Queering the Short Story Cycle for Young Adult Fiction

Queer Young Adult (YA) fiction is continuing to grow alongside the budding diversity of the wider spectrum of gender and sexualities in literature, and intersecting factors therein, but for the most part queer YA realism novels follow normative novel structures that may privilege a singular point o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chloe Cannell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elen Caldecott & Lucy Cuthew 2025-07-01
Series:Leaf Journal
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Online Access:https://ojs.library.lancs.ac.uk/lj/article/view/123
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Summary:Queer Young Adult (YA) fiction is continuing to grow alongside the budding diversity of the wider spectrum of gender and sexualities in literature, and intersecting factors therein, but for the most part queer YA realism novels follow normative novel structures that may privilege a singular point of view. Writers for adults seeking ways to represent a diverse range of identities across characters and storylines have adopted the short story cycle. Maxine Hong Kingston, Louise Erdrich and many more short story cycle authors have used the form to explore identity and community, which are themes relevant to writing young LGBTQIA+ characters. Yet this form has been underutilised in YA fiction to tell queer stories. This article considers the potential of the short story cycle for writers telling queer stories to young people. I identify multiple perspectives, connected structure and fragmentation characteristic of the form to make it suitable for telling LGBTQIA+ stories, particularly for characters at the intersection of multiple identities. By reviewing notable examples and scholarship on cycles, I considered how key features were implemented in my own creative practice. My YA short story cycle features multiple intersectional LGBTQIA+ characters and explores themes of identity and community.
ISSN:2753-6920