naomi_jay: (butterfly hands)

I think I should be able to do this without much trouble since I predominantly read UF, and I would like to read more horror. And I want to start reviewing more books. So far this year I've intended and failed to review Stacia Kane's Downside books, Suzanne Collins' Mockingjay, and Tabitha Suzuma's Forbidden - all amazing books that I wanted to talk about but never got round to. Le sigh.
naomi_jay: (ana cruz horse)
Dear Author have a pretty interesting article about sales of Paranormal Romance, Urban Fantasy, and YA Paranormals here. It doesn't surprise me at all to see YA is booming, what with Twilight and all (although I find it hard to credit the boom to Smeyers alone, and there are lots of divergent factors involved, I guess you can't deny her impact). It does surprise me a little to see PR slipping, even if only slightly, since it seems like there's something new out every day. Same with UF.

When I first started reading UF about nine years ago, I really had to dig around for it. I had to order a copy of Dead Witch Walking in specially to my local Waterstones because they weren't stocking it. And I only found UF at all because a local odds-and-ends type shop had the first few Anita Blake novels on offer. It took me ages to build up a proper UF/PR bookshelf, and almost everything came from Amazon because our local bookshops just didn't have the authors in. High Fantasy and Sci-Fi was all over the place, but the only paranormal stuff was firmly in the Horror category, and a very different beast from the UF of today.

Today my Waterstones has about four entire bookcases dedicated to UF/PR (the section is called Lady and the Vamp, which always amuses me), and the YA section has a dedicated "If you like Twilight, you'll like..." section too. It seems like everyone is writing it. Authors who wrote in different genres for years are turning their hand to UF - I'll cite Charlaine Harris as an obvious example, because she wrote cosy mysterious for years before Sookie Stackhouse came along, but there are numerous others.

There are probably a lot of different reasons for the boom, and you can probably see similar rises and falls throughout history. Vampires were incredibly popular in the late 80s and early 90s when we were all worried about AIDs. Zombies are out in strength at the moment as we worry about global terrorism and swine flu. And of course, trends feed into one another: there's been a glut of paranormal films and TV series over the past decade or so which has probably influenced the growth in UF/PR books, and vice versa. There's definitely an argument that Buffy the Vampire Slayer paved the way for Anita Blake's mainstream success, and doubtless Anita Blake opened the doors for Harry Dresden and Sam and Dean Winchester, and so forth.

I'll be very interested to see what happens to the genres from here. Obviously my vote is always for more werewolves.

ETA: Reading the comments on the DA thread, it looks like a lot of people are hungry for sci-fi romance and futuristics, as well as UF that doesn't focus on vampires/werewolves/demons. Again, I'll be interested to see if this is reflected in the market over the next few months and years.
naomi_jay: (zoidberg)
I first read Go Ask Alice when I eighteen and working evening shifts at WH Smiths. (I say "working" in the loosest possible sense, because most of my time was spent reading and gossiping with my friend Julian.) I immediately fell in love with the book - an anonymous diary of 17-year-old drug user. I was totally captivated by Alice's life, her struggles with addiction, her battle to get her life back on track despite massive obstacles. I believed it. I believed it was real and I recommended it to friends and forced it upon loved ones.

But Go Ask Alice lied to me. Because Go Ask Alice was no more the genuine diary of a drug addict than I am a psychotic green llama. In actual fact, the book was written by one Beatrice Sparks, psychologist and youth counsellor. Sparks also produced a book called Jay's Journal, an account of a youth who committed suicide after becoming involved with the occult. (I'm dying to get my hands on this, if anyone knows where I could get a copy.) Sparks claimed both books were based on real journals belonging to patients of hers. I don't know if this is true or not, but it seems Sparks was essentially a big fat liar.

Really, in retrospect, I'm amazed I ever believed Go Ask Alice was the genuine article. The lengthy, detailed passages purportedly recorded during freak-outs, drug-binges and stays at mental hospitals should have clued me in, really. And compared to genuine books of this nature, like Katie.com or Second Star To The Right, both of which I adore, this journal just doesn't cut it.

But you know what? I don't care. I still love Go Ask Alice. I'll re-read it until my copy falls apart because, even if it's all lies, it's a great story. And I reckon that still counts for something. How about you?
naomi_jay: (<lj user ="realcdaae">)

In an earlier post I asked if death was necessary in urban fantasy. I'm broadening that question now to: what makes urban fantasy?

What do you think the key elements are, the features that you'll find in every last book that comes under that tag? Magic? Sex? Kick-ass first person female narrator? Vampires? What differentiates it from epic, high fantasy besides location? What would you have to take away (or add in) to make it paranormal romance?

And on an unrelated note, are you reading Barb & JC Hendee's Noble Dead series? If not, why not? I finished Traitor to the Blood last night and I'm now moping because I can't get hold of the next book, Rebel Fay. Seriously, it's an awesome series.

naomi_jay: (<lj user="unvelldai">)
I can't stop buying books. It's a sickness. I would rather buy books than food (and in fact this week, I did). The only thing I'd rather buy than books is shampoo, and that's only because of my borderline OCD obsession with freshly-washed hair.

I always have a new book to read and I never get through my TBR pile. It's constantly growing, like a triffid. And like a triffid, it will probably cause me to go blind one day.

As it stands, my TBR pile currently contains the following:

Blood and Chocolate - Annette Curtis Klause
Dante's Girl - Natasha Rhodes
Traitor to the Blood - Barb & JC Hendee
Heir to the Shadows - Anne Bishop
Eye of Heaven - Marjorie M Liu
Sleeping with the Fishes - MaryJanice Davidson
The Summoner - Gail Z Martin
Touch the Dark - Karen Chance (actually I've started this once and abandoned it out of sheer boredom, but it's getting such good reviews elsewhere I feel compelled to try again.)

What's everyone else reading at the moment?

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