Guest Post: Science in YA by Lauren James
Today we are welcoming author Lauren James to the SundayYA blog to talk about a theme any fan of her books will be familiar with: science in YA.
The Quiet at the End of the World features two characters who study STEM, just like my other books (I have a niche, and it is intensely nerdy characters). This time, Lowrie, the protagonist, is an engineer and her best friend-slash-lifelong-crush Shen studies evolutionary biology. They are also both archaeologists, but they would never call themselves that. Lowrie has her own workshop full of tools and carries a supply around with her just in case there’s anything that needs fixing and/or breaking open. Shen has a permanent stack of books he wants to read, full of information he hopes will help him understand the crumbling civilisation around them. He’s not so great at the physical side of things, but he has Lowrie for that. She and Shen are the perfect team – skills and smarts, they call it.
I chose engineering for Lowrie not only because I’ve already done biology (The Next Together), computer science (The Last Beginning) and physics (The Loneliest Girl in the Universe), but because while representation of girls studying STEM in books is rare, there’s something even more rare. Fictional girls almost never get to study the hands-on sciences, like engineering, which is experimental rather than theoretical. I took GCSE engineering when I was at school, and I was the only girl in the class – and most of the boys had signed up because they thought it was about car mechanics.
Not only do Lowrie and Shen study science, but they love, love, love it. It’s one of the things they bond over the most. They spend a lot of time discussing things they’ve read (“I read this thing that said…”). Lowrie and Shen just like weird stuff. I wanted to capture a kind of pure enthusiasm for science – not the dull studying and memorisation by rote which is how most people experience the subject, but the excitement and curiosity of learning something interesting about a topic you’ve never heard of before. The joy of seeing a chemical burn green, rather than the density of learning chemical equations. Scrapheap Challenge and Robot Wars, instead of Horizon.
Science is wonderful – full of mysteries we still don’t understand, and facts so strange that they seem closer to magic. I firmly believe that if everyone let themselves explore the things they really enjoy, instead of assuming that the entire subject is equations and dry theories, then the world would be full of a lot more scientists. Scientists who came to it naturally, through the spirit of discovery, like Lowrie and Shen.
Thank you Lauren!














