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Paranormal romance

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Subgenre of romantic fiction and speculative fiction
Twilight, an example of a paranormal romance series

Paranormal romance is asubgenre of bothromantic fiction andspeculative fiction. Paranormal romance focuses onromantic love and includes elements beyond the range of scientific explanation, from the speculative fiction genres offantasy,science fiction, andhorror. Paranormal romance range from traditional romances with a paranormal setting to stories with a science fiction or fantasy-based plot with a romantic subplot included. Romantic relationships between humans andvampires,shapeshifters,ghosts, and other entities of a fantastic or otherworldly nature are common.

Beyond the more prevalent themes involving vampires, shapeshifters, ghosts, ortime travel, paranormal romances can also include books featuring characters withpsychic abilities, such astelekinesis ortelepathy. Paranormal romance's most recent revival has been spurred by turn of the 21st century technology; for example, theinternet andelectronic publishing.[citation needed] Paranormal romances are one of the fastest-growing trends in the romance genre.

Examples of authors specializing in this genre includeDani Harper,Nalini Singh,Jessica Bird,Kresley Cole,Christine Feehan,Kelley Armstrong, andStephenie Meyer, author of theTwilight series. According to 2013 statistics by the fantasy publisherTor Books, among writers ofurban fantasy or paranormal romance, 57% are women and 43% are men, whereas men outnumber women by about two to one in writinghistorical,epic, orhigh fantasy.[citation needed] The same statistics describe men outnumbering women by four to one in writingscience fiction and that men write 83% ofHorror.[1]

Definition and subgenres

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Paranormal romance blends the real with the fantastic or science fictional. The fantastic elements may be woven into an alternate version of our own world in anurban fantasy involving vampires,demons, and/orwerewolves, or they may be more "normal" manifestations of the paranormal—humans with psychic abilities,witches, or ghosts.Time travel, futuristic, andextraterrestrial romances also fall beneath the paranormal umbrella.[2]

These novels often blend elements of other subgenres, includingsuspense andmystery, with their fantastic themes. A few paranormals are set solely in the past and are structured much like anyhistorical romance novel. Others are set in the future, sometimes on different worlds. Still others have a time-travel element with either the hero or the heroine traveling into the past or the future.[3] Between 2002 and 2004, the number of paranormal romances published in the United States doubled to 170 per year. A popular title in the genre can sell over 500,000 copies.[4]

As in thefantasy subgenre known as urban fantasy, many paranormal romances rely on the blend of contemporary life with the existence of supernatural or magically empowered beings, human or otherwise; sometimes the larger culture is aware of the magical in its midst, sometimes it is not. Some paranormal romances focus less on the specifics of their alternative worlds than do traditional science fiction or fantasy novels, keeping the attention strongly on the underlying romance.[5] Others develop the alternate reality meticulously, combining well-planned magical systems and inhuman cultures with contemporary reality.

The first futuristic romance to be marketed by a mainstream romance publisher,Jayne Ann Krentz'sSweet Starfire, was published in 1986 and was a "classic road trip romance" that just happened to be set in a separate galaxy.[6] This genre has become much more popular since 2000. Krentz attributes the popularity of this subgenre to the fact that the novels "are, at heart, classic historical romances that just happen to be set on other worlds".[6]

Time-travel romances are a version of the classic "fish out of water" story. In most, the heroine is from the present day and travels into the past to meet the hero (for example, the manga and anime seriesInuyasha). In a smaller subset of these novels, the hero, who lives in the past, travels forward into his future to meet the heroine. A successful time-travel romance must have the characters react logically to their experience, and should investigate some of the differences, both physical and mental, between the world the character normally inhabits and the one in which they have landed. Some writers choose to end their novels with the protagonists trapped in different time periods and unable to be together—to the displeasure of many readers of the genre.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Crisp, Julie (10 July 2013)."Sexism in Genre Publishing: A Publisher's Perspective".Tor Books. Archived fromthe original on 30 April 2015. Retrieved29 April 2015.
  2. ^"Romance Novels--Subgenres".Romance Writers of America. Archived fromthe original on 2017-12-31. Retrieved2017-03-23.
  3. ^"Submission Guidelines".Dorchester Publishing. Archived fromthe original on 2007-04-30. Retrieved2007-04-30.
  4. ^Luscombe, Belinda (February 19, 2006)."Well, Hello, Suckers".Time. Archived fromthe original on June 15, 2006. Retrieved2007-04-23.
  5. ^Marble, Anne M. (2001)."The Subgenres of Romance". Writing-World.Com. Retrieved2007-04-30.
  6. ^abGelsomino, Tara (2002)."Review of Smoke in Mirrors". Romantic Times. Archived fromthe original on 2007-10-04. Retrieved2007-07-26.
  7. ^Marble, Anne M. (September 2002)."Writing Time Travel Romances". Writing-world.Com. Archived fromthe original on 2007-06-26. Retrieved2007-07-30.
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