McAnally's (The Community Pub) > Author Craft
The "Urban Fantasy" Category
Starbeam:
--- Quote from: OZ on November 16, 2011, 02:20:55 AM ---There is a series about a female FBI agent that gets taken to a parallel earth that I believe is still considered Urban Fantasy. ( I don't remember the name of the series. The world is mostly populated by werewolves and vampires with humans being the minority. ) Let's face it. Much of Urban Fantasy alters the cities enough that they aren't really on this world.
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I have the first book of that series. I forget the title, but the premise is that the agent gets pulled across to solve a mystery, something like disappearing vampires, I think.
Urban Fantasy is pretty versatile as a sub genre. It started, or most authors I've heard talk about it agree, with stuff like Borderlands and Charles deLint(sp?), and it morphed to mean werewolves and vampires with Laurell K Hamilton, and now includes pretty much anything you can think of that's set in a more modern setting.
MClark:
--- Quote from: Starbeam on November 13, 2011, 05:31:11 PM ---There are lots of UFs that aren't in first person. Harry Connolly's Twenty Palaces series, Thomas Sniegoski's Remy Chandler series, the Skinners series by Marcus Pelegrimas are some I can think of off the top of my head.
The defining features of UF isn't the POV-that's rarely something that defines any genre/subgenre. Mostly it's more the content, and with UF it's a very much debated thing of what it is.
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Harry Connolly's Twenty Palaces series is most definitely in first person.
I agree that urban fantasy does not have to be in first person.
I don't know how to multi-quote, but your comment on Charles de Lint had me intrigued. I thought for sure Emma Bull's "The War of the Oaks" preceded his work, but it does not. De Lint's "Moonheart" came out 3 years before.
CS Lewis' "That Hideous Strength" might technically be urban fantasy, since the bad scientists are working for demonic entities, but most don't think of the work as such.
Charles Williams (a not so famous Inkling) wrote what look like urban fantasies, but I have not read them. I heard they were difficult to get into.
HP Lovecraft would technically be urban fantasy, but usually is considered horror. Or maybe his own special category - Lovecraftian (which the Twenty Palace series sort of belongs too, also).
The urban fantasy Dracula is technically a epistolary novel, composed of newspaper clippings, diary entries, letters and so forth. (Hmm, I seem to have almost exactly quoted the Wikipedia entry by accident.)
Maybe I'm thread hijacking, sorry.
Quantus:
In general I think the Urban is less a phase indicating it's restrictive to Urban settings (ie cities) and more about being a (near-)modern day thing, and generally earth based, though I could see it stretching to cover off-world and other such things to a point, but there would need to be some recognizable connection to a contemporary earth society. I mean, Codex Alera is technically set in modern day on an alien planet with a wormhole attached to earth, but you arent going to get that purely from the text; would have to see author interviews and such to know it; it reads like a high-fantasy bordering on Roman historical fiction.
By contrast I used to read a comic book that was another planet from earth, and was basically humans in a modern world, just run by magic instead of science. So cops still had trench-coats and carried badges, but they were powerful shield charms, not just social symbols.
mdodd:
--- Quote from: Quantus on November 22, 2011, 06:04:04 PM ---In general I think the Urban is less a phase indicating it's restrictive to Urban settings (ie cities) and more about being a (near-)modern day thing, and generally earth based, though I could see it stretching to cover off-world and other such things to a point, but there would need to be some recognizable connection to a contemporary earth society. I mean, Codex Alera is technically set in modern day on an alien planet with a wormhole attached to earth, but you arent going to get that purely from the text; would have to see author interviews and such to know it; it reads like a high-fantasy bordering on Roman historical fiction.
By contrast I used to read a comic book that was another planet from earth, and was basically humans in a modern world, just run by magic instead of science. So cops still had trench-coats and carried badges, but they were powerful shield charms, not just social symbols.
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Quantas,
Is that the series which the Sci-fi channel did a movie where Kevin Sorbo was dressed alarmingly like Harry, but with the hat from the covers of the books and the duster was made of what looked like gabardine.
Quantus:
--- Quote from: mdodd on November 22, 2011, 10:02:03 PM ---Quantas,
Is that the series which the Sci-fi channel did a movie where Kevin Sorbo was dressed alarmingly like Harry, but with the hat from the covers of the books and the duster was made of what looked like gabardine.
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Lol, no I was talking about one of those old Crossgen Comics they had briefly. But that Kevin Sorbo thing sounds fantastically terrible, ill have to track it down :D
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