Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
GRACE PENNINGTON - There are two kinds of genres. The one the author thinks their book should be and the one the public expects their book to be. This is why authors so often argue with promotional people about genres. They think their book is "Amish Vampire Romance Science Fiction Horror" and  the publisher says, "No, that's speculative."
Well, authors are notoriously bad critics of their own work, and publishers are notoriously ignorant as to the actual tastes of their reading public (see my comments on the "Your Publisher Won't Save You" post on Aubrey's blog a while back, for example), so there's the genre the author thinks the book best fits, the genre the publisher thinks it fits (or, at a sufficiently large publisher, one genre named by the submissions department or the editor and a different one from the marketing department), and the one the intended audience is looking for, and they don't necessarily have anything to do with one another ... though if you write for long enough in a single milieu, you'll be able to say "I have X similar books already published in such-and-such genre, and a devoted following that will be looking on those shelves ..." (And speaking of shelves, some bookstores have been known to decide that books are different genres from what their publishers say ...)
Oh, and unless I've forgotten something, I've 
only met "speculative" as a term encompassing all of science fiction, fantasy, and horror.
Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
So if you're your own publisher then you're still entitled to your stubborn opinion on genre, but you must also take an objective view and realize that Amazon doesn't agree with you, and that genre classification is not about the author, it's about the audience.
Yes. Genres are a set of (organic, rather than comprehensive like the Dewey Decimal System or the Library of Congress catalog system) conventions to help suitable readers and books find each other.
Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
JORDAN SMITH - Low fantasy is not demeaning. It's a way to separate it from High Fantasy. It's like the upper and lower Nile, or the highlands vs. the low lands. It's a description of height, not status. 
Mmm ... I'd say it's not like the upper and lower Nile, but rather more like the "High Middle Ages" vs. the rest of the Middle Ages, or perhaps "High German" vs. "Low German." It began as a value judgment, that "high fantasy" was closer to the true and pure center of the genre, but continues because we need 
something to call the subgenre, and "high fantasy" will do as well as anything else.
Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
High fantasy involves quests and international disaster. (Lord of the Rings.) Low fantasy does not. High Fantasy is magic in a fantastical world on an epic scale and low fantasy is magic in the real world on a personal scale. Those are probably the only two fantasy sub-genres I understand.
That's ... not my understanding of them at all. "High fantasy," as I understand the term, is basically the branch of fantasy descended from the Greco-Roman and Norse myths, from the various European epics and fairy tales, and from the medieval romances. The "epic scale" and "fantastical" (especially quasi-medieval) "world" generally come into it, but neither is absolutely essential---a simple story about the troll that lived under the bridge in "The Three Billy Goats Gruff" might well count as "high fantasy." I've not met "low fantasy" used as a serious term.
Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
ME - I haz question. I would like an answer. I am writing a book. A very long, very epic, very dark book. Ya'll know it as Lighting Ranger. It's fantasy, there's no question of that. But. There is no magic. No sorcerers. No dragons, fairies, or elves. It's a dark ages kind of story of outlaws and priests and sacrifice. The world is fictional, the history is fictional, and the religion is all fictional. What fantasy sub-genre do you use to describe this?
Quite possibly "mythopoeic"---though that's not a term that gets much play outside of Mythopoeic Society circles, I fear.
Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
Example - Ranger's Apprentice. It's fantasy. It's a fictional world, fictional people, fictional history, but there's no magic. No witches, no dragons, no fairies or elves. No fantastical elements.
Really? The first couple of books had some decidedly fantastical elements (mostly relating to the first main villain and his minions).
Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
Now then, it's official categorized just as "Fantasy, Adventure." (That's two genres. Remember, you can have up to two genres to describe your book on Amazon.) But with so many subgenres in the fantasy world surely one exists to humor the whims of an author who says "Fantasy doesn't begin to describe the intricate complexities of my world!"
One reason there are "so many subgenres" is that so many critics invent their own systems of classification instead of working with someone else's, and so many authors do "genre engineering" and then insist on (as you noted in the first example above) a "perfect fit" for the nominal genre.
Neil of Erk wrote:
I think, for authors, it's better to define your book by target audience than genre. It's usually something like, "readers who love the style of ______ will enjoy this book," or "readers who enjoyed the setting of ________ will love this novel".
The trouble with that is, again, that authors are notoriously bad critics of their own work 

 And that even on this forum, the 
main reason I love, say, 
The Hobbit, might be vastly different from the reason someone else loves it, even if we use the same 
words to describe what we love, so something that exhibits the same feature might be painful reading for one of us and sheer pleasure for another.
Constable Jaynin Mimetes wrote:
I'm curious! I keep running across those types of books, and fantasy is almost as well known for it's subgenres as scifi,
It's worth noting that "science fiction" and "fantasy" are in many circles now considered subgenres of "speculative fiction" rather than "standalone" genres---after 
so many books that aren't quite one, but aren't quite the other either.
Lord Tarin wrote:
... and because Tolkien said so, romance. I know what you're thinking, but don't freak out. He had an entire argument for this type of discussion but I don't remember it and alas, the book was from the library. Here, Tolkien's definition of romance was a genre of medieval adventure stories, such as King Arthur and others.
From what I understand, Tolkien stood at the end of an era when 
everything we would now classify as either science fiction or fantasy would be termed a "romance" (Jules Verne, Lord Dunsany, William Morris, probably even Macdonald, etc.), so he used the formal and customary term for the genre. I'm not sure it's a good idea to revive it 

Lord Tarin wrote:
The sub-genres should describe what type of fantasy, not indicate that it's fantasy in the first place. The definition I have of fantasy is "a type of fiction featuring imaginary worlds and magical or supernatural events."
Make that "imaginary worlds 
or magical or supernatural events" and I can tentatively agree to that (with the proviso that "events" can include the mere existence of creatures)---your definition would seem to exclude the whole "urban fantasy" subgenre, which is largely set on the streets of our world's cities. (Mercedes Lackey had a series with elves set in, I think, LA back in, I think, the '80s ...)
Lord Tarin wrote:
To some extent, the audience's opinion on the book's genre should reflect the author's opinion.
Or vice versa ... (which may be what you meant)
Lord Tarin wrote:
You should know enough about your book to be able to accurately label it, something that is necessary but sometimes counterproductive. Where this gets sticky is in difference of opinion and taste. Your idea of, say, high fantasy, might not agree with someone else's idea. So Neil's point is useful here. Don't tell them what genre the book is in (unless it's obvious), tell them what other books it's like and then let them make the determination.
Except that, again, authors are notoriously bad critics of their own work ... give your book to a very-well-read friend who's a raving fan (assuming, of course, you have such a friend) and have 
him tell you what books it's like ... and even that will give false positive and false negative recommendations.
Lord Tarin wrote:
The real point of genres is to draw specific lines between types of stories that aid the reader in searching for what they want and understanding what they're getting.
Mmmm ... The root of the whole problem here is that there usually 
aren't lines between genres, so authors 
often engage in "genre engineering," choosing to write from a less-populated area of the genre-space.
Lord Tarin wrote:
To solve this problem, one might pick the overarching genre. An example would be some of my previous books. They are considered sci-fi, because they take place on different planets and have futuristic aspects. Yet they are not only sci-fi; they contain elements of adventure, mystery, and dystopia. So I would classify them as science fiction with twists of mystery, adventure, etc.
For what it's worth, to me "dystopia" is a subgenre of science fiction ... so it isn't so much a "twist" for a SF novel to be dystopian at times as venturing for a while into a corner of the genre it's already in.
Lord Tarin wrote:
And it may be that there are books to which no genre or sub-genre can be applied, in which case we might want to start inventing new definitions, if only for our own clarity.
What we need is a standard set of classifications so we can see what the state of the meta-genre 
is ... authors, publishers, readers, and critics have been inventing sub-genre terms right and left for the past decade and more 
