Genreville Posts on UF vs. Horror vs. SF (and a note from Marwa)

Sep 27, 2009 16:40

As you all know, I'm very much interested in the inspirations for urban fantasy, and where the genre comes from (as well as where it's going). I've read some great articles describing precursors to UF, most of which I intend to riff on over at FlamesRising.com at some point, when I'm actually keeping up with life ( Read more... )

gail carriger, writing

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jeff_duntemann September 27 2009, 23:49:39 UTC
He's right, of course. The only fantasy I've ever written ("Whale Meat") was urban fantasy, and the setting was the Chicago Lincoln Park area near De Paul University, where I went to college in the early '70s and tried to draw as accurately as I could. My friend Tom worked at his family's greasy-spoon diner on Clark Street just north of Fullerton, and he and I and our friend George from high school spent a few late nights there, dealing with the local street people and remarking how almost anything could hide on Clark Street. Witches? No problem...

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anonymous September 28 2009, 01:41:28 UTC
I completely agree on location in UF. One of the biggest problems I have with the Dresden novels is how little set in real Chicago they are. He goes to the EAST side of Chicago. There IS no East Side of Chicago. The east side of Chicago is the lake. Neighborhoods are seldom named what the are in real life, and as a former Chicagoan, sorry, but if you put a big residential area in the industrial area along the southern Chicago River, I'm gonna call you on it.

I love the Dresden Files, but I much preferred the TV show (which even though set in Vancouver actually had a verisimilitude of Chicago) to the books because I kept getting hung up on the descriptions of where Dresden was running off to, because it was off.

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alanajoli September 28 2009, 16:34:08 UTC
I thought it was you I'd originally heard that complaint from! I went back to check your journal and couldn't find the place where you'd noted it, and as such, left it vague in the entry. :)

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lyster September 28 2009, 16:21:00 UTC
In the day of books like The Time Traveler's Wife, I find myself regularly questioning where Urban Fantasy stops and Literature begins. Given what I know of urban fantasy, for example (admittedly not much -- Dresden Files, plus some browsing in the bookstore), I doubt an agent who specialized in UF would see John Crowley's "Little, Big" as typical of their client list, though it interweaves masterful sense of place (between upstate New York & Manhattan) with magic, fairies, prophecy, astrology, and one of the most deft interrelationships of myth and human character that I've seen. What about Bulgakov's "Master and Margarita"? The devil wanders around Stalinist Moscow, cheerfully destroying the minds of those he encounters in a hilarious fashion, all the while conspicuously failing to reach the levels of horror implicit in the political events taking place around him: imagine a deeper, more honest Terry Pratchett if Pratchett's life had been destroyed by Stalin. Urban, check, fantastical, check, but urban fantasy? What about ( ... )

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alanajoli September 28 2009, 16:35:05 UTC
I think a lot of it depends on marketing... but I feel like I could respond enough to this that maybe I should make it its own entry. :)

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lyster September 28 2009, 16:57:29 UTC
I'd be happy to read that entry, for certain.

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