Fiction Books About Home Schoolers

The goal of this blog is to encourage more writers to write more fiction books about home schoolers for home school children to read.

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Homeschool Literature: Books Featuring Homeschooling Protagonists

Sara McGrath, a long-time homeschooling mother of three and the author ofUnschooling: A Lifestyle of Learning, blogs about books where Homeschoolers are the main characters.  

 http://suite101.com/article/homeschool-literature-books-featuring-homeschooling-protagonists-a396656

It is good to see authors writing for this group of readers.  If your children are like mine, there need to be many more books in the genre so they can always find new books about other homeschoolers.

Thursday, January 17, 2013

Literature and Stories about Homeschoolers

homeschoolliterature.com is a website dedicated to literature and stories about homeschoolers. You can find lists of books with homeschool characters, books written by homeschoolers, even a book club. There is a market for home school fiction and there is room for more books on the subject.  I invite you to make your book about homeschoolers part of the Home School Adventurers series.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Fiction about Homeschooling

http://www.homeschooling-ideas.com has posted a list of fiction books about homeschooling.  You can read this list at http://www.homeschooling-ideas.com/fiction-about-homeschooling.html.  Are there other books about homeschooling that you would add?

Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Where Are All the Fiction Books About Homeschoolers?

Where Are All the Fiction Books About Homeschoolers?
Two million home school students want to know.

by Don Milne

It goes without saying that young readers can visit any library or book store and find shelf after shelf of youth literature where they can read books about children in a public school environment.  Homeschoolers make up 5-10 percent of the school age population. So, shouldn't 5-10 percent of the books for young people be about homeschoolers?  It should probably be even higher than this, since homeschoolers as a group are more likely to read more than other children. But if you look at the top 100 children's books on Amazon it is unlikely you will find even one book about homeschoolers.

Why?

The main reason is the gatekeepers that decide which books get published by established publishing companies are not tuned into the home school community.  Look at the background and education of most literary editors and agents and you will see a slant towards liberal and secular world views -- not the mindset of most homeschoolers.

With the rise of ebooks and self-publishing services like lulu, it is now easy to ignore the gatekeepers and bring fiction books about homeschoolers directly to homeschoolers.  It is also more profitable for the authors; instead of traditional royalty rates of 6%, the new channels pay authors 70%.

In an effort to increase the availability of homeschool fiction, I would like to invite writers who want to write stories about homeschoolers to participate in the Home School Adventurers series. Each author who writes a book for the series will have 100% control over the content and profits of his or her book. The only rule is that it be a fiction book with homeschoolers as the main characters. By including many books of this type in the Home School Adventurers series, we will build a brand that readers can come to when they want to read stories about home schoolers.

The first book in the series is one that I wrote with my wife Aneladee.  The name of the book is Home School Adventurers: The Lost Da Vincis. It is the story of four homeschool siblings who are faced with the disappearance of their scientist father as well as their mother and little brother.  With the help of an eccentric uncle and movie star aunt they try to get their family back.

There is a lot of writing talent in the home school community.  Take up the challenge and write the next Home School Adventurers book.