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Science grounds science fiction; authors take care to keep the stories plausible with known science.
Fantasy: contains supernatural elements not rooted in science though telepathy seems to overlap between science fiction and fantasy. Authors do not take great care per se to synchronize the stories, characters, etc with known science. More metaphysics. Beings, races, etc. that may contradict known science. May be set in any time/place and combined as part of other genres (eg., historical fantasy).
paranormal: largely set in the present or very near future with supernatural themes. Tends towards vampires, werefolk, etc.

Science fiction: you take everything from science and you streeeeeetch it. For example, people go to the moon, they plan to go to mars, these are the facts but as a sci-fi writer you have them doing more like living in mars and travelling from galaxy to galaxy etc. You take a common virus and you turn it into a super virus that wipes out half the earth's population.
Fantasy: Magic, witches, curses, other worlds, epic creatures (unicorns, dragons, fairies etc).
Paranormal: Ghosts, Vampires, werewolves, spirits, haunted hauses and these kind of stuff.


I would say it's sci fi too

The only way it would be classified fantasy or paranormal is if there were also things like ghosts and witches involved, or if it took place in an unknown, mystical realm.
Hope that helps, G.G.
Bryan wrote: "Oh, and there are never any stupid questions! : )"
I appreciate that!
I appreciate that!
Okay, what about this:
If the X-men storyline contained no futuristic elements, how would you classify it?
If the X-men storyline contained no futuristic elements, how would you classify it?

Fantasy- Magic, spiritual, fictional worlds or plots to which a hero is the main focus.
Paranormal- the weird, strange, ghosts and the unknown.

Fantasy = impossible
Paranormal = maybe :)"
I kind of like your point of view Ed.
Thank you Dimitrios and Bryan. That helps.


I've read paranormal fiction where teens may have special powers, but then generally everything is on a smaller scale--smaller villains, smaller threats. Once you get super-sized, you have comic book/superhero.
Thanks, everybody, for your input! I guess it varies from person to person, though many ideas are the same. I've heard Stephen King's Carrie referred to as straight fiction, sci-fi, as well as paranormal. I'm not sure there's actually a wrong answer...

There's a lot of crossover between paranormal and horror, and they might even be the same thing--with one difference. The primary target of a horror book is to scare you. Paranormal just means having paranormal elements.


And, personally, I think I would classify Stephen King, in general, as Supernatural Horror (including It, Carrie and Christine). The majority of his books deal with the supernatural, while at the same time trying to scare the bejesus out of you. Then, there's the other side of him, which is strictly character drama (i.e. Shawshank Redemption and Stand By Me (aka The Body)), but those are few and far between.
What would you say makes each genre unique? I'm genuinely curious to find a majority opinion...