tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4782401287764864195.post7303265244397949142..comments2023-05-28T07:56:03.418-08:00Comments on Alaska Romance Writers of America: Romantic Science FictionJackieIviehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16483781395559710572noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4782401287764864195.post-37133102470030781022011-12-12T16:03:21.800-09:002011-12-12T16:03:21.800-09:00Great assessment, Lynn. The hard part is to unite ...Great assessment, Lynn. The hard part is to unite reader and book. Good think I like a challenge!Tam Linseyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14455888010872538096noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4782401287764864195.post-49912111339948798122011-12-10T17:57:48.585-09:002011-12-10T17:57:48.585-09:00Liz and Lizzie make excellent points, and I like T...Liz and Lizzie make excellent points, and I like Tam's goal that no one notices the science. In my own genre (historical) I like it when the author weaves in an explanation/information as part of the novel. <br /><br />My opinion is that there is an audience for every book, but the trick is for the book and reader to find each other. When you don't write something really obvious, like Regency romance, it's harder to make that happen. But I'm sure you will, Tam.Lynn Lovegreenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18381497298898067525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4782401287764864195.post-2017802604833118162011-12-09T23:51:25.966-09:002011-12-09T23:51:25.966-09:00Thanks for visiting, guys.
I'm with you, Liz ...Thanks for visiting, guys. <br />I'm with you, Liz - I like both romance and science in detail. But even my beta readers fall into one or the other camp.<br />Lizzie, I see a future where there are no shelves :) Amazon has eliminated them, so people browsing books will find what they like even easier, assuming the correct tags are placed on the book. And readers ultimately just want a good story. My goal is to write so that no one "notices" the science or the romance - everything just flows and feels like it belongs.Tam Linseyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14455888010872538096noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4782401287764864195.post-90146786621884767562011-12-09T12:10:53.097-09:002011-12-09T12:10:53.097-09:00Bravo Tam,
This is exactly what I'm thinking a...Bravo Tam,<br />This is exactly what I'm thinking about. <br />The question is why readers, agents, and editors are so down on science. I think it's been this way for about ten years.<br />I think there is plenty of speculation to be done particularly regarding biology. Romance is an essential component of biology. Can't have life(bio) without courtship and sex.<br />I think the problem is that science addresses scary problems such as genetic modification, global climate change, and stem cell research. With the current financial and political insecurity readers don’t want to face these things, and so when reading science fiction prefer stories which are a throwback to 1950s/60s technology and ideas such as space travel.<br />I believe that the pendulum will eventually swing with readers once again becoming interested in speculation.<br />Let's plan to be ready for when it happens. I do believe romantic science fiction belongs on the science fiction shelf where the science will be appreciated and the romance enjoyed, not on the romance shelf where the science will be considered a flaw.<br />I have yet to read a book on the romance shelf which is excellent science fiction, but I've read plenty on the SF shelf with excellent romance. I think romance readers will go to the SF shelf more readily than SF readers will go to the romance shelf.Lizzie Newellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12038584075330873558noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4782401287764864195.post-17895170870850712882011-12-09T10:52:38.987-09:002011-12-09T10:52:38.987-09:00Hey Tam,
Ahh, the question for the ages (at least ...Hey Tam,<br />Ahh, the question for the ages (at least for today's romance writers). I think thirty years ago (maybe even less time than that) we didn't have to worry about this, since the sub-genres of romance were just weird little mutant offshoots stuck away in the bookshelf corners. Nowadays, it's hard to find a plain ol' contemporary romantic book! <br /><br />I love loads of detail in my books so I'm up for any amount of explanation whether it pertains to the world or the characters' relationship. In an ideal romance-writer's world, I'd have both, truly. I'd love a book where neither the science nor the relationship could get cut without hurting the story. But romance editors today don't want the detail -- they consider that to be bogging down the story, which to them is the relationship. Guess that just means, there's room for more books!! <br /><br />Glad you write what you write -- I have no doubt it'll find a wonderful home and a huge audience!LizbethSelvighttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14068753571254601527noreply@blogger.com