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#31 | |
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#32 |
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The current poll results would appear to disagree with your assertion; 78% of the current respondees have indicated that they read both.
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#33 |
Gizmologist
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Actually, if there had been a "mostly SciFi" option, I would have chosen that. I do read some Fantasy, but it's very much mostly SciFi for me these days.
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#34 | |
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![]() But I think I can see people not identifying it as fantasy, if they use a restrictive definition. Pratchett is an enormous best seller in the UK, for example, and some folks might read Discworld who wouldn't read any other fantasy. They might just see it as a satirical take on society and mores, which it also is. Along those lines, I had a friend years back who read a lot of SF, but didn't like fantasy. I lent him a copy of the late John Bellairs' _The Face In the Frost_. He was a huge baseball fan, and when he got to the bit where the wizard's incantation included "S is for Smead Jolley, the only major league player ever to make four errors off of a single batted ball..." he said "Omigod! Smead Jolley! You don't know..." and was hooked. Afterward, he said "I still don't like fantasy. But I like John Bellairs!" A similar dynamic may be at work. ______ Dennis Last edited by DMcCunney; 10-08-2008 at 11:44 AM. |
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#35 |
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Likewise, Dennis, I know people who like Douglas Adams' "Hitchiker's Guide" books, but would probably claim not to like SF, although I don't think anyone could really classify HHG as anything other than SF.
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#36 |
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i'm another one who would have voted differently for a 'mostly one, some of t other' option -- i tend to be about 70% fantasy, 30% sci fi.
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#37 | |
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![]() And there have been things over the years arguably SF, but published as "literary", with authors carefully not using the SF word to avoid being categorized as writing "that crazy Buck Rogers stuff". ______ Dennis |
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#38 |
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I've felt for a long time that SF and Fantasy aren't really very good genre distinctions (I know: all the genres are arbitrary at some level). I read SF that's mystery, adventure, occasionally even romance. I think Fantasy tends mostly to the Quest sub-genre, but it branches a bit as well.
But at the same time, if they put all the mysteries that had SF elements in with the mysteries, I'd have a harder time finding them -- for instance, Michael Creighton's books are in Fiction & Literature half the time, and I would mostly consider them to be SF, but they've gotten popular, so they must be F&L, right? ![]() Man I'm in a cynical mood today: I just realized I've used the eyeroller smilie in almost every post! |
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#39 |
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I read both too, with a slight bias toward fantasy. But as Dennis says, the genres aren't always clearly separated. My favorite example of atypical fantasy is Jo Walton's Tooth and Claw. It's an examination of Victorian social mores, with a plot lifted straight from Framley Parsonage and not a shred of magic. But all the characters are dragons...
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#40 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I voted for SF, as I read very little of what's generally considered fantasy. On the other hand, there are so many standard elements in SF that, at this point, I consider to be pure fantasy (such as faster-than-light drives, teleportation and humanoid aliens) that, when I read books that include them, I oftimes consider them "futuristic" fantasy.
SF and fantasy have become pretty vague labels these days, there's too much overlap on both sides for them to be useful in anything but a very generic level. |
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#41 | ||
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The late L. Sprague de Camp decided part way through his career that FTL travel was impossible, and stopped using it in his stories, because he felt what was portrayed in SF should be possible, even if we didn't know how to do it now. In the old days, SF writers felt they had to provide explanations of how such things worked (even if it was essentially handwavium) when they used such elements in a story. My favorite was a Brian Aldiss story, where the narrator said "FTL travel? Oh, yeah. Had it for many years. I'd be happy to tell you how it works, but the printer refuses to typeset three pages of the equations required to give the explanation, so lets just take my word for it and carry on, shall we?" These days, things like FTL are part of the wallpaper, implicitly assumed, and generally not explained. I was tickled by the approach David Brin took in the Uplift series: if there was a way to go faster than light at all, there was more than one way, and different galactic species used different methods. The Tandu, for example, had a "Client" species called Episiarchs. The Episiarchs had been bred for psi abilities. Tandu ships used Episiarchs to travel between the stars. The Episiarch denied the current state so intensely that reality warped, and the ship disappeared from here and reappeared there. It wasn't perfect, and sometimes a ship disappeared from here and didn't reappear, but the Tandu were willing to accept the trade-off. Quote:
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#42 | |
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After reading Tolkien, I was really into fantasy for awhile. I didn't abandon Sci-Fi, though. But there isn't as much of a difference between the genres as people seem to believe. . Bradley's Darkover books are fantasy novels set in a science fiction universe. Andre Norton's Witch World series has a Science Fiction set-up, as does Robert Heinlein's "Glory Road." I'm mostly turned off by the Fat Fantasy Trilogies turned out today. They owe more to Dungeons and Dragons than to Tolkien. I do like fantasy from authors like Jonathan Carroll and John Crowley, Guy Gavriel Kay and even Clive Barker and Neil Gaiman. |
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#43 | |||
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I have some in one format, some in the other, and some in both. I haven't been an SFBC member for years, but I like SFBC editions, and often buy them at conventions. For me, the best part of the SFBC was the practice of creating hardcover anthology editions of things that had been a series in paperback I happily acquired them to replace the PBs and free shelf space. I also have a few SFBC editions where the SFBC version was the only hardcover edition of a title. Quote:
![]() For the SFBC to make ebook editions available, they would have to go back and negotiate rights to do it for all the titles they wanted to issue. And the status of the SFBC and associated clubs is in question. Bertelsmann, AG, acquired Doubleday and the book club operations to add to their portfolio of publishing assets, since they were already big in that area in Europe and wanted to expand to the US. But the book clubs are under the same sort of pressure as the rest of publishing. Back in May 07 they laid off long time editor Ellen Asher and her assistant, Andrew Wheeler, and replaced them with a chap named Rome Quezada. (Ellen took an early retirement buyout and is fine. Not sure of Andrew's status.) More recently, thre have been rumors they were looking to unload the book clubs, though it isn't clear who would buy them. Quote:
______ Dennis |
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#44 | |||
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______ Dennis |
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#45 | |
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@ DMcCunney: I did a search on some of the books you mentioned. It seems they are only sold in pBook form. It's too bad, I guess I'll swing by the Bookstore to get the copies =X= Last edited by =X=; 10-08-2008 at 03:09 PM. |
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