Montagues, Capulets, Genre Fiction, Literary Fiction and Me, Trapped in the Middle with You

There’s a weird dynamic that happens when a genre fiction writer meets a literary fiction writer. A suspiciousness. Like we’re two dogs from different packs circling each other. Now this is crazy! We both fish out of the same water. We’re both trying to do the same thing which is to write words for an emotional\spiritual reaction. And in the end, I’m not sure how much we get to choose what we write. It’s the old thing with Stephen King and Robert Frost, looking at a New England pond. One will have monsters. The other inspiration on the beauty and truths of life. Both will string words together to capture the experience.

Okay, now, this is a complete generalization, that genre fiction writers and literary fiction writers are constantly battling like Montagues and Capulets. I had dinner with a fiction writer, Eleanor Brown who wrote The Weird Sisters. We didn’t duel with steak knives. Well, we were at a Mexican food place. We shattered Corona bottles and tried to slash each other with the broken ends. Kidding.

However, after Saturday night, at the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers conference, after I blew it with a nice literary fiction writer, I had to figure out what happens when I meet someone writing literary fiction. Me. Only me. My reaction as a soon to be published genre writer. Let’s say I’m the Mercutio, caught between the Montagues or the Capulets. Or Friar Lawrence. No, Mercutio, he was so much more mercurial.

This is what happens when I meet a writer and I ask, “What do you write?” And they answer, “I write literary fiction.” My immediate reaction is, “Yeah, right.” Yeah, I know, I’m horrible, but this is the truth. If I can’t be honest with you, World, who can I be honest with? I’ll share all of my dirty secrets. Except maybe for two or three that only Chris Devlin knows. And she is a vault, baby.

So there I am, thinking, “Yeah, right, you can write literary fiction? Who do you think you are?” In essence, I think THEY are saying, “I can write better than you, genre fiction boy. Wanna go up against the champ?” And I don’t. I get afraid.

So after I scoff, I get afraid. Maybe they do write better than me! Oh my gosh, maybe I can’t write at all. Maybe I should give up and never, ever write again. I hear there are other things to do with one’s time. Collect stamps. Photography. Maybe join the Elk’s Club.

All the while, the literary fiction writer is inching toward the door because I’m losing it. Usually, I keep this all to myself. But not last Saturday night. Oh boy. Total and complete meltdown. And if you know me, once I start to blow it socially, I don’t stop digging until we’re all buried.

Now, there is some historical precedence to the whole literary versus genre fiction thing. I wrote a paper on Science Fiction as Literature in college, and one of the things that happened during the 1950’s is that science fiction became so incredibly popular that publishing houses opened up the doors to anything, and I mean anything. I heard a story recently that since the writers got paid by the word that they would sometimes overwrite scenes just to get more cash. Five pages of a guy brushing his teeth. True story. And so, a lot of junk hit the market. And maybe you could say the same thing about romance novels, fantasy novels, mysteries, et cetera. There have been booms and busts for genres. How many cut-rate horror novels were there in the late 70’s and early 80’s?
So, yeah, maybe there was been trash published in genre fiction.

And yes, there is still a stigma. I was talking with a college professor who was also a famous novelist. I shan’t name names. I told him I wanted to get published. He sniffed and said I should dash off a mystery. They’re so easy and they seem to sell.

But the truth is, writing is hard, whether you are writing mysteries, romances, or literary novels. It’s hard. My friend says that it’s like building a table with 23 legs. It’s all hard. We should be supporting one another.

But I will learn from my experience. No more scoffing. No more fear. The next time I meet a literary fiction writer, I’m going to hug them and cry into the crook of their neck. I’m going to weep and say, “My brother, my sister, my soul, my heart, my fellow writer. Let us journey together for we are both bound by blood, ink, and sweat.”

Yeah, then they won’t think I’m weird at all.

P.S. A friend of mine from a writer’s workshop long ago has asked me to critique her literary novel because she said, and I quote, “You know your sh*t.” I’m so excited. I love books. Whether they be literary, genre, dripping wet in the bath, or bone dry boring. I love books.

P.P.S. A last dirty little secret. A last confession. I want to do both. I want to do genre and literary in the same stories. And not just a little magical realism. No, full on, in your face, genre stuff but with a beautiful, literary bent. Think Margaret Atwood. Think David Lynch meets Stephen King meets frakking Shakespeare. Hey, that’s my first novel. Anyway. Oh, to dream. All writers are dreamers because to write is to dream, and perhaps Mercutio put it best. Maybe he is talking about all writing in the passage below because all fiction, all stories, are dreams.

True, I talk of dreams,
Which are the children of an idle brain,
Begot of nothing but vain fantasy,
Which is as thin of substance as the air
And more inconstant than the wind, who wooes
Even now the frozen bosom of the north,
And, being anger’d, puffs away from thence,
Turning his face to the dew-dropping south.

7 thoughts on “Montagues, Capulets, Genre Fiction, Literary Fiction and Me, Trapped in the Middle with You

  1. When I took my Intro to Lit class in college, I grew a serious bias against literary fiction, despite how much I enjoyed some of the stories. In the handful of years that followed, I came across some great literary works, and my views changed drastically! I don’t go out to look for literary fiction. In fact, the first place I go when I walk into a book store is the fantasy/sci-fi section.

    However, if a book is recommended to me, or if I stumble over a great literary book, I’ll read it. Not because I feel like I have to, but because good writing is good writing, no matter what happens in the story.

    Personally, I don’t want to write literary fiction. I like the pulp, the candy, the shiny, kitchy feel of genre fiction. It’s my favorite! I’ll continue to read and recommend literary fiction, but I don’t think I’ll get around to writing it any time soon. Maybe some day, when I’ve matured a bit more :).

  2. As someone who writes in a few genres, I’ve learned genre is more of a marketing tool than a cage for the essence and spirit of the written word.

  3. Very well put. I am totally going to blog about your comment on my blog. It’s gonna be a meta-blog on comments on blogs, but with cats instead of people. Very post modern.

  4. Oh, Giles, you are too cool. I go back and forth between straight up genre fiction to literary fiction. I like it all. Just finishing up with SHIVER and ATLAS SHRUGGED. Then, on to books written by struggling writers, both pretty literary. But I have WEREWOLF SMACKDOWN on my list from Mario Acevedo. At this stage, when I go into a bookstore, you’re right, straight to sci-fi\ftantasy. That is, when I’m not trembling by the cash registers, fearful of all the competition my little books have.

  5. This is a great post, Aaron. What is that thingthat separates the us from the them? I was lucky that the English department at UNC valued all types of literature when I was a student there in the early 90s. They even hosted the Literatures of the Fantastic conference (1994?) and roped Harlan Ellison in to deliver the keynote. Very forward thinking for the ivory towers of the time. Plenty of colleges and universities today could take a lesson. Good writing is good writing is good writing. Let’s all cry and be good together.

  6. Tomatoes, tomatoes, can’t we all be brothers? First off, Aaron is right–whether it’s literary or genre, or 23 table legs…it’s hard. I think people don’t know the difference because they are looking at the wrong things. “Literary”, although trounced about as though this describes your writing style and talent, has nothing whatsoever to do with those things. Literary does not mean smarter, better or snooty-er.

    As a struggling writer–and I say struggling in the sense that every writer does struggle, and I don’t see me as struggling in any other way, I know my motivations. Do you know yours? Good! We’re almost there–and that’s where all writers need to start.

    Last year, “chick lit” writer Jennifer Weiner snubbed literary, Pulitzer Prize winning author Jennifer Egan on comments she’d made after winning. You can read about it here:

    http://www.ravingsii.blogspot.com/2011/05/cat-fight-and-open-letter-to-jennifer.html

    and here:

    http://www.ravingsii.blogspot.com/2011/05/saying-oops.html

    Make sure you read the comments. They’re fun. 🙂

    Jennifer Weiner went on a rampage about literary writing and how “chick lit” is denounced by the literati, and then said “I will go cry into my huge royalty checks.”

    Yeeee-ah. I see her motivation for writing a mile a way, folks, and it isn’t about art. As a literary novelist, my motivations are, in a very humble way, about change. I want someone to walk away from my book and be altered-forever. Certain authors have done this for me. Philip Roth, Robert Butler, Hemingway, Camus, Marquez. I want to create a piece of art that doesn’t just enrapture, but entertains and engages as well. I hate dry literary fiction. It’s out there because some writers are in love with their own voice. Mistake.

    Literary writing does something that genre writing does only sometimes: it runs with themes and motifs that transcend time, gender, race, socio-economics and class. Genre fiction must have a formula in it somewhere. You can play with the formula, you can create twists and turns, but in the end, a romance is a romance and a horror novel better be horrifying. Literary fiction has no such strictures, and so we get to play with universal themes that transcend any genre. AND we can throw in a horrifying romance, too!

    Anne Rice is a wonderful horror writer–she is also an excellent writer and her books are quite literary due to their themes.

    My point? Be proud, genre writers! But…don’t get miffed when the literati ignore you in their high-brow circles. They have motivations that they see as loftier than a royalty check or even art and they/we sometimes get full of ourselves. But we’re on the whole, very nice people.

  7. Hurray! Loving you! I think I’ll do a whole blog just on this comment alone. I love talking about this stuff!

    In the end, though, I think I side with my friend Sue Mitchell, genre\literary is about marketing, more than about the story. But you are right, horror better horrifying, and romance better be romancey.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *