KatG
January 27th, 2005, 03:13 PM
I have to disagree with you both on most of your points. (I feel that I'm being utterly obnoxious here, but bear with me while I multi post.)
I don't have a problem with the category. The problem I have is the perception that this genre has in the public's mind. It is nice, in a way, to have a clearly defined section in the book stores. I only wish that it was not a section rife with covers that make the books seem trite and comic bookish.
Again, if the science fiction publishers had not branched out into fantasy and given it distinctive cover art and developed the fan audience for it, genre fantasy would not exist. There would be no section in the bookstore for it, and only a handful of authors would be getting their non-genre adult fantasy published. There would certainly now not be the massive market for adult fantasy fiction that exists today. What you're complaining about is a very small slice of the public which does not like fantasy stories, whether they are genre or non-genre, and changing cover art won't help with that. The request that genre fantasy shrug off its sf genre origins to get in good with literary criticism is a little ungrateful, don't you think? And won't work either because you can dress the story up in any packaging you like, get it reviewed everywhere and there will still be people who think stories with magic in them are silly. You just have to live with it, Gary. When a genre author gets nominated for a major literary award (something with good odds of occurring,) and later on, when one wins the award, you can throw that author's name around if you're feeling disparaged. Or you can leave the genre altogether and publish your work as non-genre general fiction. It worked for Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
Has the fantasy readership been mostly males, KatG? The fan readership is predominantly male still, but draws in lots of females, more successfully than sf probably, cause girls think they're bad at science.
I know that was the case for the sci/fi reader for a long time, It still is the case for the sf fan audience.
and that reader has moved on, which partially accounts for the scant number of titles being published today in sci/fi.
No they haven't moved on and it is not a scant number of titles being published in sf. SF had a massive surge of growth in titles and fan audience along with fantasy in the 1980's. What then happened was that sf couldn't sustain and continue that growth at that rate. Fantasy could only because it got another wave of new fans in the nineties for epic fantasy and for children's fantasy (Harry Potter) which spilled over into the adult genre. In the nineties, sf saw the beginning of a correction, which is not the same thing as a decline. Its fan audience stopped rapid expansion, but the genre is in many ways healthy with a number of authors having great sales numbers. Fantasy, after expanding and expanding, is now starting to see a correction/collapse in epic fantasy because it can't sustain that rate of expansion. Which way sf is going to go -- erosion of fan audience, renewed growth, absorption into the mainstream -- is up in the air right now. Erosion is feared. A financial depression in fantasy is also feared. But the fan audience for sf is still there. It's just compared to the fantasy hoopla, it looks tinier than it really is.
Science itself is ahead of the author, so it is difficult to write anything truly imaginative in that field.
I know this is a popular tune in the media right now, but that's because the media don't actually read sf. The idea that sf is dying because technology has somehow outstripped imagination comes up every couple of decades and has no basis in fact. SF is not reliant on coming up with new predictive scientific ideas. A lot of sf is sociological and has little to do with technological developments. But a lot of people are scared of science and feel they don't understand it, and that's been more of a deterrent to getting new sf fans than the rate of technological change. To say there are no sf ideas left just because we have cell phones? C'mon. Isaac Asimov would laugh at such an over-inflated sense of self-importance.
What about wonderful books like The Mists of Avalon? Where does that belong in the heirarchy?
Don't understand the question -- it's considered genre epic fantasy, one of the earliest. Of course, she was better known for historical romance so you could argue it, but genre fantasy took in everybody when they were getting started as a category. There've essentially been two major generations of genre epic fantasy -- the first waves in the seventies and eighties like Salvatore, Brooks, Feist, Eddings, Bradley, Le Guin, McKillip, de Lint and so on; and the second generation in the nineties to today -- Jordan, Martin (though he wrote very early in the genre too,) Goodkind, Hobb, and so on.
I don't have a problem with the category. The problem I have is the perception that this genre has in the public's mind. It is nice, in a way, to have a clearly defined section in the book stores. I only wish that it was not a section rife with covers that make the books seem trite and comic bookish.
Again, if the science fiction publishers had not branched out into fantasy and given it distinctive cover art and developed the fan audience for it, genre fantasy would not exist. There would be no section in the bookstore for it, and only a handful of authors would be getting their non-genre adult fantasy published. There would certainly now not be the massive market for adult fantasy fiction that exists today. What you're complaining about is a very small slice of the public which does not like fantasy stories, whether they are genre or non-genre, and changing cover art won't help with that. The request that genre fantasy shrug off its sf genre origins to get in good with literary criticism is a little ungrateful, don't you think? And won't work either because you can dress the story up in any packaging you like, get it reviewed everywhere and there will still be people who think stories with magic in them are silly. You just have to live with it, Gary. When a genre author gets nominated for a major literary award (something with good odds of occurring,) and later on, when one wins the award, you can throw that author's name around if you're feeling disparaged. Or you can leave the genre altogether and publish your work as non-genre general fiction. It worked for Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
Has the fantasy readership been mostly males, KatG? The fan readership is predominantly male still, but draws in lots of females, more successfully than sf probably, cause girls think they're bad at science.
I know that was the case for the sci/fi reader for a long time, It still is the case for the sf fan audience.
and that reader has moved on, which partially accounts for the scant number of titles being published today in sci/fi.
No they haven't moved on and it is not a scant number of titles being published in sf. SF had a massive surge of growth in titles and fan audience along with fantasy in the 1980's. What then happened was that sf couldn't sustain and continue that growth at that rate. Fantasy could only because it got another wave of new fans in the nineties for epic fantasy and for children's fantasy (Harry Potter) which spilled over into the adult genre. In the nineties, sf saw the beginning of a correction, which is not the same thing as a decline. Its fan audience stopped rapid expansion, but the genre is in many ways healthy with a number of authors having great sales numbers. Fantasy, after expanding and expanding, is now starting to see a correction/collapse in epic fantasy because it can't sustain that rate of expansion. Which way sf is going to go -- erosion of fan audience, renewed growth, absorption into the mainstream -- is up in the air right now. Erosion is feared. A financial depression in fantasy is also feared. But the fan audience for sf is still there. It's just compared to the fantasy hoopla, it looks tinier than it really is.
Science itself is ahead of the author, so it is difficult to write anything truly imaginative in that field.
I know this is a popular tune in the media right now, but that's because the media don't actually read sf. The idea that sf is dying because technology has somehow outstripped imagination comes up every couple of decades and has no basis in fact. SF is not reliant on coming up with new predictive scientific ideas. A lot of sf is sociological and has little to do with technological developments. But a lot of people are scared of science and feel they don't understand it, and that's been more of a deterrent to getting new sf fans than the rate of technological change. To say there are no sf ideas left just because we have cell phones? C'mon. Isaac Asimov would laugh at such an over-inflated sense of self-importance.
What about wonderful books like The Mists of Avalon? Where does that belong in the heirarchy?
Don't understand the question -- it's considered genre epic fantasy, one of the earliest. Of course, she was better known for historical romance so you could argue it, but genre fantasy took in everybody when they were getting started as a category. There've essentially been two major generations of genre epic fantasy -- the first waves in the seventies and eighties like Salvatore, Brooks, Feist, Eddings, Bradley, Le Guin, McKillip, de Lint and so on; and the second generation in the nineties to today -- Jordan, Martin (though he wrote very early in the genre too,) Goodkind, Hobb, and so on.

