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ROMANCE persecution.
• Chick-Lit: often humorous romantic adventures geared toward • Hauntings
single working women in their twenties and thirties. • Historical
• Christian • Magical Realism: a genre inspired by Latin-American authors, in
• Contemporary: a romance using modern characters and true-to- which extraordinary forces or creatures pop into otherwise
life settings. normal, real-life settings.
• Erotica • Psychological: a story based on the disturbed human psyche,
• Glitz/Glamor: focused on the jet-set elite and celebrity-like often exploring insane, altered realities and featuring a human
characters. monster with horrific, but not supernatural, aspects.
• Historical: • Quiet Horror: subtly written horror that uses atmosphere and
• Multicultural: a romance centered on non-Caucasian characters, mood, rather than graphic description, to create fear and
largely African-American or Hispanic. suspense.
• Religious
• Paranormal: involving some sort of supernatural element,
ranging widely to include science fiction/fantasy aspects such as • Science-Fiction Horror: SF with a darker, more violent twist,
time travel, monsters or psychic abilities. often revolving around alien invasions, mad scientists, or
• Romantic Comedy experiments gone wrong.
• Romantic Suspense: a novel in which an admirable heroine is • Splatter: a fairly new, extreme style of horror that cuts right to
pitted against some evil force (but in which the romantic aspect the gore.
still maintains priority). • Supernatural Menace
• Sensual: based on the sensual tension between hero and • Technology: stories featuring technology that has run amok,
heroine, including sizzling sex scenes. venturing increasingly into the expanding domain of computers,
cyberspace, and genetic engineering.
• Spicy: a romance in which married characters work to resolve
their problems. • Weird Tales: inspired by the magazine of the same name, a
more traditional form featuring strange and uncanny events
• Sweet: a romance centered on a virgin heroine, with a storyline (Twilight Zone).
containing little or no sex.
• Young Adult
• Young Adult: written with the teenage audience in mind, with a • Zombie
suitably lower level of sexual content.
THRILLER/SUSPENSE
HORROR
• Child in Peril
• Action: a story that often features a race against the clock, lots
of violence, and an obvious antagonist.
• Comic Horror: horror stories that either spoof horror conventions • Comic
or that mix the gore with dark humor.
• Conspiracy
• Creepy Kids
• Crime: a story focused on the commission of a crime, often from
• Dark Fantasy: a horror story with supernatural and fantasy the point of view of the criminals.
elements.
• Disaster: a story in which Mother Nature herself is the
• Dark Mystery/Noir: inspired by hardboiled detective tales, set antagonist, in the form of a hurricane, earthquake or some other
in an urban underworld of crime and moral ambiguity. natural menace.
• Erotic Vampire
• Eco-Thriller: a story in which the hero battles some ecological
• Fabulist: derived from "fable," an ancient tradition in which calamity - and often has to also fight the people responsible for
objects, animals or forces of nature are anthropomorphized in creating that calamity.
order to deliver a moral lesson. • Erotic
• Gothic: a traditional form depicting the encroachment of the • Espionage
Middle Ages upon the 18th century Enlightenment, filled with
• Forensic: a thriller featuring the work of forensic experts, whose
images of decay and ruin, and episodes of imprisonment and
involvement often puts their own lives at risk. • High/Epic Fantasy: tales with an emphasis on the fate of an
• Historical entire race or nation, often featuring a young "nobody" hero
• Horror: a story—generally featuring some monstrous villain - in battling an ultimate evil.
which fear and violence play a major part, complete with graphic • Historical
descriptions. • Mundane SF: a movement that spurns fanciful conceits like warp
• Legal: … generally putting his own life at risk. drives, wormholes and faster-than-light travel for stories based on
• Medical: a thriller featuring medical personnel, whether battling scientific knowledge as it actually exists.
a legitimate medical threat such as a world-wide virus, or the • Military SF: extrapolate existing military technology and tactics
illegal or immoral use of medical technology. into the future.
• Military: a thriller featuring a military protagonist, often working • Mystery SF
behind enemy lines or as part of a specialized force. • Mythic Fiction
• Police Procedural • New Age: a category of speculative fiction that deals with occult
• Political Intrigue: a thriller in which the hero must ensure the subjects such as astrology, psychic phenomena, spiritual healing,
stability of the government that employs him. UFOs and mysticism.
• Psychological: a suspenseful thriller in which the conflict • Post-Apocalyptic
between the characters is mental and emotional rather than • Romance
physical—until an often violent resolution. • Religious: centering on theological ideas, and heroes who are
• Romantic ruled by their religious beliefs.
• Supernatural: a thriller in which the hero, the antagonist, or • Science Fantasy: a blend in which fantasy is supported by
both have supernatural powers. scientific or pseudo-scientific explanations.
• Technological: a thriller in which technology - usually run amok - • Social SF: tales that focus on how characters react to their
is central environments - including social satire.
• Soft SF: tales based on the more subjective, "softer" sciences:
SCIENCE FICTION/FANTASY psychology, sociology, anthropology, etc.
• Alternate History: often featuring a profound "what if?" • Space Opera: a traditional good guys/bad guys faceoff with lots
premise. of action and larger-than-life characters.
• Arthurian Fantasy • Spy-Fi: tales of espionage with SF elements, especially the use of
• Bangsian Fantasy: stories speculating on the afterlives of high-tech gadgetry.
famous people. • Steampunk: a specific type of alternate history in which
• Biopunk: a blend of film noir, Japanese anime and post-modern characters in Victorian England have access to 20th century
elements used to describe an underground, nihilistic biotech technology.
society. • Superheroes
• Children's Fantasy • Sword and Sorcery
• Comic • Thriller SF: an SF story that takes on the classic world-at-risk,
• Cyberpunk: stories featuring tough outsiders in a high-tech near- cliffhanger elements of a thriller.
future where computers have produced major changes in society. • Time-Travel
• Dark Fantasy: tales that focus on the nightmarish underbelly of • Urban Fantasy: a fantasy tale in which magical powers and
magic, venturing into the violence of horror novels. characters appear in an otherwise normal modern context, similar
• Dystopian: stories that portray a bleak future world. to Latin American magical realism.
• Erotic: SF or fantasy tales that focus on sexuality. • Vampire
• Game-Related Fantasy • Wuxia: fantasy tales set within the martial arts traditions and
• Hard Science Fiction: tales in which real present-day science is philosophies of China.
logically extrapolated to the future. • Young Adult
• Heroic Fantasy: stories of war and its heroes, the fantasy MYSTERY/CRIME
equivalent of military science fiction.
• Amateur DetectiveChild in Peril
• Classic Whodunit
• Comic (Bumbling Detective) Cozy: a mystery that takes place
in a small town—sometimes in a single home—where all the
suspects are present and familiar with one another, except the
detective, who is usually an eccentric outsider.
• Courtroom Drama
• Dark Thriller: a mystery that ventures into the fear factor and
graphic violence of the horror genre.
• Espionage
• Forensic
• Heists and Capers: an "antihero" genre which focuses on the
planning and execution of a crime, told from the criminal's
perspective.
• Historical
• Inverted: a story in which the reader knows "whodunit," but the
suspense arises from watching the detective figure it out.
• Locked Room: a mystery in which the crime is apparently
committed under impossible circumstances (but eventually elicits
a rational explanation).
• Medical: generally involving a medical threat (e.g., a viral
epidemic), or the illegitimate use of medical technology.
• Police Procedural: a crime solved from the perspective of the
police, following detailed, real-life procedures.
• Private Detective: Focused on the independent snoop-for-hire,
these have evolved from tough-guy "hard-boiled" detectives to
the more professional operators of today.
• Psychological Suspense: mysteries focused on the intricacies
of the crime and what motivated the perpetrator to commit them.
• Romantic
• Technothriller: a spinoff from the traditional thriller mystery,
with an emphasis on high technology.
• Thriller: a suspense mystery with a wider—often international—
scope and more action.
• Woman in Jeopardy
• Young Adult: a story aimed at a teenage audience, with a hero
detective generally the same age or slightly older than the
reader, pursuing criminals who are generally less violent—but
often just as scary—as those in adult mysteries

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