Sunday, March 10, 2013

Confused About What Genre You're Writing?


“What genre is this book?”

This is a question that authors ask themselves frequently while writing. Agents ask it when considering representation. Editors ask it when acquiring. Marketing departments ask it while trying to promote the book. Bookstore staff members ask it when trying to categorize the book and when speaking to customers. Readers ask it before buying the book and when telling their friends about the book.

Phew.

The problem is, when you’re writing speculative fiction, all the boundaries seem to blur until you feel like you’re cross-eyed. To give you a brief example, when I wrote my first novel, Afterlife, I saw it as science fiction. When my editor acquired it, however, she asked for a few changes -- not many -- and the book was then marketed as an urban fantasy. To me, that book will always be sci-fi. But to many readers, it’s urban fantasy.

My current novel, Fathom, probably falls into the category of paranormal romance. But to me, it’s fantasy. I never saw the paranormal romance elements when I was writing the book. They’re probably there, but to me it was like a math equation:

Overarching coming of age theme + legendary creatures + mythological elements = FANTASY.

But then, I’m just the writer. Writers don’t usually get to decide what category their novels fall into. They just write the best book they can and try not to worry about things like markets or categories or the dreaded Latest Hot Topic.

So, just for fun, I put together a little Cheat Sheet for helping to define what category the book you’re currently reading might fall into. Now, these are just suggestions, not hard, fast rules. Here goes...

CATEGORIES OVERVIEW:

FANTASY: May take place in another world and often contains magic or supernatural elements. Does not contain scientific themes (otherwise, it would be science fiction.) Usually has a battle of good versus evil. May or may not have romance.
Books: The Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, Game of Thrones.

HORROR: Can contains supernatural themes; meant to scare, startle or terrify. Sometimes rooted in folklore. May have vampires, werewolves, etc. Also may have a gothic tone. Sometimes written very beautifully, despite horrific subject matter.
Books: The Shining, Dracula, The Haunting.

PARANORMAL ROMANCE: May blend elements of science fiction, fantasy and horror. Takes place in our world, but often has otherworldly creatures, like vampires, ghosts, shape shifters, etc. A sub-category of fantasy and/or a sub-category of romance that contains experiences outside the normal or supernatural aspects.
Books: Highlander, Twilight, The Vampire Diaries.

URBAN FANTASY: Usually has a contemporary urban setting -- although the urban setting can be in another time period. Set in our world, which is often populated by otherworldly creatures or immortals. May or may not have romance. Is usually written in first person, and is often graphic, gritty and/or noir in tone. Considered a sub-genre of fantasy.
Books: Small Favor, Moon Called, Dead Until Dark.

SIMPLIFIED VERSION:
FANTASY: The creature lives in another world and is beautiful.
HORROR: The creature is scary and wants to kill you.
PARANORMAL ROMANCE: The creature is a little scary, but wants to kiss you.
URBAN FANTASY: The creature is horrid, and you need to hunt/kill/destroy it.

SUPER SIMPLIFIED VERSION:
FANTASY: Creature—yay!
HORROR: Creature—boo!
PARANORMAL ROMANCE: Creature—smooch!
URBAN FANTASY: Creature—thwack!

Have you ever read a book that crossed genres? If so, which book was it? And what is your favorite genre to read?

...................


Merrie Destefano left a 9-to-5 desk job as a magazine editor to become a full-time novelist and freelance editor. She has two speculative fiction novels with HarperVoyager: Afterlife: The Resurrection Chronicles and Feast: Harvest of Dreams, and her most recent novel, Fathom, is a YA paranormal romance. A regular contributor to the Supernatural Underground, her favorite hobbies include reading scifi and fantasy, attending Comic Con, watching The Walking Dead, and preparing for the zombie apocalypse. For more information, visit her website at merriedestefano.com.

11 comments:

Sharon Stogner said...

bwahahaha! love the super short description... very accurate :)

Merrie Destefano said...

Thanks, Sharon! And thanks for the comment! *hugs*

Dani Harper, Author said...

GREAT descriptions and in small words too -- perfect for me!

Mary Kirkland said...

That's funny.
I actually like Paranormal romance the best. Not sure I've read many that have crossed over into other genres.

Barbara E. said...

Great post! That clears it right up for me. I get so confused when someone asks a question like, what's your favorite urban fantasy. I know there are books I enjoyed, but were they urban fantasy, paranormal romance, etc. Maybe now I'll have a little better handle on it. :D

Helen Lowe said...

Love it, Merrie; such fun! :)

Bonnie said...

Merrie,
Thanks for the descriptions. I love all the above genres.

Terri Garey said...

You are so funny, Merrie, and so accurate! My books have been marketed by my publisher both as paranormal romance AND as urban fantasy, but they've always been "Creature-thwack!" :)

Patricia JL said...

HAHA! I love the super simple version. Too funny.

Carolyn Charron said...

Wonderful! I thought my novel was a horror story but apparently it's an urban fantasy! Who'd've thunk it? ;)

KerrelynSparks said...

So funny! Merrie, you're a hoot!