I’ve talked about genres before
on this blog, but a conversation with my friend Wonderdog led to tackle it
again.
Wonderdog was marvelling over my
ability to write many different genres, and I said my books were all similar
types of story, just with a different genre focus. I mentioned one book I was
struggling with, since I couldn’t decide if it should be fantasy or romance. We
then got to talking about what I would need to change to make it fit into one category
or the other.
Firstly, it is worth covering what genre is:
Simply speaking, genre is the
primary emotion of the book. It is also a label that allows booksellers and
librarians to easily shelve your book so it can be found by readers who will
enjoy reading it.
So, what do I mean by the primary
emotion? Well, the primary emotion you should feel while reading a horror novel
is fear. The primary emotion you want to experience while reading a romance
novel is love or infatuation. Action is excitement. Thriller is tension. Drama
is often nostalgia. Fantasy is wonder. Obviously, most novels will have a range
of emotions. It’s very difficult to make someone feel an emotion strongly
without contrast. To have high highs, you need low lows.
However, in most cases, the
primary emotion is going to correspond with the genre.
And when people go looking for a
book, what they are really looking for is how that book will make them feel.
Good, sad, intelligent, whatever. Which is why you should want to be grouped in
the correct genre in bookstores. If you are grouped in the wrong genre, then
people are not going to get what they want, and they are going to be
disappointed.
Not knowing your genre doesn’t
make you cool, special or different. It just makes it hard for your book to
find readers, and tells me it has no strong emotional impact.
Have you stopped bragging about
defying genre now? Good. Let’s go on.
Next Topic: What Makes A Story One Genre Or Another?
Quite simply, it’s the focus and
word use. In a previous post, I talked about atmosphere and gave three descriptions of the same room. I used those examples to demonstrate how
you can take the same information and, in the way your present it, completely
change the reader’s perception.
Genre is basically the same. It’s
not the content itself, but how you present it. Take for example a man with a
sword. In a fantasy, I might introduce him like this:
He was big, brutish. The sword at his side had
seen a lot of use. He moved like a fighter, light on his feet and much too
alert to be the simple merchant he claimed.
However, in a romance, he might
look a bit more like this:
He was tall, roguish. The sword at his side had
seen a lot of use. He moved like a dancer, light on his feet, his bright blue
eyes alert and attentive. He looked much too capable to be the simple merchant
he claimed.
Instead of big and brutish, he
becomes tall and roguish. Why? Because big and brutish are not sexy, but tall
and roguish sounds like the sort of man women would like to meet. In both
cases, he is light on his feet. However, in one he is compared to a fighter, in
the other, a dancer. With the added bonus of alert blue eyes.
To go back to the setting and
place blog post examples:
Safe and exciting:
The den was lit with cheery, jumping candlelight.
Two overstuffed leather couches would be perfect for reading in on cold winter
days. The bookshelf was overflowing with titles, new and old, and the TV was so
big, it took up half the wall, almost as good as a movie theatre.
Tense and scary:
The den was cold and sallow in the flickering
candlelight. Two overstuffed couches stood hulking on opposite sides of the
room, like sagging, bloated monsters about to fight. The dusty bookshelf,
spilled over with books, both forgotten and abandoned. The TV was the worst of
all, a vast yawning blackness that took up almost the entire wall.
I would consider the first example
to be suitable for a YA action or even romance, and the second to be a horror
or thriller.
How Does The Reader Feel?
At the RWA conference last
weekend I was talking to some awesome fellow writers about my psychology degree
and if I thought it was better than a writing degree. The short answer is
‘yes’. However, that is true for me, and might not be true for everyone else.
It depends on your skill and temperament.
I quickly realised the ladies I
was speaking to thought psychology was important to learn how to write characters. Which it is. However, you
get a lot more out of psychology when you apply it to readers.
There is a joke in competition
judging: The story that makes you cry the most wins.
Think about best-selling books.
People are passionate about them.
They felt something strongly while reading them. Same with blockbuster movies.
What about big budget movies that fail? When was the last time you watched a
big budget movie that tanked? How did it make you feel? Sort of meh? Like, it
was okay, just… meh?
Exactly.
When you are writing a horror,
you want the reader to feel afraid. When you are writing a romance, you want
the reader to feel caught up in the character’s infatuation. For some of us,
this just happens. We can do this innately, by writing things that make us feel
those things.
However, you can often have a lot
more emotional impact if you consciously think about what you want the reader
to feel. Research how to make them feel that way. Both by learning about
psychology, and reading fantastic books and studying how other people do it.
Make sure your book is delivering
on the promise of its genre.
And if you aren’t already, follow me on twitter. I always link back to new blog posts and often post really cute
pictures of my cats. What more could you ask for?