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Because then people expect them to be good Werthead Send a noteboard - 30/11/2009 09:06:22 PM
One of the consistent problems with mainstream authors 'doing an SF' is that they are putting their toe in a pool where suddenly all their Bookers and highbrow column coverage count for nothing. To succeed, they need to pull their mainstream readers along with them and scare off the genre fans, who will generally find their attempts at SF to be either laughable or unremarkable (see the absolute roasting that Winterson's quasi SF novels have gotten from genre reviewers), coming as they invariably do from an ignorance of the genre.

Harkaway and Chabon were exceptions as they are literary writers who are also massive genre fans, and whilst happy to tow the publisher line not to big up their books as genre, don't deny they are either. Amis, however, came a cropper with TIME'S ARROW as various reviewers, such as Langford, pointed out a number of SF novels (and an episode of RED DWARF) that did a reverse-chronology tale in a much more interesting manner, whilst Winterson's pseudo-SF books have been torn apart with glee by genre reviewers since she hasn't a clue what she's doing.

'Literary' writers doing SF occasionally produce something of interest - CHILDREN OF MEN and THE HANDMAID'S TALE are not without merit - but they do have a problem in that their 'literary SF' is going to be contrasted in-genre against the likes of Wolfe and LeGuin, and unless some kind of miracle takes place they are not going to withstand that level of comparison.
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Why are authors afraid of the science fiction label? - 30/11/2009 05:41:35 PM 1104 Views
I think this may be true of genres in general - 30/11/2009 07:01:50 PM 548 Views
Aye, I agree. - 30/11/2009 07:47:55 PM 483 Views
Did you borrow my signature pic or did you get it from the web, as well ? *NM* - 01/12/2009 11:51:20 PM 211 Views
I have been meaning to ask you the same question - 02/12/2009 12:08:32 AM 515 Views
Haha! - 04/12/2009 04:36:24 PM 501 Views
Genres have their use... - 30/11/2009 08:24:29 PM 587 Views
Because then people expect them to be good - 30/11/2009 09:06:22 PM 557 Views
My favorite response. *NM* - 03/12/2009 05:39:05 PM 224 Views
Because too many people will not even try a book that is labeled Science Fiction. Too intimidating? - 01/12/2009 01:18:26 AM 528 Views
i actually have a recommendation for that... - 01/12/2009 04:07:05 AM 510 Views
most people think Star Trek or Star Wars when they think SciFi - 03/12/2009 05:28:05 PM 497 Views
but that is SciFi. I think you prefer Science Fiction - 03/12/2009 05:45:29 PM 598 Views
No that is science fantasy scifi is just an abbreviation - 03/12/2009 06:27:36 PM 487 Views
Basically what temeraire said- "genre" has a stigma, no matter how unfair it may be - 01/12/2009 07:43:50 PM 514 Views
most things that fit neatly into a genre is crap, though. - 01/12/2009 08:01:33 PM 498 Views
I know! - 03/12/2009 02:55:17 PM 460 Views
the answer can be glimpsed in Tom's thread - 02/12/2009 01:22:20 AM 492 Views
mmmno - 02/12/2009 11:11:02 AM 568 Views
but - 03/12/2009 05:35:37 PM 523 Views
Because 90% of what is written in the Scifi/fantasy genre is escapism crap - 03/12/2009 05:26:59 PM 490 Views
But 90% of what is written outside the Scifi/fantasy genre is escapism crap as well. - 03/12/2009 05:29:20 PM 533 Views
I will reiterate: 92.689% of statistics used in an argument are made up on the spot - 03/12/2009 05:39:36 PM 501 Views
I will have you know I made up that stastic some time ago - 03/12/2009 06:19:29 PM 504 Views
I am not sure that is true - 03/12/2009 06:23:04 PM 502 Views
What I wonder each time someone makes that remark... - 06/12/2009 06:44:28 PM 477 Views

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