Come see me at Context 27, Sept. 26 to 28 in Columbus

I'll be a participating author at the Context 27 convention in Columbus from Sept 26 to 28. Context is a small literary-focused convention with a number of writing focused workshops and panels. Among the guests will be Auhtor Guest of Honor Jonathan Maberry, Editor Guest of Honor Betsy Mitchell, and Special Game Writing Guests Lucien SoulbanJennifer Brozek, and Monica Valentinelli. Other authors attending include Gary A. BraunbeckMaurice BroaddusGeoffrey GirardSarah HansFerrett Steinmetz, and many more.

My panel schedule will be 

  • Classics You May Have Missed at 6 pm on Friday
  • Showing & Telling at 11:00 am on Saturday
  • Lit/Genre expectations at noon on Saturday

The last day to register at a discounted rate is this Wednesday, Sept. 17. Context is a great value and a great convention and I hope to see you there.

The Mirror Empire is an epic fantasy for people who hate epic fantasies

When I finished The Mirror Empire by Kameron Hurley, one word kept screaming through my mind: Epic! Epic! Epic! I wanted to shout to the world that this is what a truly epic fantasy should be.

And I say that as someone who has grown to hate epic fantasies.

Confused? Then understand this: In recent decades the term epic fantasy has become cemented to rather non-epic ideas of what constitutes fantasy, namely endless variations on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings. Epic fantasy has come to mean European-style castles and magic and dragons and quests, usually populated by European-styled people living European-styled lives with European-styled beliefs.

There's nothing intrinsically wrong with fantasies like these, and obviously many people love them. But I for one am sick of them.

I've always believed the term epic fantasy meant more than Tolkien and endless knockoffs of his work. To me, fantasies are truly epic when they take you to worlds you never previously imagined and introduce you to people and events and magic you couldn't have dreamed up yourself.

I don't want my epic fantasies to be more of the same old. And that's one reason I absolutely fell in love with Hurley's The Mirror Empire.

Hurley's novel is set on a world I can barely attempt to describe, where shifting satellites power magical abilities and open doors to other dimensions. Now this world is approaching a critical alignment of these satellites, an alignment which allows people from other worlds to invade every two thousand years. 

The setting is actually far more complicated than that, but to tell more would reveal some truly epic spoilers. All that matters is that Hurley has invested her time in creating a powerful world and you can't help but believe in this setting. Add in a story dealing with powerful themes like identity and slavery and genocide, and characters you'll love even when they reveal themselves as having oh-so-human failings, and the result is a great novel which will pull you through a literary wringer and leave you wishing immediately for the next book in the series.

The Mirror Empire is the best fantasy I've read this year and one of the best of recent years. This is also an epic fantasy for people who have grown to hate what passes for epic fantasies in today's marketplace.

The Mirror Empire is highly recommended and will be on my award shortlists. I suggest people check it out.

 

About Writing by Samuel R. Delany is the best writing book most people shouldn't read

Yes, I'm in love with this book.

Yes, I'm in love with this book.

My writing is changing. Not that my writing ever stopped changing—hell, nothing in life is capable of not changing. But I'm contemplating a bigger change than normal. I've reached a point where the stories I've written until now will absolutely not be the stories I keep writing from here on out.

This explains why I've been obsessing lately on science fiction and worldviews, and asking people for their different SF worldviews. But it's also obvious that most people hate talking about theoretical constructs around literature. And I totally understand this hatred. The route by which literature reaches the mind and soul is through being read, not through being analyzed.

I say all this because I'm about to recommend a book which most people shouldn't read—Samuel R. Delany's About Writing. This is the best writing book I've ever read. I can't recommend it enough.

Except that most people probably shouldn't read it. If you're not a fiction writer, don't read it. If you're a new fiction writer needing to learn the basics, don't read it. If you're an established fiction writer who doesn't give a fictional crap about the theoretical side of what you're writing, don't read it.

But if you're a fiction writer who knows the basics, and who wants to discover what's holding your stories back from the ideal in your dreams, this is the book for you.

I am now rereading this book. I expect I will reread it on a regular basis. This is writing book I'd like to be buried with when I die so archaeologists of the future can see what I tried to do with my fiction.

About Writing by Samuel R. Delany is the best damn writing book around. But most people shouldn't read it.

What is your science fiction worldview?

The other day I discussed why science fiction is more of a worldview than an actual genre. But if that's true, exactly what type of worldview is SF? I'm trying to figure this out and I'd love to hear from people about what they consider as the science fiction worldview, or what they consider to be the markers of science fiction. 

I almost asked people to define science fiction before realizing that a worldview doesn't fit with the idea of a hard and fast definition. Part of this is because worldviews continually change and flow across time and place. The other part is because I agree with what Nnedi Okorafor wrote in her must-read essay "Can you define African Science Fiction?", which is that all too often "labels suck."

As Okorafor says of labels:

Yes, they are ways to simplify life. They make things easier to understand and faster to find. They have their uses. But when you take them too seriously, they are bullsh*t.

So I'm not looking for definitions or labels to slap onto science fiction. But I am looking for viewpoints on what science fiction might be in our 21st century world. But to get us started I've also collected a number of famous and not-so-famous definitions of SF. But I hope no one considers these definitions as anything more than the beginning of a much larger discussion. 

Feel free to leave your thoughts in the comment section below. If you'd like to offer your thoughts in private, email them to me.

Jason's incomplete list of SF definitions even though definitions often suck

Here's my initial take on the science fiction worldview: The present as seen through a science-based view of the future.

In addition, here are a few of the definitions of SF which have stuck with me over the years:

  • "Science fiction can be defined as that branch of literature which deals with the reaction of human beings to changes in science and technology." — Isaac Asimov giving a traditional definition of science fiction.
  • "Fiction in which things happen that are not possible today." — Margaret Atwood, who has often said she doesn't write science fiction.
  • Science fiction is about "events that have not happened." — Samuel R. Delany. I also love Delany's statement that "Science fiction isn’t just thinking about the world out there. It’s also thinking about how that world might be — a particularly important exercise for those who are oppressed, because if they’re going to change the world we live in, they — and all of us — have to be able to think about a world that works differently." 
  • "Realistic speculation about possible future events, based solidly on adequate knowledge of the real world, past and present, and on a thorough understanding of the nature and significance of the scientific method." — Robert Heinlein giving another traditional definition of SF. Is it just me, or are the traditional definitions of science fiction often mind-numbing and boring?
  • Science fiction is about "subverting paradigms." — Nalo Hopkinson. The full quote is "Science fiction and fantasy are already about subverting paradigms," which was said in response to her fiction being described as "subverting the genre." The complete interview is found in the excellent book Report from Planet Midnight
  • "Science fiction: the unknown is to be understood and thereby changed." — Nancy Lebovitz
  • "Science Fiction is the improbable made possible." — Rod Serling
  • The "literature of ideas" — Niko Silvester and many others
  • The "literature of cognitive estrangement" — Darko Suvin
  • The "literature of change" — Richard Trietel. Also make note of Tom Shippey's comment that "Science fiction is hard to define because it is the literature of change and it changes while you are trying to define it."

What if science fiction is a worldview instead of a genre

Shaun Duke raises an interesting point by saying that science fiction has in many ways become a supergenre. Shaun began thinking about this during a discussion with Maureen Kincaid Speller and Paul Kincaid about what science fiction "is," a discussion in which Kincaid said thinking of SF as a genre in the narrative sense is not an accurate application of the term "genre."

Cue the Shaun-Duke-summarizing-and-melding-with-Paul-Kincaid quote:

Unlike romance or crime, there is nothing unique to the narrative practice of sf that can be separated from everything else. This might explain, for example, why there has been so much discussion about the nature of sf as a cross-pollinating genre – crossovers being so regular an occurrence that one would be hard pressed to find an sf text which does not cross over into other generic forms.

Shaun then suggests that people consider science fiction as one of the "supergenres" alongside realistic fiction and anti-realistic fiction, underneath of which rest the traditional genres of historical novels, crime stories, romances, fantasies, and so on. "These supergenres would not necessarily define the genres beneath them, but they would suggest a relationship between genres that moves beyond narrative practice, but never quite leaves it behind. A fantasy novel might be as much historical as it is anti-realist; the former is a narrative practice, while the latter is a conceptual 'game.'"

Shaun makes some fascinating points in his essay, which I suggest people go and read. I also look forward to reading Shaun's future exploration of this topic.

However, I wonder if Shaun doesn't take his thought experiment far enough. Perhaps instead of even speaking of science fiction as a genre or supergenre, we should instead speak of SF and other established genres as viewpoints toward seeing the world. 

After all, fiction itself is a worldview, a way of saying that certain types of stories have not truly happened and likely will never happen. The "fiction" worldview allows people to approach fictional stories with a different frame of mind than the viewpoints we have when approaching historical texts, or memoirs, or poetry, or even real life.

And within the viewpoint of fiction rest more individualized views of what fiction can accomplish. These viewpoints—our traditional genres like fantasy, horror, romance and so on—essential set up people to understand what they're about to experience. Just as the human mind must learn to interpret the sensory inputs we receive from our eyes and ears—allowing us to know that this image we're seeing is a tree, and that buzzing sound we're hearing is a bee—so too must people learn to understand the fictional stories they experience. Hence the existence of genres, which help people understand the fictional motifs and themes and beliefs they are about to encounter.

Now I know there's more to genre than merely a worldview—there's also a marketing aspect which publishers and authors use to sell books, along with social communities of readers connected with each genre. However, I think this worldview theory is still a useful way to understand part of why genres exist.

And if it's true that genre should in part be understood as a literary viewpoint, this would also help explain why science fiction is in such decline.

During Readercon earlier this year I spoke briefly with a well-known author whose fiction, while incorporating many aspects of SF, is not usually considered a part of the science fiction genre. (Yes, I'm being vague, but this was a personal conversation and I don't intend to name the author.) When I asked the author why he thought fantasy had eclipsed the science fiction genre in recent years, he said that "Unlike with the fantasy genre, science fiction is still trying to discover what it wants to say." 

This quote struck me because I'm fascinated with why so few people these days read science fiction.  But what if the problem with SF isn't that it merely doesn't know what it wants to say to 21st century audiences (although I believe that is part of the problem). What if the worldview of science fiction, centered around technological change and futurism and humanity's place in the universe, no longer strikes many people as being unique to the genre because this worldview has become common among a sizable portion of humanity.

In short, what if SF's worldview is now the defacto worldview of so many people living through the technological changes of the 21 century that the genre seems rather tame and boring?

I don't know if this is true, but it's what I'm contemplating today. But if there's any truth in this, then if science fiction is to again become relevant to people the way our genre views the world—and our genre's place in our fictional understandings of life—must change.