Curating YA Collections for Boys’ Emotional Growth

A practical framework for librarians building collections, displays, and programming that help boys find themselves in stories — and find stories that hold what they feel.

The Problem

Why Boys Are Underserved in YA Collections

The data is consistent and troubling. Boys read less than girls by middle school, and the gap widens through high school. But the problem is not that boys don’t want to read — it’s that they struggle to find books that reflect their interior lives without reducing them to action heroes, reluctant warriors, or comic relief.

Most YA collections skew toward female protagonists in emotional narratives and male protagonists in genre fiction. The implicit message is clear: girls feel, boys do. When boys do appear in emotionally complex roles, those titles are rarely surfaced through reader advisory or display strategies that reach the boys who need them most.

The shelf is not neutral. What we display, recommend, and booktalk communicates what we believe boys are capable of feeling.

Research in adolescent literacy consistently shows that boys engage more deeply with reading when they encounter protagonists navigating recognizable emotional terrain — identity confusion, family rupture, the pressure to perform a version of masculinity that doesn’t fit. The challenge for librarians is not acquiring these titles. Many already exist in your collection. The challenge is organizing, surfacing, and contextualizing them in ways that reach teen boys without stigma.

This guide provides a framework for doing exactly that — using the Fallboys archetype system to audit, organize, display, and recommend YA literature that centers boys’ emotional complexity.

Collection Development

Building an Emotionally Inclusive YA Section

A collection audit and development strategy centered on emotional range, not just genre balance.

Step 1: Audit Your Existing Collection

Pull every YA title with a male or masc-aligned protagonist. Categorize each one using the five Fallboys archetypes:

  • Falling in Love — First love, heartbreak, romantic vulnerability, learning to be seen
  • Falling Apart — Grief, mental health crisis, family dissolution, emotional collapse
  • Falling Away — Displacement, alienation, migration, leaving home or being left behind
  • Falling Into Identity — Self-discovery, coming out, cultural identity, becoming who you are
  • Falling & Failing — Ambition, pressure, moral compromise, the cost of winning or losing

Most libraries will find a heavy concentration in Falling & Failing (sports, competition, survival) and significant gaps in Falling in Love and Falling Apart for male protagonists. This imbalance mirrors broader cultural discomfort with boys’ vulnerability.

Step 2: Fill the Gaps Intentionally

Once you’ve mapped your collection to the five archetypes, prioritize acquisitions in the underrepresented categories. Look for:

  • Male protagonists who cry, grieve, love openly, or struggle with mental health
  • Diverse voices — queer, BIPOC, neurodivergent, and disabled protagonists
  • Multiple formats — verse novels, graphic novels, audiobooks, and hybrid texts
  • A range of reading levels from accessible middle grade crossovers to complex upper YA
  • Both #OwnVoices narratives and thoughtful cross-identity portrayals

Step 3: Maintain the Framework Over Time

Add the archetype classification to your internal cataloging notes. When evaluating new acquisitions, ask: “Which archetype does this serve? Where is our collection still thin?” This turns collection development from an intuitive process into a structured, equity-driven practice.

Programming

Display and Programming Ideas Using Fallboys Archetypes

Five archetypes give you five ready-made display rotations and program concepts — no additional planning framework needed.

Falling in Love

Display hook: “What happens when a boy lets someone see him?”

Feature titles about first love, heartbreak, queer romance, and the vulnerability of connection. Pair with a passive program — a “love letter to a fictional character” post-it wall where teens write anonymous notes to characters who moved them.

Falling Apart

Display hook: “Stories about breaking — and what comes after.”

Titles exploring grief, mental health, addiction, and family rupture. Include a resource card with local and national crisis hotlines. Partner with your school counselor or community mental health organization for a panel or resource table alongside the display.

Falling Away

Display hook: “When home is the place you left — or the place that left you.”

Center narratives of displacement, immigration, alienation, and cultural dissonance. This archetype pairs naturally with Immigrant Heritage Month, Refugee Awareness Week, or a “Where I’m From” poetry workshop using George Ella Lyon’s template.

Falling Into Identity

Display hook: “Who are you when you stop pretending?”

Feature coming-out stories, cultural awakening narratives, and identity exploration. Ideal for Pride Month, but equally powerful year-round. Pair with a “mirror and window” activity where readers identify books that reflect them (mirrors) and expand them (windows).

Falling & Failing

Display hook: “When winning means losing everything.”

Sports narratives, academic pressure, moral compromise, and the cost of ambition. This archetype resonates strongly during exam seasons and athletic seasons. Host a “pressure check” book discussion group exploring how fictional characters handle expectations.

Cross-Archetype Programming

Program idea: “The Five Falls — A Semester of Stories”

Run a five-session book club, one archetype per session. Each meeting features a different title and explores a different dimension of emotional growth. Teens can take the Fallboys Reflection Quiz to discover their archetype before the series begins, building anticipation and personal connection.

Book Lists

Book Lists by Genre and Reading Level

Starter lists organized by format and accessibility. All titles feature male or masc-aligned protagonists navigating emotional complexity.

Graphic Novels & Verse Novels (High Engagement, Accessible Entry Points)

These formats lower the barrier for reluctant readers while delivering genuine emotional depth. The visual and poetic structures provide built-in pacing that keeps boys engaged.

  • Long Way Down by Jason Reynolds — Verse novel. A boy with a gun rides an elevator down, meeting ghosts who challenge his plan for revenge. (Falling Apart / Falling & Failing)
  • New Kid by Jerry Craft — Graphic novel. A Black boy navigates identity and belonging at a predominantly white private school. (Falling Into Identity / Falling Away)
  • Heartstopper by Alice Oseman — Graphic novel series. Two boys discover connection, identity, and the courage to be seen. (Falling in Love / Falling Into Identity)
  • The Crossover by Kwame Alexander — Verse novel. Twin brothers face basketball, family, and the tremor of growing apart. (Falling & Failing / Falling Apart)
  • El Deafo by Cece Bell — Graphic memoir. Finding identity and belonging while navigating difference. (Falling Into Identity)
  • Blankets by Craig Thompson — Graphic novel. First love, faith, family, and the weight of leaving everything behind. (Falling in Love / Falling Away)

Literary Fiction (Character-Driven Emotional Depth)

The core of any emotionally inclusive collection. These titles prioritize interior life, vulnerability, and the messy process of becoming.

  • The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky — Mental health, friendship, trauma, and the ache of feeling too much. (Falling Apart)
  • Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz — Two Mexican-American boys discover identity, love, and the courage of honesty. (Falling in Love / Falling Into Identity)
  • A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness — A boy facing his mother’s terminal illness confronts the monster of grief and truth. (Falling Apart)
  • Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli — A closeted teen navigates blackmail, identity, and the risk of being known. (Falling Into Identity / Falling in Love)
  • The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini — Guilt, redemption, displacement, and the long shadow of moral failure. (Falling Away / Falling & Failing)
  • It’s Kind of a Funny Story by Ned Vizzini — A teen checks himself into a psychiatric ward and discovers what it means to choose life. (Falling Apart)

Speculative Fiction & Fantasy (Emotional Complexity Through Metaphor)

Genre fiction is not an escape from emotion — it’s often the safest space to explore it. Fantasy and science fiction allow boys to process vulnerability through the protective layer of metaphor.

  • The Giver by Lois Lowry — A boy discovers the devastating cost of a world without pain — or love. (Falling Into Identity / Falling Away)
  • A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin — A young wizard must face and accept his own shadow self. (Falling & Failing / Falling Into Identity)
  • Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card — A gifted boy is manipulated by adults and must reckon with the cost of obedience. (Falling & Failing)
  • Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo — Broken boys form a crew, each carrying trauma they cannot outrun. (Falling Apart / Falling & Failing)
  • They Both Die at the End by Adam Silvera — Two boys face their last day alive and discover what connection means under a deadline. (Falling in Love / Falling Apart)
  • The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien — A reluctant, comfort-loving hero discovers courage he never knew he had. (Falling Away / Falling Into Identity)

Sports & Pressure Narratives (Familiar Entry, Unexpected Depth)

Sports fiction is often the first genre boys reach for. The best sports narratives use competition as a frame for exploring identity, masculinity, and moral complexity.

  • Ghost by Jason Reynolds — A boy who runs from everything discovers what it means to run toward something. (Falling & Failing / Falling Into Identity)
  • Gym Candy by Carl Deuker — A football player’s pursuit of greatness leads to steroids and self-destruction. (Falling & Failing)
  • Whale Talk by Chris Crutcher — A multiracial adoptee builds a swim team of misfits and confronts systemic cruelty. (Falling Into Identity / Falling & Failing)
  • Leverage by Joshua Cohen — Two athletes from different sports confront hazing, violence, and the cost of silence. (Falling & Failing / Falling Apart)
  • Tangerine by Edward Bloor — A legally blind boy uncovers family secrets while finding his place on the soccer field. (Falling Into Identity / Falling Away)
Reader Advisory

Creating Reader Advisory Tools with the Archetype Framework

Move beyond “If you liked X, try Y” toward conversations grounded in emotional experience.

The Archetype Conversation Starter

Traditional reader advisory asks about genre preferences. The archetype framework adds a deeper layer. Instead of “Do you like fantasy or realistic fiction?”, try:

  • “Are you in the mood for a story about figuring out who you are, or about dealing with something hard that happened?”
  • “Do you want something about pressure and competition, or about connection and relationships?”
  • “Are you looking for a story about leaving a place behind, or about falling apart and rebuilding?”

These questions map directly to the five archetypes without requiring the reader to know the framework. They give boys permission to name an emotional need through the safe proxy of “what kind of story do you want?”

Shelf Talkers and Annotation Cards

Create brief, honest shelf talkers that name the emotional experience of a book without spoiling it. The format:

  • The emotional hook: One sentence naming the feeling. (“A boy who is afraid to let anyone see how much he’s hurting.”)
  • The archetype tag: The Fallboys archetype, which builds literacy over time. (“Falling Apart”)
  • The format note: Verse novel, graphic novel, or audiobook available — useful for reluctant readers.
  • The intensity rating: A simple 1–5 scale for emotional weight, matching Fallboys’ system.

The Reflection Quiz as an Advisory Tool

The Fallboys Reflection Quiz can be used directly in reader advisory sessions. Invite a teen to take the quiz on a library device. The quiz matches them with an archetype and provides personalized book recommendations drawn from the archive. This transforms reader advisory from a librarian-directed interaction into a self-discovery experience — and many boys respond better to a tool they can explore independently.

Passive Advisory: QR Code Stations

Place QR codes on your YA shelves linking to the Fallboys Archive filtered by archetype. A boy browsing the shelves can scan a code and immediately see a curated list of titles organized by emotional experience rather than alphabetical order. This requires no direct interaction with a librarian — important for teens who may feel stigma around asking for emotionally vulnerable recommendations.

Collaboration

Partnering with Teachers: Cross-Curriculum Connections

The archetype framework creates a shared language between library and classroom.

English Language Arts

The archetype system maps directly to ELA standards around character development, thematic analysis, and narrative structure. Offer teachers archetype-organized book sets for literature circles. Each archetype provides a built-in discussion framework:

  • What is the protagonist’s “descent” — the central emotional fall?
  • What is the turning point where awareness begins?
  • Does the protagonist “rise differently” by the end — and what does that look like?
  • How does the author use craft (structure, voice, imagery) to make the reader feel the fall?

Social-Emotional Learning (SEL)

Each archetype aligns with core SEL competencies. Falling in Love connects to relationship skills and social awareness. Falling Apart connects to self-awareness and self-management. Falling Into Identity connects to responsible decision-making and self-awareness. Provide school counselors with archetype-tagged reading lists that complement their SEL curriculum. Bibliotherapy is most effective when the book selection is precise — and the archetype system provides that precision.

Health and Wellness Classes

Titles tagged as Falling Apart are particularly relevant for health classes addressing mental health, substance use, and coping strategies. Provide discussion guides that help health teachers use fiction as a case study. A novel like It’s Kind of a Funny Story can open conversations about help-seeking behavior in ways that clinical materials cannot.

Social Studies and History

Falling Away titles — narratives of displacement, migration, and cultural alienation — connect directly to history and social studies curriculum. Pair titles like The Kite Runner, Between Shades of Gray, or American Born Chinese with units on immigration, conflict, and cultural identity. The emotional archetype framework helps students connect historical events to personal human experience.

Creating a Shared Toolkit

Develop a one-page “Archetype Quick Reference” card for teachers in your school or district. Include the five archetypes, three to five recommended titles per archetype, suggested discussion questions, and the relevant curriculum connections. This single document turns every teacher in the building into a potential partner in promoting boys’ emotional literacy through reading.

Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Begin by auditing your existing YA collection for male-led titles that explore emotional complexity beyond action and adventure. Use the Fallboys archetype framework to identify gaps across five emotional categories: Falling in Love, Falling Apart, Falling Away, Falling Into Identity, and Falling & Failing. Aim for balanced representation across all five archetypes, and prioritize titles featuring diverse protagonists — including queer, neurodivergent, and BIPOC boys.

The Fallboys archetype framework organizes YA literature into five emotional descent categories: Falling in Love (first love, heartbreak, connection), Falling Apart (grief, mental health, family rupture), Falling Away (displacement, migration, alienation), Falling Into Identity (self-discovery, coming out, cultural awakening), and Falling & Failing (ambition, pressure, moral failure). Librarians can use these archetypes to create themed displays, develop reader advisory conversations, build curated book lists, and design programming that helps boys explore specific emotional experiences through fiction.

Avoid gendered language like “books for boys” which can feel prescriptive. Instead, use archetype-themed displays with questions that provoke curiosity: “What does it cost to keep a secret?”, “Stories about falling apart — and putting yourself back together”, or “When winning means losing everything.” Pair books with brief, honest shelf-talkers that name the emotional experience without spoilers. Rotating displays by archetype theme keep the section fresh and give you five ready-made display concepts throughout the year.

A strong collection spans multiple reading levels (middle grade through upper YA) and genres, because emotional complexity appears across all of them. Include literary fiction, verse novels, graphic novels, speculative fiction, sports narratives, and nonfiction memoir. Graphic novels and verse novels are especially effective entry points for reluctant readers. Each genre offers unique ways to explore vulnerability — fantasy through metaphor, sports fiction through pressure and identity, and verse novels through the intimacy of compressed language.

Librarians can offer teachers curated archetype-based book sets aligned to curriculum standards — ELA units on character development, SEL objectives, health class discussions on mental wellness, and history courses exploring identity and displacement. Provide discussion toolkits with open-ended questions organized by archetype. Co-host reading circles or book clubs structured around a single archetype theme. The Fallboys framework gives both librarians and teachers a shared vocabulary for connecting literature to emotional development goals.

Put the Framework Into Practice

Explore the full Fallboys Archive to find titles for your collection, or dive into the Archetypes to understand the framework that makes reader advisory conversations easier and more meaningful.