I often hear
things like 'genre is just a tool made up by marketing people.'
Yes, that's
true. That does not make it bad,
though. Imagine going into a store and
wanting a new fantasy novel, only you have to search through every single shelf
of fiction to find one. Or worse,
searching through places like Amazon.com, book-by-book. So let's start by saying that genre
distinctions are a great tool for readers.
But what
about authors? Yes, they can help you
define what you are going to write and let you know what certain expectations
might be.
However, that
doesn't mean you have to write to fit a genre.
In fact, you shouldn't. You
should write whatever suits you for the story you want to tell, and genre
should be the last thing you consider. And if that means you write something that
crosses genre lines, all the better. Genre
designations are not meant to be walls.
Oh, but how
will you ever market such a thing?
How about by
marketing it to all the genres included in it?
Hey, and doesn't that mean you will be marketing to an even larger
audience than if it was just one? So,
let's not look at genres as something horrible and limiting.
Some of my
earliest published material crossed genre lines combining fantasy with science
fiction. I loved writing the book. (The third book of the Dark Staff series:
Crystal and the Stars.) I hadn't even considered
such things as genres when I came up with the plot. I only thought about how the new ideas would
interact with the olds ones.
These days,
the most common combination you see is romance and something else. I don't write romance, so that's not going to
happen on my end. I have written
historical (fiction) and fantasy combinations several times, though. A bit more fantasy and science fiction as
well.
I currently
have a story for sale that combines science fiction with vampires, werewolves
and shape-changers in a sort of science fiction/fantasy/dark fantasy/future
urban fantasy sort of way:
. . . Oh yes,
werewolves, vampires -- and worse -- are out in the stars with the rest of
humanity. However, we're more subtle about our presence these days. Humans no
longer believe in the old myths and sometimes that makes them easy prey, as
vampires quickly learned. Many people had disappeared in Terra Nova lately. I'd
heard about it in coffee shops and hotels; the places where humans gather to
gossip and pretend they aren't worried. They didn't know what they faced or how
to fight it and that left the vampires to prey as they wanted. They were
getting bold.
The vampires hadn't counted on me, though.
Someone has to stand between the monsters and the humans.
The vampires hadn't counted on me, though.
Someone has to stand between the monsters and the humans.
No Beast So
Fierce: http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/81265
This was a
case where I worked with a couple different story prompts and suddenly
something very odd blossomed out of the two seeds. Something odd and wonderful and great deal of
fun to write.
There are
times when you want to write something genre-specific. I love to write urban fantasy (though one of
my best is a science fiction, near-future, post-apocalyptic urban fantasy that
combines Cherokee and Egyptian mythology.
No, really.) Most of my science
fiction deals with cultural themes and alien places. I love to write epic fantasy.
But really,
what I love to write is stories that appeal to me. Writers should never limit themselves or
their imagination. If everyone thought
they couldn't step outside normal genre lines, there would be no steampunk, no
urban fantasy.
Don't limit
yourself. Who knows what new great
combination you might come up with!
If you want to get to read about nearly twenty other writers and find out what's on their nightstands, check out the Merry-Go-Round Blog Tour. Be sure to read tomorrow's post by Sharon Kemmerer
2 comments:
Very true. Take away the limits and explore :)
That's a great idea, I always looked for what stood out when marketing my mixed genre projects and totally forgot about the little this and that in the background of the story. Now I have another window and maybe another audience.
Nice Post
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