, here’s the final result for Nerds Heart YA 2009, bolded titles denoting the winners.

Round One:
Valentina: My Most Excellent Year versus The Opposite of Invisible

Jodie: The Last Exit to Normal versus What They Always Tell Us. Round One decision.

Natasha: Feathered versus I Know It’s Over. Decision Post.

Ali and Lenore: Alive and Well in Prague New York versus Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before. Lenore’s decision post and Ali’s reviews and decision post.

Mary Ann: Cracked Up To Be versus The Shape of Water.

Trish and Vasilly: The Screwed Up Life of Charlie the Second versus Debbie Harry Sings In French; decision post.

Kelly: The Latent Powers of Dylan Fontaine versus Leftovers.

Becky and Kailana: Pretty Monsters versus The City in the Lake

Round Two

Heather: The Last Exit to Normal versus My Most Excellent Year; decision post.

Amy: Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before versus Feathered; decision post.

Laza: The Screwed Up Life of Charlie the Second versus Cracked Up to Be.

Stephanie: The Latent Powers of Dylan Fontaine versus The City in the Lake.

Round Three

Nicole: My Most Excellent Year versus Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One Before.

Michelle and me! The Latent Powers of Dylan Fontaine versus The Screwed Up Life of Charlie the Second: Part One! and Part Two!

Round Four: Finals!

Chris and Nymeth: My Most Excellent Year versus The Screwed Up Life of Charlie the Second, Part One! and Part Two!

If I’ve missed a post (and it’s likely), or you’ve written up any Nerds Heart YA posts of your own, please share them in the comments so I can add them to my archive of the project I’m going to be building. Don’t worry if you get caught in the mod queue! I’ll fish you out. Link away! :)

10 comments

Chris said:

First of all, Who needs Edward Cullen at all?

Second of all, you didn’t drop any balls!!!! You were a rockstar yourself throughout this whole thing. Seriously Renay, this superstar mega project would’ve never happened without your genius idea and all of these wonderful books wouldn’t have gotten the love (or sales boost) that they’re getting if it weren’t for you.

I agree that next year (because I’m seriously hoping there’s a NHYA 2010) we should reach out to minority authors and books about POC more than we did this year. I don’t think that we purposely shunned those groups this year, it just happened that way…which is still sad. But overall, I think this project just rocked and I’m so happy just to be a part of it.

Maree said:

I was cheering from the sidelines, but it was a fantastic idea, and you are a rock star! And if you do decide to do it next year, I can give you some Kiwi recs if you like … all of you did an awesome job :)

Nymeth said:

I think that focusing on books that didn’t get much love from book blogs would be a good strategy. Not only because it’s easier to measure than sales, but because I suspect it actually is a good indicator of how much attention those books got in general. If a book is starting to get some buzz, bloggers tend to pay attention.

Then there’s another thing…this year we were all a little bit hesitant to include books none of us had read on the list, even if they sounded good and didn’t seem to have received a lot of attention. If there was a larger number of volunteers, maybe we could have people read from the long list first so we could make more informed choices?

I SO hope to see Nerds Heart YA happen again next year.

Jodie said:

Just wanted to drop off a link to my first post about Nerds Heart YA for your archive:

http://bookgazing.blogspot.com/2009/04/nerds-heart-ya.html

I really hope we get to do this again, but I think you’re right, we need defined criteria next year. Composing a shortlist would be easier next year because everyone’s on the alert for books published 09 and people are forming lists in their head as they go along. Longlist readers would be a really good idea but intensive, still the Booker judges read all the longlist before they make shortlist decisions. And it’s a good idea to think about whether we narrow down the scope from all neglected books to a more specific kind of neglected book (and oh gosh that makes me think of multiple contests running at the same time with all the winners of each contest going into a massive show down to avoid claims of literary ghettoisation (not a word probably) but that also makes me think of your head twisting all the way round).

Anyway I also really hope this contest changes, grows and comes back next year!

Michelle said:

I’m with Chris….who needs Edward Cullen we have our own sparkly goodness in you!!

I think you did a phenomenal job putting together a project of this magnitude. Despite the logistical and organizational issues that something like this brings along you handled them all in stride and most importantly navigated it to a successful completion.

I want to thank you for bringing me in on this as not only did I have a great time reviewing with you but I also read a couple of books I likely wouldn’t have otherwise. So if nothing else comes out of Nerds Heart YA the fact that you’ve done that means something!

As for next year, I hope you do decide to go again next year for purely selfish reasons. Perhaps you can do a new theme each year to focus on the overlooked in that area :)

Oh and you can totally call on me to participate any time!

Kelly said:

Renay, we’re all fitting this stuff in on top of our “real” lives, so don’t you dare apologize! You did an awesome job. :-)

I agree with Nymeth that book blogger buzz is probably as good an indicator as any.

I would like to keep it open as far as which types of books we focus on. My reasoning is that by including more mainstream books in the bracket and putting them head-to-head with other books, we’re pulling in more interested folks. If we were just to focus on one area (say GLBTQ just as an example), I feel like *some* people might skip over posts about the tourney because that’s not a topic they generally read about. And I’m not talking about close-minded folks here, either. A lot of folks pass up GLBTQ books because they think they won’t identify with the characters. This tourney opened some eyes in that regard, but I don’t think that would have happened if we had “branded” it as something specific.

I really, really hope we have NYHA 2010 too. :-) I would be happy to help coordinate on the backend if you want/need help. Organizing is my idea of fun, kinda sad but true. ;-)

Hey, I just thought of something for those of us keeping a mental tally of titles for next year. I could make a Wiki page now that anyone can add titles to starting now for the long list. Whaddya think?

Heather said:

I LOVED reading all the posts in NHYA and I really hope you do it again in 2010. If you do, I would be more than thrilled to be considered as a judge. Please let me know if you’d like any help with anything! :)

I so agree with you that there are things that we could have done better–which is why we should definitely do it again next year! I’m still kicking myself for not putting out more feelers to get help finding books written by people of color early enough in the process to make a difference–but I love that we ended up with focus on GLBTQ lit in the final round, which developed totally organically.

Thank you for being the brain behind this tournament, it was so much fun. I’d love to help make a 2010 one happen, and I’ve been taking notes on the books I read this year so I’ll be more prepared to make better recommendations.

Kelly said:

I feel like I need to say this out loud somewhere so I don’t forget, but…

Jack Tumor MUST be on our list next year! It was so, so good, but I’ve seen hardly *any* mentions in book blogs…

Heather said:

Oh most awesome Renay, please, please do it again! It was so much fun and we got the word out about so many great books! I’ll be happy to help in anyway I can, just say the word!