The Sword and Laser discussion
Which box do you belong in?
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So yes its a double edge but necessary sword in an information age where you need a way to sort through all the stuff being thrown at you.

Some books interest me more than others and while I am sure author X is a great author I am not interested in some genres and i really do not want to dig through 50 romance books to find a good fantasy or military science fiction book.
Yes good books can rise above their genre and appeal to a wide audience, the Millennium trilogy and harry potter certainly proved that.
How do you suggest we decide what to read if we should not be labeling or categorizing books?
I really don't want to read about canning techniques of the 18th century or other topics that are equally uninteresting to me.


Another advantage I can think of for labeling is helping readers to avoid what they do not want. Someone who is sick unto death of stories about dark fae in modern cities, for example should know to avoid urban fantasy labeled as such.
I don't have much patience for people who are put off books because of the shelves they've been put on; I don't care for horror, but if a book description makes it sound like a good read, I'll read it.


I like specific labels for genres I like. I could care less about the sub-genres for Romance because it's unlikely I'm going to read it anyhow. But if I find a SciFi/Fantasy book I'm thinking about reading the sub-genre it is makes a big difference to me. An example I can think of would be Post-Apocalyptic vs. Space Opera they are both science fiction but they are drastically different. Plus I think we should all have a Sword and Laser shelf, but that's a completely different topic.
On a side note I've really had to restrain myself from saying anything immature about boxes and what I'd like to put in them. I hope you're all happy I didn't stoop to that level.

For myself I like having a basic idea what I'm going to get into. Do I feel like reading fantasy right now or rather some science-fiction or maybe something completely different. I also like to mix things up so that I don't follow up one fantasy book after another.
Some of the bad things that can happen is a) you don't get what you expect, because someone told you it was "this-and-that" and for you it was really something else. That doesn't necessarily make the book any bad, but you can't help but having some kind of expectations and maybe choosing a book exactly because you thought it would be something it turns out not to be. Also, people can be put off by genre labelings because they think they don't like the genre. I'm pretty sure that goes for most genres. On the other hand, really, that's these peoples' loss. I try to stay open and read outside my preferred genres. I lean towards SciFi and Fantasy because the stories speak to me a bit more, but I don't stick to it. And I've read awesome books that weren't SciFi or Fantasy and I've read not-so-good books that were. So there.

I have my music divided into my own categories too - geek rock, angry women, etc. That's beside the point.
I think if labels were more descriptive, it would be more helpful. For instance, if someone would label McEwan as "another novel about a bored white academic in a midlife crisis" instead of "literary fiction," I'd know when to stay away!

Ah! A riddle.

*groan*


You mind explaining that one? I'm curious."
Sure. I'm kind of obsessed with cold weather islands and want to travel to all of them - I've been to some of the Hebrides and to Block Island, but want to see PEI, Marthas Vineyard, Easter, the Faroe Islands, Philip Island, the Azores, the Channel Islands, etc. Maybe blame a childhood reading diet of Anne of Green Gables, I dunno. But until I find the magical librarian job that makes me wealthy, I mostly have to live vicariously through books, so I'm always looking for novels set those places.

The seas are different too. Nor'easters bring dark, blocky waves. There is just something indescribable about watching an angry sea crashing onto an empty stretch of beach.

There's usually some simple ones like "best children's book" or "book that seemed the longest", but I also create very specific categories. In the past years there has been "Weirdest Book", "Best Book about Rabbits" (that was Watership Down, naturally), "Most Charming Book", "Best Book with a Vampiry Theme", "Clukiest Use of a Deus Ex" or "Best Kind-of-Victorian Ghost Story". I usually have lots of fun making up these categories and it just shows that sometimes it's hard to find the right box for something.

Anne - <3 - will you be my best friend? Okay, what about linking us to your blog?

My current one is http://herebesubtlety.squarespace.com, you might have to sift through the books category to find the articles. The old blog still resides at http://herebesubtlety.com/ where you can use the "xxxx in Review" categories to get to the top ten lists.

And, Jenny,
I think if labels were more descriptive, it would be more helpful. For instance, if someone would label McEwan as "another novel about a bored white academic in a midlife crisis" instead of "literary fiction," I'd know when to stay away!
Very funny.
hmm
Ok - I was wondering why we have this obsession with categorising books - hard fiction, young fiction, dark fantasy, epic fantasy etc etc etc!
Personally I could care less - all these labels do is put people off because it was categorised as on type or another.
Do these classifications help or annoy you or do not really care either way?