The latest novel idea to get lodged in my head is firmly in the realm of young adult: all the most important characters are teenagers, a big theme is about teens handling big new powers that they have to work out on their own, moral choices and growing up and all that good stuff...
Problem is, it's a spec-fic setting where, for various reasons... the adults are by and large "right". That is, the protagonist is going to be dealing with serious crimes committed by people in her own peer group, and trying to bring them in based on rules set down by society. She's not rebelling against her parents, culture, or government; she's tracking down teens who are.
I'm kinda worried that this violates one of the basic themes of YA fiction, in which teenagers grow up by rebelling against the restrictions placed on them by the adults. "Discover that the adults are part of an evil conspiracy" is pretty standard in this genre; "discover that the adults have put fairly sensible guidelines in place for good reason, and try to stop people who are rebelling against them" seems like it'd go over with teens like a bag of bricks.
This doesn't mean that all the adults are perfect, or that they're the ones solving problems. For various setting-based reasons, the adults pretty much have to sit back and let trusted teens deal with rule-breaking ones. But is the whole "Actually, those rules are there for a good reason" premise going to be a deal-breaker? Most all of the good YA adventure fiction I've read loves protagonists who break the rules, defy authority, and shake things up. I'm not sure "defend the status quo!" is going to work so well, even if it does end up being more complicated than that over the long run.
Problem is, it's a spec-fic setting where, for various reasons... the adults are by and large "right". That is, the protagonist is going to be dealing with serious crimes committed by people in her own peer group, and trying to bring them in based on rules set down by society. She's not rebelling against her parents, culture, or government; she's tracking down teens who are.
I'm kinda worried that this violates one of the basic themes of YA fiction, in which teenagers grow up by rebelling against the restrictions placed on them by the adults. "Discover that the adults are part of an evil conspiracy" is pretty standard in this genre; "discover that the adults have put fairly sensible guidelines in place for good reason, and try to stop people who are rebelling against them" seems like it'd go over with teens like a bag of bricks.
This doesn't mean that all the adults are perfect, or that they're the ones solving problems. For various setting-based reasons, the adults pretty much have to sit back and let trusted teens deal with rule-breaking ones. But is the whole "Actually, those rules are there for a good reason" premise going to be a deal-breaker? Most all of the good YA adventure fiction I've read loves protagonists who break the rules, defy authority, and shake things up. I'm not sure "defend the status quo!" is going to work so well, even if it does end up being more complicated than that over the long run.