Fantasy Aficionados discussion
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When is fantasy not fantasy?


Maybe they're "fantasizing" about the vampires...yeah, that's all I've got as an idea.



On the other hand. I remember a time, when Fantasy only included what we are now calling Epic fantasy. Vampires were "horror" or Thrillers, Fantasy meant horses, sword, sorcery and maybe monsters.
Once the Horror based "fantasy stories" (Urban Fantasies) became accpeted fantasy. Then the explosion of what was considered fantasy affected all forums discussing it.
There was a time, when the catagory (genre) was considered "Sci-fi/Fantasy" It was fantasy if it had swords and sorcery, but in the same genre, and if it had blasters and space ships or some type of scientific problem/issue it was science fiction. Anything else, like the creature features The Beast Maker by James V. Smith Jr. if it wasn't considered a sci-fi monster (Created by man in a labratory) then it belonged somewhere else.
I think on the other side of the fence, (I think a good complication) writers have felt more freedom to reach out of the box, less confined by formula.
Even though I experience the same frustrations I see here about all this vampire stuff in the Fantasy Genre, Vampire Romance, Teen hillbilly vampires, werewolves in High School etc. that I agree should be classified as something else, I don't think the over all outcome is bad.
Some books which I enjoyed, like "Hounded" might not have a place in a publisher's mind as acceptable and would be harder to push through.
Anyway, those are my thoughts. Growing pains suck (Change pains) but that's why the middle two letters of Growth is OW! Growth is still good.


This means that urban fantasy is a definition of fantasy. Also, YA should be included in fantasy, just because it features main characters that are in their teens, it does not mean that it isn't fantasy.
And why are vampires and werewolves not fantasy? This doesn't make sense to me.

To be more specific, I just left a group where the fantasy book of the month is the tale of a girl's attempt to not miss a Mexican holiday. No fantasy elements at all.
Anyway, just thought it'd make a good discussion topic to see what people thought applied and didn't...which appears to be correct, as we're getting a few different opinions already.
Edit: Now now, let's not be mean about the Wikipedia reference. :)

Fantasy, to me, has always been more than just high fantasy. Fantasy has always been about the "impossible." So that's why I think that vampires and werewolves should be included in the genre.

To be more specific, I just left a group where the fantasy book of ..."
I totally agree with you Jim. Unless she must go through a magical world or is late because she meets a unicorn, I wouldn't consider it fantasy.
Are you sure the group doesn't have a non-fantasy read every month?



Thank you. Most people see one thing they dislike and then refuse to read the rest of the post because the person was wrong on the first point.
And for the record, I know just as many adults as kids that read these YA romances, not just my generation (which isn't really mine being that I'm 21, but yanno).
Do you have a better website for reference for stuff like this?

Odd. I don't understand that one. People must have not paid attention to the genre and then just decided to vote/nominate what they wanted to read.



I believe I've had this conversation before. Once again I'll say that I've always liked this 'what if' idea about fantasy myself. The problem is that this is too easily corruptible into the idea that all fiction is fantasy which in many ways is true but helps no one.


I would like to agree with that and a few months ago, I would have. However, now that I'm trying to seek out friendly locations to discuss the style that I write (epic fantasy), I'm getting infuriated with the "we only do fantasy...oh wait...what we mean is (insert random subset that may or may not even be fantasy-related)" mindset I'm finding all over the place. The ambiguity over what "is" fantasy was once appealing, but now it's driving me batty.
When someone says fantasy and then leans towards sci-fi, I blink and nod. When someone says fantasy and leans towards non-fiction, I want to stab myself in the eyes.
Maybe that's just me. :)



Easier with examples...
Game of Thrones: Basic fantasy. Not a lot of "OMG that cannot happen in the real world." I've heard that's changing as the story goes on, but I've fallen behind. Bad on me.
Lord of the Rings: Kind of a middle ground. There's magic and monsters, but they aren't bold enough for me to quite say epic fantasy...but maybe.
Deathgate Cycle: Epic fantasy. Lots of magic, the rules are very different from our world, etc.
That's my interpretation...your mileage may vary.


For me the scale of the action is the controlling factor. Magic might be minimal, I don't care. It might just be so accepted it isn't noted that much. But if it's affecting a huge area and huge numbers of places and peoples, then it's epic.
GoT, epic, LotR, epic, Malazan, epic.
Whereas tales of fantasy where the rest of the world is unaware or unaffected, not epic. Most urban fantasy, I'd think, would fit here. As would tales like The Sorcerer's House, Midnight Riot.


I think the problem is apples, oranges and Roses.
Apples are apples, Oranges are oranges, a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.
Or if that didn't help muddy things up a bit try this. A "Quartermaster" in the Army handles stores and supplies. In the Navy we call that a "Storekeeper". In the Navy a Quartermaster is one of the enlisted rates trained to assist the CO/Officer of the Deck/Ships Navigator in all things navigation.
What I mean is, this is Sheep and Sheep, one or many.
We could take Epic fatasy and NAME it Guns and ROSES. It would still contain what ever the genre includes. So the term "Fantasy" has two uses here. One, expresses the "name" of the group it belongs in. The other use of "Fantasy" referse to the content of a book (or the nature of the story).
To Quote Colonel Potter (M*A*S*H) "If I had a horse and named him "Man O' War" that doesn't mean he can run!"
By definition in itps purest form, any fiction book could be considered "fantasy" because it is a story "dreamed" up and not about real things.
People tend to act like there is no control over what goes into a genre or not. The words "Fantasy-Genre" are just a name. Anything could be stuck under that name.
By that idea, I don't see anything wrong with catagorizing vampires and YA disco Werewolves into their own sub group.
The book world is acting like the name "Fantasy" given to the Genre is interchangable with the same word Fantasy when used properly in a sentence.
There really is no corelation there beyond "hey, name it somethign so we know what it's about."
It's really more like the "PC vs. Mac" thing, or VHS vs Beta, (DvD vs. Blue Ray?)
It's the old "Spirit of the Law vs. Letter of the law thing. The old way where Fantasy meant swords, orcs and magic, space ships meant sci-fi and vampires were wolves and other supernatural creatures in a modern setting meant Horror was just as valid as the definition in the Wikki piece (again Wikki reflects current situations, rather than defines criteria).
If anyone follows me.
The short version. Someone(s) somehwere could solve this by sitting down and voting on criterion for each genre (named appropriately) or, we can be more forgiving but also more creative and let the functional definition of Fantasy open the door to more unusual and creative things (not all creative ideas are good ones).
It's a choice that may not be ours to make, but it's not like there's a hard fast rule or law on this Genre thing. the phrase "in the fantasy genre" does not have the same meaning as "a fantasy story."
Okay, thank you for letting me type, the crazy man will shut up now... I meant this crazy man.


While its ok for this book series, I don't consider Twilight fantasy. It's PNR. That's the whole reason for the series - it's a romance. Romance is a huge genre that has many different "sub-genres" that encompass the entire range of non-fiction and speculative fiction. You want a M/M romance? Historicals, menages, suspense, steampunk, horror? It's there. Vampires and werewolves are your thing? It's there. Spaceships, lasers, pointy eared aliens? Romance has that, too. Do you find prairie dogs or trees to be especially sexy? Romance has a book for you!
Not that I don't read romance. I read it all the time and reading a historical right now. I just recognize how the many facets of romance are slowly corrupting the categorization of the horror/fantasy genres.


I don't have a problem that they are written. Like I said, I like and read romance. You know this. BUT just because I read it doesn’t mean that I don’t realize it’s romance and not fantasy. The problem is that people are categorizing the books as they should.
A lot of PNR – because of its fantastic elements – is pushing into the fantasy genre. A lot of the genre confusion is the readers. BUT a lot more are also publishers. IIRC after Christian fiction, Romance is the best-selling genre. After Romance comes “spec fic” which includes all fantasy. It’s been a while since I read the studies but IIRC the highest selling spec fic is Fantasy (after romance). SOo….. Romance sells like hot cakes. Fantasy is damn close. *publisher lightbulb!* Let’s see if we can get readers from both sides and sell like mad!



And btw, I'm still laughing at: "Do you find prairie dogs or trees to be especially sexy? Romance has a book for you!"



I've noticed that the most popular shifters trend toward predators...the most common of which are werewolves and dragons. Which slams you back into horror (werewolves) and fantasy (dragons) again.



*snorts water out of nose and blushes fiercely*

;-)
You're going to need brain bleach.

I also disagree with the notion that just because some creatures used to be primarily considered things of horror that that means any story with them in it is necessarily horror and not fantasy or some variation thereof. Also, the trend for vampires and werewolves and things being included in the fantasy realm can be laid more at the feet of UF - perhaps starting with Buffy - and less the YA PNRs.
For me one of the lines which divides horror and fantasy anymore are not, necessarily, the creatures used within it but, rather, the intent. For instance, aspects of magic and the supernatural, while being a heavy definer of fantasy in the forms of wizards and mages and dragons and things have also been used in horror stories. It's generally how these things are used, and the intent of the story, which marks which is which.
If vampires and werewolves and whatnot are used in a story, but that stories intention is not to be scary, to horrify, or terrorize, then I don't really consider it horror.
It's really the same sort of differentiation that exists between fantasy with romance and a romance with fantasy. There can be fantasy with horror aspects, and horror with fantasy aspects, but just because something has some things which are, or have been, considered monsters, this doesn't make it horror if they're not being used as monsters.
Of course, there's also a lot of crossover and, by the look of things, there's going to be more crossover in years to come, and not less. Some people like that sci-fi and fantasy are no longer in separate sections in most bookstores and libraries. Others are continually irritated by this face. Some, noting the crossovers of the various spec-fic subgenres, seem to think there should just be a spec-fic section so that the nitpicking of where something stops being fantasy and starts being horror, or sci-fi, or alt-reality, so on and so forth, can stop. Those who are already horrified that sci-fi and fantasy are lumped together go apoplectic at such suggestions.
And so it goes... and so it goes...
Personally, I'd kind of be ok with a spec-fic area, but that's because I read pretty much across the spec-fic realm (though I don't read much sci-fi). Most of the people who don't like the lumping don't like it because they tend to be more genre specific and have a hard time finding their kinds of books in the larger pile.
Which is a lot like picking up a UF book and having it wind up being PNR.
*Just as a random side-note: Dracula is considered horror, and is often held up as the proof that vampires are meant to be horrified and not romantic... but, in its day, it would've been quite a titillating read being that it is rife with social commentary and breaking taboos, including Victorian sexuality.
Similarly Frankenstein, often considered another quintessential gothic horror, is, perhaps, better considered an early sci-fi story, dealing with the what-ifs of scientific technique, as it is, as well as having a heavy dose of philosophizing about human nature and morality.
Books mentioned in this topic
Magic Lost, Trouble Found (other topics)The Drawing of the Dark (other topics)
The Host (other topics)
The Host (other topics)
Necropolis (other topics)
More...
As a fantasy writer, this just blows my mind. The comparison I keep coming back to is if HBO replaced Game of Thrones with a Lifetime special, would anyone notice. I'm betting they would. Why is it so different in most "fantasy" forums?
Thoughts?