:eek: That’s close to a canonical list of good sf writers.
BTW, the Rama books after the first were written by Gentry Lee, who shouldn’t be allowed near a word processor.
:eek: That’s close to a canonical list of good sf writers.
BTW, the Rama books after the first were written by Gentry Lee, who shouldn’t be allowed near a word processor.
Pier Anthony’s porn book sucks, and not in a good way. I have Ardor on Ardos by Offut, which is very good. What else do you recommend of his?
I recognize all of the names, but I don’t read science fiction. I opened the thread only because “fantasy” was in the title.
To make up for Lord of the Rings.
The inevitable sex scene in Sci-Fi and Fantasy books. Why?
Some look at sex scenes and ask, “Why?”
I imagine sex scenes still unwritten and ask, “Why not?”
Turtledove is just gratuitous when it comes to sex scenes. I absolutely adore the World War series, but the amount of porn in it is just embarrassing.
A Heinlein book that you didn’t like?
You are not of the body! HERETIC! Burn the witch!
But seriously, which one?
Glory Road. Looks like I gave it two stars on Goodreads:
I think rather that the sex scenes in Auel’s books are the only point to that series.
I will readily plead ignorance to the world of publishing. I think, perhaps, that there may be a misunderstanding owing my mistaken understanding of what ‘genre fiction’ means.
According to an English major I knew, it meant Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Horror, and Speculative Fiction. Judging by the books you’ve mentioned, he was wrong and the term covers considerably more territory, including what I thought of as ‘mainstream’ fiction. Which raises the question-What is ‘mainstream fiction’?
Canonical male writers. No Le Guin, no Zimmer Bradley, no Cherryh, no Brackett, no Moore, no Tiptree/Sheldon, no Tepper. I’d hold any of those against most on your list (especially that hack Heinlein)
In deference to the more informed (and no doubt recent) opinions of others, I rescind, retract, and repudiate my earlier mention of Reynolds and Crichton. I have not read anything of theirs in quite a long time and am likely remembering incorrectly.
Gentry Lee wrote the other Rama books? That’s great news. Mr. Clarke can go back on my list of OK writers.
Would it be fair to say the consensus so far is that badly written sex is no more common in Spec Fiction than in fiction as a whole, and that the really bad stuff can be quite a bit worse than what is found in the examples I gave?
Mark fucking Twain? He’d probably thought it was funny.
And Heinlein sucks. Except the good parts of Starship Troopers.
That’s a six-page thread all to itself.
The short answer is that mainstream is that which isn’t genre. I know. But that’s the real answer.
So what’s genre? There are several major genres and dozens of sub-genres. Science fiction, fantasy, and horror are either genres by themselves or sub-genres of some larger category. SF has military, hard, soft, speculative, alternate history, and more. Fantasy is split into urban, historical, mythological, pastoral, among others. Mystery contains thrillers, detective fiction, police procedurals, cozies, whodunits, private eyes, and a dozen more. Technothrillers and spy novels are sometimes mystery and sometimes separate. Serial killer novels are a new genre or sub-genre. Romance has fifteen or more sub-genres, the largest being contemporary (which is divided into various shades of explicitness), historical (ditto), paranormal, romantic suspense, and inspirational. Inspirational crosses over into Christian fiction, which has overlaps with most of the other genres as well. Westerns are an old genre that is now split into contemporary and historical. Tie-in novels overlap other genres. They used to be heavily f&sf-related but today you can find gaming, mystery, anime and other tie-ins. Erotica and pornography are genres and that takes us back to chick lit, which can be mainstream or romance but is developing into its own category. Is humor a genre? It can be from people like Christopher Moore. Bestseller fiction is a genre, with people like Dan Brown and James Patterson and Michael Crichton examples, although they can be genre bestsellers like Stephen King and Nora Roberts and J. R. Rowling. Young adult and children’s books are technically not genre, but given the recent popularity of fantasy series genre has mostly taken them over. There are lots of others specialized genres, like war books and action hero books and whatnot.
What’s left? Mainstream. Which so often overlaps into genre in tone and style that a special name, slipsteam, is given to mainstream authors who write books accepted by the critics but obviously in the f&sf genre. That Wiki page gives magic realism, the new weird, and speculative fiction as sub-genres of slipstream, but nobody agrees what those boundaries really mean.
However, the reality is that while mainstream authors get most of the critical attention, books that are genre from any publishing or critical perspective constitute the vast bulk of fiction sales. I don’t know what the exact percentage is and there’s a huge definitional problem to boot. My guess is 90% of fiction sales are genre in some form of what I gave above. If you take out the bestseller genre, as many people would, at least 50% of all fiction sales are genre. That leaves maybe 10% for mainstream.
It’s all genre out there. Generalizations are dangerous.
No Asimov either. I agree with your additions, but someone who has read none of the listed authors (except one book by Heinlein) can’t say much about sf in general.
Ah, that explains why the book you read was Glory Road, not exactly mainstream Heinlein. He wrote some more fantasy, but that was Unknown style, back in the '40s.
I wonder if there is any difference in the quality of fantasy sex scenes and sf sex scenes, besides the former often happening in forests and castles and such. (Or between vampires and werewolves, which seems to be the current trend.)
I didn’t say anything about sf in general. I commented on everyone on the list being male.
I read Glory Road because my husband liked it and thought I might. I wouldn’t have picked it up on my own.
Ergo, writers who write genre fiction are trying to tell character-driven stories and include sex in their writing because it helps sell books - and 95% of their writing is crap.
What was the question?
I don’t read widely in science fiction but I’ve read a decent amount of Neal Stephenson and William Gibson, and while the sex scenes they write are frequently uncomfortable to read, in my opinion they are there for damn good reasons.
Stephenson in particular is masterful in his use of bad sex to further good character development. Holy heck, The Baroque Cycle contains some of my absolute favorite cringeworthy sex that exists not to titillate but inform. I only wish I could write joyless coupling used as a political weapon with the ease he does.
I think in the whole trilogy there’s a total of one sex scene in which both parties are sincerely just in it for the orgasms.
And don’t forget Ben Bova. It’s like you’re reading like Jackie Collins “In Space!”.
… You waited six months to mention Ben Bova???