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ayarbo wrote:
I have a question…how do you know in which genre you have written when your novel has several elements of many? Can you recommend any books/references?
Books? Orson Scott Card’s How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy and Talking about Detective Fiction by P.D. James come to mind. There’s also a book… just let me look it up… On Writing Romance: How to Craft a Novel That Sells by Leigh Michaels (which I have not read). Stephen King’s On Writing addresses the three levels of horror writing (terror, horror, and blood and guts basically), if I remember correctly. I know more books about writing different forms, such as screenplays or short stories, rather than genres.
As for your question of how do you know what you’re writing, my suggestion is to distill your story to its essence. Get rid of trappings or elements that are peripheral, or even central in a purely plot sense. Every story is, at its heart, simple: what is the central conflict and what, ultimately, is at stake? I’m afraid I can’t be more specific than that without knowing particulars of your story, but here are some broad guidelines:
Fantasy: The impossible/unexplainable plays a vital role in character evolution and resolution to the story.
Science Fiction: Extrapolation of the hypothetical or possible plays a vital role in character evolution and resolution of the story, and usually in offering an idea or commentary about current life.
Horror: Evil or malevolence find some form of personification or expression designed to challenge readers with their own negative emotions for the purpose of catharsis.
Literary: Commentary on society (mostly contemporary) that fosters ambiguity and develops conflict to its most complex and leaves the reader to supply a final resolution.
Inspirational: Conflict is overcome in a manner designed to validate morality and basic human goodness, often attached to religion and spirituality.
Adventure: Plot driven stories that play heavily on exterior stakes, mostly using a male protagonist who cannot change too severely over the course of the story because substantial capability is required from the beginning.
Romance: All other elements and stakes of the story are subjugated to the fate of one or a small number of potential romantic relationships.
Women’s: Relationships and societal forces challenge and facilitate evolution of a woman as an individual or women as a close group.
Mystery: A story about what is going to happen or why did something happen.
Thriller: A story about will the protagonist survive significant harm or tragedy while trying to resolve a crisis or question.
And, just in an attempt to helpful, here are some tips about writing for specific ages:
Children’s: The story resolves allowing children to still be children.
YA: The story resolves with children being forced to adopt some adult skill sets.
Adult: The story is not one of the previous, or looks upon childhood or youth with a measure of nostalgia.
Does that help, ayarbo? If you want more specific feedback on what your story may be just head to my contact page and give me a short summary.
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Susanne asked:
What is the difference between Science Fiction and Speculative Fiction?
Consider speculative fiction something of a super-genre, or a category that includes several mainstream genres: fantasy, science fiction, and horror. Each of these genres then split off into multiple sub-genres (think high fantasy or military sci-fi). It is called speculative fiction because these stories all have a major speculative element, or something that is not factual in reality. Fantasy is usually defined by something magical or mystical; science fiction involves something that may theoretically be possible given extrapolation of our current understanding of natural law; horror generally involves some incarnate of evil, whether literal or metaphorical, often a being or entity of some sort (which is what differentiates horror from thriller).
So, you can think of speculative fiction as the big tent under which fantasy, science fiction, and horror all reside. I use the term speculative fiction more than most because much of what I write doesn’t fit cleanly into any of the three main genres under the tent. This is sometimes called a ”slipstream” story, or a story that slips from one genre to another and back. I find it easier to call my writing speculative because it doesn’t mislead people into expecting something more well defined, which much of my writing isn’t. If people read some of my stories expecting high or epic fantasy because it’s called fantasy, they’ll be confused and maybe disappointed.
Next post: an update on my visits to Farnsworth and Jordan Ridge Elementaries.