Fantasy Book Club discussion
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How has the introduction of romance affected the fantasy genre?

To me, I do not enjoy a fantasy when the MAIN component is the romance. You can't escape that part of it, I think, but I am thinking for some reason of the Darkfever series which is written by a romance novelist and is actually found in the romance section of my bookstore! I don't think that series belongs in the romance section. I think all of this paranormal romance crud (ack!) should have its own section.
I guess I don't mind the romance in my fantasy, as long as I would CLEARLY not file the book in the romance section! :)

Now, I don't mind some romance in my fantasy, as long as it doesn't overshadow the fantastical elements. And, as long as it's one man and one woman...not the dreaded love triangle, which is a technique that is way overused in my opinion, especially in young adult paranormal.




When I look at something classed ..."
Sooo.... doesn't matter if the book has wombat-centaur wizards throwing fireballs while riding on the back of dragons over an abyss of demonic hordes... once two of those wizards start kissing, well, gee, that's a ROMANCE novel. Not fantasy. No, not at all...
Regarding the OP - when has romance not been part of fantasy? Even famously-reticent Tolkien included romance plots in his work.


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The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
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Its like:
GIRL: OMG! you so beautiful and drop dead gorgeous and im gonna love you forever.
GUY: I've spent centuries in torment and nobody touched my cold vampire/werewolf/shifter/fey/demon..etc heart like you just did!
THE 3RD GUY: OMG! She's so beautiful, i have to have her! We are going to be awesome together!


Ok, i understand that for a writer, its frustrating. And the easiest way would be to go with it and cash in on it. But a good writer can make it without contributing to a parade of bad taste. Its so much harder to make a quality fantasy piece, the sort of books that Jaq mentioned. That is fantasy!
Let lovey-dove stuff stay where is belongs. If not, then im going to spend more time with my other 'love' - horror! They stake sparkly stuff there:)

I personally don't find myself reading Paranormal or Urban Fantasy books (I hope that's what you were talking about) as they don't appeal to me personally. As such I couldn't say whether they have cheapened or enriched the genre as a whole, however, the will have broadened the fanbase and one can only hope that someone brought into the fantasy section by them may chance to look around and decide to pick up an epic fantasy or something, which would lead to good things :D


If it can happen to one then it can happen to more... and soon, SOON WE SHALL HAVE THEM ALL!!! *cough* sorry, where was I? Oh yes, the Fantasy fans taking over the world, that's right.... Mwuahaha!


Not at all. There's a romantic angle in most stories, regardless of genre. But if the romance is centr..."
Maybe, but it will also read like a fantasy novel. So I suppose what matters is whether you want to read fantasy (in which case who cares if there's also romance in it) or whether you just want to avoid reading fantasy. The latter is legitimate, but it's weird to protest that fantasy romances are in the fantasy section just because you want to be able to use 'fantasy' as a label to avoid romance with.

Ok, i understand that for a writer, its frustrating. And the easiest way would be to go with it and cash in..."
Who SAYS that romance doesn't belong in the same book as dragons?
[I'd quibble over Pern, by the way - several of the books seem to primarily be romance stories, and iirc one of the short stories is nothing but a sex scene with some romance tacked on]
And yeah, you'd NEVER get romance in horror. Imagine, what teenager would read a romance novel with, like, vampires in it, or werewolves, or creepy stalkers?

As for romance belonging in the same book with dragons. Sure it can. You can put romance in the same book with what ever you want, but if its a book primary about romance then its a romance book and not a fantasy one.
You do understand a difference between a romance novel and a element of romance in a novel, right?


Romance in fantasy needs greatly to be better done. Used as a motivation love can be an extremely powerful tool. Used as a core plot device it is often predictable and a little cringeworthy.

I agree. Erikson's romances are far more believable because they aren't perfect, rosy versions of love. Romance handled badly can ruin a good fantasy. Look at the WOT series. Perrin going all drippy over Faile. Mat going all drippy over Tuon. Rand going all drippy over Elaine, Min and Aveiendha. Need I go on? It turned into a soap opera!

Kushiel's Dart is direct in what it entails: A woman whose superpower is masochism in the bedroom, but, here, I thought the book revolved around intrigue more than sex. She does fall into the honey trap of "throbbing cock," though. Blah! The Wise Man's Fear does have some sex nouns in it, which may have surprised people. I would like to point out that you can only spill the orange viscera from so many thousands of orcs before readers get numb to it. A bit of a romp in the enchanted woods is a much needed diversion for the genre.
I would say the keys are correct marketing, and verbage that does not draw the reader out of the fantasy setting. Because romance is going to happen. Couples who swing swords together, stay together.

I think if I read a fantasy ( as opposed to a paranormal romance) I am expecting some in depth stuff. I would consider true fantasy to be roger zelazny, Brandon Sanderson, Brent weeks, Trudi Canavan etc. if I'm feeling like reading fluff I will go pick myself up a paranormal romance. And I like when I am reading any genre that I can put it firmly in a category. As long as the romance in my fantasy actually fits I don't mind.

From fantasy I want depth and substance. There is nothing wrong with fluff, just not when i don't want it.
Paranormal's are like a contaminant. And some of their targeted audience has such low expectations. I don't want that to happen to fantasy, or horror...or any other genre. So i'm thrilled that there is a genre just for them, they should stay there.

I agree with you, Hayley. In general I do not like romance, like porn it gets boring quickly. I do not mind relationships which may be romantic, but certainly do not want it to be a major part of a novel. Or if it is an important theme, I don't want mushy, but conflict that drives or is related to other themes. I think Janny Wurts did an excellent job of integrating the romance of Arithon and Elaira into her epic fantasy. But, PNR, please. I don;t even consider it Fantasy.


Fluff is a problem when you get too much of it, but I would say on the whole, the way that most use it--as simple, honest to god character devices--works well. The works of Robin Hobb, for example. Romance always factors into the lives of the characters therein, but is it the driving force of the series at large? No. It does beautifully for fleshing out characters, and giving them greater depth, for connections and the drawing of the reader down deeper into the lives of what they're witnessing...but Hayley's got the right of it, it should work in conjunction with, not overshadow the primary fantasy aspect. When romance is the primary drive--oh dears, guess what, they have another genre for that.
Unfortunately, this is also a day and age where you have so many books bouncing between the genres because so many silly people don't know how to classify them, and that leads to problems in its own right...
As to Pratchett, well, he has his niche. He does it well. Would or could everyone pull it off? No. Amusing to think of him as an "outlaw," though.

Quite the opposite with me. I like authors who know how to mix ideas into something new but harmonious. If an author starts to think his story in "certain categories", he might write predictably and maybe reproduce one single idea in various books. That's definitely not what I want. But I'm not saying every book clearly fitting a category is like this. It is maybe more relaxing to read such books.

Not sure what you mean by this. I love romance and humor, its my favorite kind, but Pratchett doesn't come to mind at all. The Princess Bride. Stardust. Howl's Moving Castle. Those do.


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The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
(last edited May 30, 2012 01:46PM)
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A part of me believes that placing paranormal romance in the Fantasy/Sci-Fi genre gives it some sort of "credibility" that romance--in spite of being the most recession-proof genre on the market (NYT and Forbes have done articles on the continuing popularity of romance)--finds mysteriously elusive. I can understand the idea of crossover appeal, but the problem is the stories which in my opinion, simply fail to engage what's so special about fantasy.
As I've said before, I'm not adverse to romance in fantasy, but I have certain expectations. I need for the fantasy elements to be first and foremost. I need the worldbuilding to take me somewhere fantastic, and I need for the characters to evolve. If they have a relationship, it has to feel natural. In a lot of paranormal romances, the "romance" is often due to some cliched "binding" or "the one" trope where the reader simply accepts these two characters are going to be together (whether or not they're actually compatible) because that's what sells.
BTW and this is just me, I don't view Kushiel's Dart as paranormal romance. I see it as historical fantasy with heavy sexual/romantic elements. I most certainly wouldn't shelve it with the Harlequins, LOL


Thank you, Traci.
Romance needs not to be shelved with fantasy to get "credibility." Romance already has credibility. Just ask who makes the most money...it's always Romance. Romance has more lines, sub-genres, more books published per year and a larger readership than just about every genre (with the exception of religious), period.
Also, women readers are the heaviest readers who make the largest volumes of purchase.
So when you add those together...I think that the romances are being shelved with the fantasy in order to start to temp romance readers in to buying fantasy...not the other way around.

why romance in fantasy? I can but guess, maybe the publishers just stereotypically think that if they cross fantasy with romance, they will get more female readers

Ummm...that's what I said...?


MrsJoseph wrote: "So when you add those together...I think that the romances are being shelved with the fantasy in order to start to temp romance readers in to buying fantasy...not the other way around."

well, mutual liking aside :D you are basically right... cramming romance into fantasy just for the hell of it isnt exactly the factor that turns me on to read it... I like when the romance is more subtle in fantasy, when it has to undergo hardships and all to survive in the end - the way you see it was really powerful and fuelled the characters to undergo what they had to... if I wanted romance, I would read either pure romance or a historical romance - or, for instance, classic romance like Jane Austen
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The FountainPenDiva, Old school geek chick and lover of teddy bears
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I agree that romance shouldn't need credibility considering the kinds of sales the genre generates. I work in the romance industry as an editor, so why would I insult it? Trust me, I've attended enough RT and RWA functions to know how well it does and how large the readership is. But sadly, romance like sci-fi/fantasy is not considered "real" or "quality" fiction by some people. That's the problem. And the way I've heard it explained by some industry professionals, the merging of fantasy and romance is calculated to give it that cachet that romance itself just doesn't seem to have. Ironically, these folks view sci-fi/fantasy the same way, but perhaps with a little less disdain. Go figure.



But seriously.... Folks.... Romance is awesome in all genres!.... It adds spice,
tension, goals, heat, fun, a reason for all sorts of things, like oh I dunno....
WAR! Remember Helen of Troy? What about the princess of Barsoom?
Come on kids.... It's our reason for existing!
It's not rings , or power, it's ROMANCE!
Just playing devils advocate, ok?
Books mentioned in this topic
Stardust (other topics)Belgarath the Sorcerer (other topics)
Swordspoint (other topics)
The Elvenbane (other topics)
The Curse of the Mistwraith (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Samuel R. Delany (other topics)Andre Norton (other topics)
Kate Elliott (other topics)
What do the rest of you think?