Genre and all that…
As a reader, do you pay attention to genre? Same question to you if you’re an author. “Genre fiction” is often a snooty put-down, but bookstores invented genres long ago as a means to order their bookshelves, and they’ve hung on, even though cross-genre books abound and one can now argue against the need for them. As a reader, I don’t pay much attention to genre—maybe more so than Amazon’s star ranking, though—I’ll read almost anything if it piques my interest. I determine that from the book blurb and the “Peek Inside” feature for the most part if I’m buying it at Amazon. And I’ll make a confession: if I’m browsing for books in a bookstore (I do more browsing on internet sites these days), I’ll leaf through the book and then go home and buy the ebook version (it had better not be comparable in price to the paper version, though—that kills any motivation for buying).
As an author, I NEVER pay attention to genre while I’m writing the novel. Following Clancy’s advice, I’m just telling the damn story! I’m a storyteller, not a mystery writer or sci-fi writer or…you get the idea. When I release a book, I have to think about genres sometimes—retail sites ask for them—but I just consider them keywords. Sometimes it’s easier to describe one of my books by saying what it’s not. My YA novel The Secret Lab is NOT a magical fantasy story, and my new novel Rogue Planet isn’t either, but hard sci-fi, space opera, and fantasy are good keywords for the latter because it contains elements of all those genres—adventure and saga would be some other key words.
A recent review of the second edition of The Midas Bomb commented on my disrespect for genre in a positive fashion: “I particularly enjoyed the many different genres the author includes: thriller, mystery, psychological, political and a little romance to top it off.”—Legalmagic’s Amazon review. (Note that the second edition only has three reviews. The first has more. I guess it’s legit that Amazon doesn’t combine them?) The reviewer could have added crime, police procedural, and counterterrorism—the first two are often considered genres or subgenres; the last maybe should be. This is a good review comment. It lets the reader know s/he shouldn’t be expecting a pure mystery or purely political novel. S/he should only be expecting a rockin’ good story because that’s what I always strive to deliver.
I often fear that genres are used as much as a book’s success by authors as indicators of how to write to market. Romance and erotica are hot (double meaning, I suppose)—should I write books in those genres? Dystopia and post-apocalyptic are hot too in the sci-fi world—should I write exclusively in those genres (I have some books like that—I cut my reading teeth on the classic dystopian novels)? Does the astounding success of Weir’s The Martian mean I should write about potato farming on Mars? (I wrote about a Martian colony in the second half of More than Human: The Mensa Contagion—don’t remember any potatoes.) I have many story ideas. When I turn them into books, I don’t think about genres—that’s too restrictive. Story ideas lead to stories, pure and simple.
Of course, readers can restrict themselves to certain genres. Many do. Again, I do it ass backward, though—as a reader, I won’t read romance or erotic novels. That’s using genre negatively, I suppose. I won’t read steampunk either—seems stupid, just like the bodice rippers, but those are just personal tastes. Every reader has a right to develop her or his own. I would still prefer that readers fall into an internet mindset and think of genres just as keywords that describe a book succinctly. That makes Legalmagic’s review above full of useful information for readers, for example. Who knows? That “little romance” might just cause a reader of books in the romance genre to try the book and be pleasantly surprised. Romance is a part of most characters’ lives, after all. In fiction, the story has to seem real, and to deny characters some romance now and then doesn’t reflect reality!
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In libris libertas…
June 30th, 2016 at 10:01 am
As a reader, I do think of genres when I skim. In a bookstore (Brick & Mortar) I (like you) skip the romance shelves, give a cursory glance at the “general fiction” shelves (Barnes and Noble shelves horror fiction in their general fiction instead of having a dedicated area for the genre) and go for the mystery, SF and finally the YA shelves. (IMO, some of the coolest concepts for stories are making their way into YA novels.)
That said, I’ve read a few romances that I did enjoy (tried writing a vampire romance once with a friend many years ago but we couldn’t seem to get on the same page) and while there is so much stuff in the “brands” of stories I do prefer to read, I wouldn’t eschew a romance just because it was labeled “romance.”
On Amazon, I also tend to use their categorization when I browse, but usually I’m finding things by recommendations and by reading blogs and comments and such. (I’ve found many good authors, including one Steven M. Moore, that way.) If I like their comments, if I like the way they seem to think, I am more inclined to give their novels a try…
July 2nd, 2016 at 5:45 am
Hi Scott,
About bookstores using genre, I’ve seen “Horror and Paranormal” as a section that contains King and Koontz. They tend to get in “Suspense and Thrillers” and “Fantasy and Science Fiction” too. Most other authors are shelved only in one place, and that might not be to their liking.
About finding yours truly via blogging (posts or comments), I think that shows the importance of participating there. In my case, I have many more real visits to this blog than I do readers…sigh….
Take care.
r/Steve
PS. The email from WP telling me about your comment went to spam this time. Guess they’re trying to generalize the pain? 😉