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How do You Read Science Fiction?
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Lara Amber wrote: "I love the fact that sci-fi and fantasy have exploded and has bled over into other genres. Young Adult Sci-Fi/Fantasy has a huge selection and draws many authors who normally write adult fare. Ther..."
I feel there is a lot of confusion on what makes readers frustrated in inaccuracy of science. Such as the premise you put forward that it's like the modern day but zombies are suddenly real, personally I don't care what mumbo jumbo or even need it explained why zombies are real. What I want is everything outside of that in the story to be accurate and consistent.

I too agree that her ideas are original and I read the Newsflesh Trilogy Boxed Set and enjoyed them. However, I thought that the third book was running out of gas gas fast and barely crossed the finish line. I loved the idea that the look at me generation really expanded to vainglorious levels.

I wonder when zombies passed from horror to science fiction. I wonder if it really started with 28 Days Later.

In selecting reads, I look at what's hot in discussions, ratings and rankings, and, to a lesser extent, Amazon reviews. The first chapter from the "Look Inside" usually gives me enough to know whether or not it will end up on my want to read list.
I'm most attracted to post-apocalyptic, time travel, first contact, and futuristic thrillers.
For many years, I preferred to read (and own) hardcovers; never really could do paperbacks...don't know why. Now, with the advent of eBooks and the portability of my Kindle, I read from that format almost exclusively. If I love the book, then I still buy the hardback for the shelf; it's just comforting to see it there.

Although no examples come immediately to mind, I believe there were some precedents in novels and short stories before 28 Days Later came out.
The various alien invasion stories feature similar zombified humans, if not actual zombies as we've come to know them. Invasion of the Body Snatchers and The Puppet Masters for instance, which certainly planted the seed for SFnal zombies.

I think it goes back to that thread we had last year about when is it Science Fiction and when is it Fantasy. When the Zombies have a scientific explanation for existence, live in a science based world, and follow consistent logic, it's science fiction. When they were caused by magic, it's fantasy.
Slightly spoilerish about the zombies in Mira Grant's Feed:
(view spoiler)

1818?...sorta Frakenstein is a lot of the way there with making undead creatures sci-fi.
When Zombies are portrayed as a what if question then it's sci-fi. While a strick definition would be a lot longer you can use common sense. Is it a non-magical event that everyone knows about that caused an outbreak of zombies then it's sci-fi. Is it about some witch who summoned some zombies to haunt some college kids on vacation then it's horror.

It doesn't necessarily have to be horror. It could easily be comedy or romance, or even romantic comedy.

1818?...sorta Frakenstein is a lot of the way there with making ..."
Frankenstein is certainly an early proto science fiction and maybe a true first science fiction. I do not agree with you on the zombie bit though because the monster was very articulate and could converse, which is belied by the more famous movie. As for the horror science fiction zombie debate, I think it may be along the lines I know it when I see it. As for your definition, Night of the living dead is certainly one of the genres classic horror films, but they came back due to a comet, which gives it a science fiction slant. Their bites could also turn you into a zombie, but then so did dying.
Maybe a better example for science fiction zombies was with RE-Animator or Lifeforce.

so agree. I even buy the books if I like the kindle version. However I have taken to buying paperback as I can fit more in the cupboard.
I really don't care what genre they fall into a long as I like the story after the first two chapters.
I become so immersed in the story my children know to "get my attention" before talking to me.

I had an interesting conversation with a staff guy at my local B&N. He's been in the bookstore biz a long time and used to work at an independent bookstore. I mentioned how much I like the fantasy genre, but so much of it is dark now. It could be classified as horror/paranormal. He thought about 75% of current fantasy fiction fits that description.
I speculate that Anne Rice's vampire chronicles and the huge success of the Twilight series have tilted fantasy publishing into the horror and paranormal genres. Then the taste for apocalyptic or dystopic fiction kicks in, and fantasy fiction becomes quite dark indeed.
I have nothing against dark, sad books. I recently read On the Beach and I thought it was superb. But I don't need any more violence, terror, or horror in my life. Not unless the book has something worthwhile to say about the human condition--and most of these books don't. I read the news in the NY Times everyday. That scares me enough.
I'll read anything that's intelligent and well-written, whether it's sci-fi/fantasy, literary fiction, popular fiction, or nonfiction. I pay attention to book reviews and buzz about new books, but half the time the books don't interest me when I check them out. So more often than not I rely on my reader's radar that I've developed over my lifetime. It's surprising how often I'm attracted to a certain book cover. Then if the story idea and the writer's voice align, I'm in.
I've been a longtime fan of Ursula LeGuin's books, based on science and/or anthropology, and Patricia A. McKillip's books, which show a background in English literature and folklore. For a long time I liked Naomi Novik's Temeraire series, because of its solid basis in Napoleonic history. Like so many series, though, the Temeraire series has deteriorated as it progressed. The author runs out of ideas and brings down the quality of the whole series. Or as I like to say, if you keep at it long enough, you sh-t on yourself.
For years I ignored Seanan McGuire's October Daye series because the premise seemed too farfetched (a fairy detective??). But McGuire knows how to tell a story, and unlike many series, every book in her series delivers value to the reader. I think that's worth noting. In YA books, I've enjoyed Rick Riordan's Percy Jackson/Olympians series, another strong set of books. The author has a deep understanding of Greek and Roman mythology. His translation of traditional myths into modern times is spot-on, and that keeps me reading.


I feel like this is true if you include PNR, which is fantasy but it has a different target demo and is often marketed separately as a part of romance. Kind of like how the mystery section is divided. You have the thriller mysteries which deal with things like murder, and you have the warm and fuzzy mysteries that deal with things like quilts and kittens.
Without PNR in the adult fantasy section, I would say it's maybe 50%, which is still a huge margin but less so.

I agree that On the Beach is melancholy, but I never saw it as dark. I was very depressed when I was finished. To me it was like watching a loved one die with their last breaths in the hospital. Slowing down until it is over.
I just love your description of reader radar. I might have to appropriate that description for myself because it is accurate to me too.

I thought the staff guy's estimate was plausible. I had been browsing the shelves and couldn't find any palatable fantasy that I hadn't read yet. He did come up with a few suggestions that didn't feature werewolves, zombies, vampires, other miscellaneous horrors, the end of the world or a world you wouldn't want to live in. That's pretty slim pickin's for three aisles of sci fi/fantasy in a well-stocked bookstore.
BTW, these monstrous creatures can be the subject of wonderful stories when the author has some awareness of their folkloric and/or psychological roots. But most horror/paranormal fantasy feels like Halloween dress-up to me, very shallow in what it's trying to do (i.e., scare you and arouse sentimentality).
Papaphilly wrote: "I agree that On the Beach is melancholy, but I never saw it as dark..."
I thought the outcome was pretty dark. The low-key tone of OTB disguised the terrible story it was telling. BTW, North Korea tested a nuclear bomb yesterday, and China was not happy about it. I tell you, nothing is scarier than the daily news.
I just love your description of reader radar. I might have to appropriate that description for myself because it is accurate to me too.
You're welcome to it.

The death of the planet is certainly dark. However, I see it more as watching a toy winding down instead of a sudden stop. The intervening factor happened prior to the story and while it is certainly on the mind, it is in the background. What depressed me is that the word did not end in fire, but slowly extinguished after the fire and how normal it all was when it ended.

Interesting to note that the first recorded use of the word 'zombie' was in 1819.
In movies, I think the first possible SF zombie was in the 1977 aquatic Nazi zombie flick Shock Wave (aka Almost Human, aka Death Corps). It's the first film I can find where a science experiment created zombies rather than voodoo (or some non-disclosed cause).
It's still really horror in my mind but horror with a scientific explanation could still be called SF.
Books mentioned in this topic
On the Beach (other topics)On the Beach (other topics)
Frankenstein (other topics)
Invasion of the Body Snatchers (other topics)
The Puppet Masters (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Nicholas Fisk (other topics)John Wyndham (other topics)
John Christopher (other topics)
Joan Aitken (other topics)
Isaac Asimov (other topics)
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Well then, Here's to traffic jams!