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Image from How to Write Slipstream Fiction - The Write Life |
Welcome fans of the Sup back list.
Today we are sharing a post by Terri Garey, Supernatural Underground author who writes award-winning and critically-acclaimed urban fantasy. Here are her thoughts from February 2015 on the weird and wonderful genre of Slipstream Fiction.
Read on to discover what makes this form of writing tick!
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Slipstream Goes Mainstream, or Why Weird Is the New Normal
I read an article* in the Wall Street Journal the other day about
"Slipstream Fiction". It was a term I'd never heard before, which
surprised me, but what surprised me even more is that I've been writing
slipstream fiction for years, and didn't even know it!
Wikipedia defines the Slipstream genre as: "fantastic or non-realistic fiction that crosses conventional genre boundaries between science fiction, fantasy and mainstream literary fiction". Um, hello... we authors here in the Supernatural Underground write about ghosts and shapeshifters and time travel and shadowy creatures from other worlds. We weave tales of mystery and magic, blending fantasy with science fiction, modernity with the medieval, and while the settings and characters may differ, the focus remains on the universal aspects of the human condition: the quest for self, the need for love and acceptance, the choices we make on the moral issues between right and wrong, good and evil.
Slipstream fiction is being referred to as "the New Weird", and I, for one, am very glad to hear it. I've never wanted to be a carbon copy of everyone else - I have my quirks (I adore Halloween, avoid red meat, and talk to my orchids while tending them). According to the WSJ article*, I'm not alone, as Slipstream Fiction is a fast-growing genre, indicating that readers seem to embrace the blending of the mundane with the bizarre.... continue reading here.
Wikipedia defines the Slipstream genre as: "fantastic or non-realistic fiction that crosses conventional genre boundaries between science fiction, fantasy and mainstream literary fiction". Um, hello... we authors here in the Supernatural Underground write about ghosts and shapeshifters and time travel and shadowy creatures from other worlds. We weave tales of mystery and magic, blending fantasy with science fiction, modernity with the medieval, and while the settings and characters may differ, the focus remains on the universal aspects of the human condition: the quest for self, the need for love and acceptance, the choices we make on the moral issues between right and wrong, good and evil.
Slipstream fiction is being referred to as "the New Weird", and I, for one, am very glad to hear it. I've never wanted to be a carbon copy of everyone else - I have my quirks (I adore Halloween, avoid red meat, and talk to my orchids while tending them). According to the WSJ article*, I'm not alone, as Slipstream Fiction is a fast-growing genre, indicating that readers seem to embrace the blending of the mundane with the bizarre.... continue reading here.
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We would love to hear about your favorite examples of Slipstream in the comments.
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