Episode 2: So you think you’re too good for genre?

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Summary

Episode 2: nicholae cline, Jen Brown, Sofia Leung discuss their favorite genres and set the record straight: romances always have happy endings.

 
  • Intro

    nicholae: You’re listening to the We Reads podcast where we: nicholae, 

    Jen: Jen, 

    sofia: and Sofia talk about books, the authors we love and how our identities show up while we’re reading. 

    Jen: These books have brought us joy, nourished us and changed us for the better. We’re excited to discuss them with you! 

    nicholae

    Y'all, can anyone remember why we wanted to talk about genres in the first place?

    sofia

    not really 

    Jen

    That's a great question.

    [laughter]

    sofia

    oh maybe because we all love genre

    Jen Brown

    Probably. That seems safe.

    nicholae

    My friend, genre.

    [laughter]

    Jen Brown

    Know her. Love her. 

    nicholae

    This is off to a good start already. 

    [laughter]

    Sofia

    Yes, it really is. 

    Jen

    10 out of 10

    [laughter]

    Sofia

    No notes

    [more laughter]

    nicholae

    Best episode. Give us an award.

    [more laughter, as Sofia adjusts her mic. Hosts joke about sticking their entire heads into the sound-dampening boxes that their mics are inside of.]

    Jen

    Yeah, we love genre. We love a category, I think.

    sofia

    I mean, we are librarians.

    Jen 

    This is true.

    sofia

    I do love a fantasy and I know you both do also. But nicholae, you don't like sci-fi? 

    nicholae

    I love sci-fi. Who said?

    sofia

    Oh, I don't know. I'm just looking at your list.

    nicholae

    Who lied to you?

    sofia

    I'm looking at your list and it's not on there.

    nicholae

    I'm coming for you. I put spec fic on mine because I'm fancy.

    sofia

    Ohhh. Let's talk about the difference. Yeah. What does that mean?

    Jen Brown

    Mmm.

    sofia

    Because I didn't put spec fic on mine.

    nicholae

    I mean, I think for me, it kind of...It emphasizes the speculative in science fiction. So, perhaps we could say all spec fic is sci-fi, but not all sci-fi is spec fic. I'm not saying that's true. I'm just sort of making things up as I go along.

    sofia

    No, I think that's true.

    nicholae

    But what I like about saying speculative fiction is that it really emphasizes the imagination, the imagining forward, the imagining other ways of being and living in the world, imagining other configurations of the world.

    And I don't know, I think sci-fi to some degree has the capacity to do that in all of its forms across time, but there is a history of sci-fi that is more reacting to certain moments and creating worlds that are meant to kind of represent slant-wise things that are going on in the real world, in the in the time and place that it arises, right?

    But there are other kinds of science fiction that are actually imagining totally different worlds, imagining different ways that things can be. And that is also necessarily intertwined with the present. It emerges from the present context. But I think it's more forward-looking than retrospective.

    And that, to me, gets to the difference a little bit. But honestly, I think half the time when people say spec fic, they're just being pretentious.

    [laughter]

    And that's me. Sometimes I'm fancy.

    Jen Brown

    Pinkies up.

    Sofia

    Oh, so spec fic is for people who don't like genre. They're like, I'm too good for a genre.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm. I do sometimes get that vibe. I feel similarly to nicholae. I feel like I can vibe with spec fic. I feel like there are books that fall into that category and it's like, okay, this is giving and it makes sense here. But then there are times where I feel like people label something as spec fic to elevate it, like you said, away from genre. And then it's like, oh, I feel better about liking this because it's not science fiction. It's not fantasy. It's speculative.

    Sofia

    Interesting. So like what are some speculative fiction books off the top of your head that don't fall into fantasy or sci-fi?

    Jen Brown

    Mmm, that's a good question. 

    Sofia

    Or like an author?

    Jen

    I kind of, you know…and I'm thinking about it like…it's not that those books don't fall into sci-fi fantasy because I would think of them as such, but they get given the label of speculative, maybe because something in the prose feels literary or something about it feels like it's dealing with bigger, more important themes. The one that's at the top of my mind is like the Broken Earth trilogy by N.K. Jemisin, which I feel like is, I mean, it could be both, right? It has elements of science fiction. It also has fantastical elements that aren't rooted in science necessarily, but like the science of earthquakes and shifting. But I just, I think that book is great for a lot of reasons, but I've heard people talk about it—even other authors on other podcasts talk about it—like it's this literary thing that transcends just mere fantasy / sci-fi. It is the speculative, like halfway to literary type thing.

    And I don't know. I feel like I'd be curious to know what N.K. Jemisin would say about her own books because like, I don't know. Is that what she thinks? Like, I think she wrote it as a sci-fi fantasy. But I don't know.

    nicholae

    Right.

    Sofia

    That's interesting.

    nicholae

    Yeah, I feel like there's kind of an elevation happening. So because of the trappings of genre, people sometimes feel a certain amount of judgment towards or shame about their love of genres. I think especially...

    Jen Brown

    That part.

    nicholae

    Right, I mean, I think especially genres like thrillers or romance. I think there was a time when sci-fi and fantasy felt more that way. I think fantasy still does to a certain degree. I think sci-fi has been elevated already to a certain degree in contemporary years so that it feels more literary and can actually be a part of the canon in a way that some of these other genres cannot. 

    Sofia

    Oh, is it cause like—white man?

    nicholae

    Maybe so. I mean, I think more and more white male authors have ventured into...like literary authors have ventured into sci-fi territory, but also most authors that are really well known in sci-fi are white and male, especially what would be considered like the classical canon of the 20th century.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm. Yes.

    nicholae

    I mean, for me, all spec fic is sci-fi, like I said, but not all sci-fi is spec fic. Um It's, you know, all gravies are sauces, but not all sauces are gravies.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    nicholae

    I just, I mean, I also think, you know, to your question, Sofia, I think of people like Kazuo Ishiguro and Richard Powers who play with sci-fi themes or, you know, spec within speculative territory.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    sofia

    Yeah, yes.

    nicholae

    I don't know that they would necessarily consider themselves science fiction authors, but there's a certain amount of like speculation and fabulation happening in their books, especially, you know, The Overstory from Richard Powers.

    sofia

    Right.

    nicholae

    And you know almost all of the works from Kazuo Ishiguro over the past few years have done that as well.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    sofia

    Yeah, those are great examples. Although I didn't even realize Richard Powers did that because I don't think I've read any of his books. But yeah.

    nicholae

    Yeah, he has for a while, like Galatea and The Overstory are the two that first come to mind for me from him in this territory.

    sofia

    Interesting. Yeah, I guess like I do like some speculative fiction, but actually sometimes when it says that I'm like, oh, it's going to be like too literary for me. Am I just going to be oh my God, get to that point, man.

    Jen Brown

    Right.

    sofia

    So I actually still really more strongly identify with like saying I like fantasy / sci-fi over speculative fiction because I think if it's categorized as fantasy sci-fi, I will probably be more likely to like it versus if it was just categorized as speculative fiction.

    Even though, like for example, I didn't realize N.K. Jemisin was, like a lot of people were talking about her as like a spec fic person because I always identified her as like a fantasy sci-fi person.

    Jen Brown

    Right, right, right. And to be fair, I have heard white men say this. And so what I wonder is if that has something to do with them, I don't know, the inner the inner world of white men doing something, jumping through mental hoops of trying to either validate or maybe that's their way of feeling like, oh, we're giving her props, but it's also really kind of…

    sofia

    yeah

    Jen Brown

    It almost feels like it has the opposite effect.

    sofia

    Yeah. Yeah. It's like theory. Yeah.

    Jen Brown

    Yes, theory versus practice! Yes, it is like that. It feels a lot like that.

    sofia

    yeah

    Jen Brown

    But I'm with you, Sofia. When we were prepping for this episode and I was thinking, what are my favorite genres? I specifically wrote down, you know, fantasy. Specifically because I like the just I've just…ever since childhood fantasy has been that escapist place of just whether it's like…really vast sprawling epics or, you know, more character focused, tight focus, like that. I feel like that's my jam. I wrote down science fantasy, which is another thing that I think is like I think of a little differently than science fiction.

    Sometimes sci-fi has a hard sort of scientific focus. And I'm a fan of like, the softer sci-fi, the softer side of science that's more like it's science fiction, but magic, basically.

    [laughter] Technology and magic.

    sofia

    Okay, give me an example.

    Jen Brown

    I mean, okay, what is a good example? Leslye Penelope…

    sofia

    Yeah, it was like a song of something, something.

    Jen Brown

    yes, yes, yes, yes. Yes, I think that that's a good one because that one has like a more modern like setting as well, like almost like a golden age-esque. I think there's like automobiles and things in it, but then there's this magical side of things. Yes, I gotta, I can't remember the name of that book, but it it is a series that was really good by Leslye Penelope. [The book is] in the romance [category], as well. Romance slash sci-fi fantasy category. But yes, I love me some horror. And I have to actually, you know what, I got to eat some, I got to eat my words here because I'm looking at my notes. I did write speculative fiction.

    [laughter]

    As one of my favorite…But I, but I, I like, qualified it with “character-driven” speculative fiction, which I don't even know….I think I know what that means, but I don't even know if I could name a bunch of books with that. But basically—any genre that falls under that umbrella of sci-fi fantasy but where we care about the characters more than we do about the world. 

    Sofia

    Okay, gotcha.

    Jen Brown

    Like I wasn't as big of a Game of Thrones fan, in terms of the books. I mean, I watched all of the TV show up until the awful end. But like, I want a book that's gonna put me in the mind of the character, and like really drive through what they're going through…their inner world. I want a rich inner world of the character, in the speculative space, I guess.

    nicholae

    On the topic of character-driven sci-fi, spec fic, whatever we want to go with in terms of our terminology, I think of the Ancillary Justice series, the Anne Leckie series. That, to me feels, like it does a really good job of balancing both like a real richly conceived world and deep world building on the one hand with a desire and a commitment to exploring the subjectivity of a character. And…it's also just a fascinating premise. So it's also doing that thing that I think sci-fi does really well, which is: take an idea or a theme and really go with it and explore it in a, I think, compelling, and intriguing, and new way, right? So like the subjectivity of a quote individual who's not actually just an individual, right? But who has been individuated or separated in some way from this other kind of consciousness that they otherwise experience and were born from. Right? So to me, that book, that series does a really good job of balancing these two. It doesn't sacrifice world building for character development, or character development for world building, for example.

    sofia

    Yeah, I don't quite remember what the book [Ancillary Justice], like the whole premise of the book. I have, like, a very sketchy memory of it. Can you remind me?

    nicholae

    Yeah, so basically the main character that you follow across the three books, and I haven't read the prequel—

    sofia

    There's a prequel?

    nicholae

    I think that came out later. I'm pretty sure there's a fourth one. I think it's a prequel. Maybe it's a sequel. I forget right now.

    nicholae

    But basically the premise [to Ancillary Justice] is: the main character is a ship. Right?

    sofia

    Right.

    nicholae

    There's a consciousness that the ship has, and it has these ancillaries. And the ancillaries are these bodies of, spoiler alert, [laughter] formerly colonized peoples from other planets. And the ship can then spread its consciousness to these ancillaries, these bodies. Right?

    sofia

    Right

    nicholae

    And so because of a series of circumstances and events in the books, in the first book, the ancillary who's the main character of the story is separated from their ship and then goes on an adventure to sort of re-write herself.

    sofia

    Yes, yes.

    nicholae

    And I believe in the series, everyone uses she/her pronouns. Am I remembering this correctly?

    Jen Brown

    I think that's right.

    sofia

    Yes.

    nicholae

    She's trying to make her way back to her ship, and then the story ensues.

    sofia

    Yeah. And it actually, now I'm remembering, yeah, that was a great summary. Whenever I talk to somebody about that book and like, It's very telling to me when they don't remember the pronouns, like they, or they misremember the pronouns of like everybody in the book or like who they think.


    Jen Brown

    Mm.

    sofia

    Isn't the main character called Breq?


    Jen Brown

    Yes.

    sofia

    Yeah, like, or they like misgender Breq.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    sofia

    Or like, they have a gender assigned to Breq, because Breq is technically an it.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    sofia

    That is always very interesting to me.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    nicholae

    Right. It is. And the book, I think, does a good job of not describing key details about bodies and what they have or what they don't have, right?

    sofia

    Yes. Right.

    Jen Brown

    Right.

    nicholae

    There are moments where it comes out for different characters, but the book does not, sort of, make that really obvious for the reader. And I think that was obviously an intentional choice. And I think it's a good choice.

    sofia

    Yeah, and actually I feel like from what I remember, Breq had a hard time telling people's genders

    Jen Brown

    Mmmm.

    nicholae

    Right, because the empire, I believe, uses, everyone uses she/her, but she ends up going to planets where that's not the case. Where this like dimorphism is more clearly encoded in language and culture too.

    sofia

    Right, right, right.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    nicholae

    So she has struggles figuring out who is like what gender in that cultural context.

    sofia

    Right, right.

    nicholae

    And of course, she is perceived in a certain way based on the cultural context that she is in.

    sofia

    Right.

    Jen Brown

    Yeah. And I just have to say, like, as an audiobook lover, I loved the narration for that book. And I thought it struck such a beautiful tone. If folks haven't listened to it, it's the same actor from Bridgerton [Adjoa Andoh], though I did not know her—

    sofia

    What?

    Jen Brown

    I know! When—

    sofia

    Who?

    Jen Brown

    It's Lady Dansbury, I think?

    sofia

    Really?


    Jen Brown

    [Googles it.]

    Yes! Yes. She is the narrator for all three books. And she's fantastic.

    sofia

    She's got an amazing voice. Okay, great.

    Jen Brown

    I know! I know.

    sofia

    That’s great. I gotta listen to it again.

    Jen Brown

    You should. Yes.

    nicholae

    Can you think of other character-driven—it doesn't have to be speculative fiction—but character-driven genre fiction? That, maybe in some ways, kind of defies the expectations of the genre?

    sofia

    Oh, defies expectations. [laughter] That's going to be harder.

    Jen Brown

    [laughter]

    nicholae

    Or, yeah, I mean, I think there is this conception, we know it's not true, but there's a conception that genre is formulaic.

    sofia

    Right.

    Jen Brown

    Mmm.

    nicholae

    Right. And that the focus is, in many cases, not on character development as individuals and their individual subjectivities and relationships. More so how they fit into certain tropes, certain patterns. Again, we know that's not true, but are there any that sort of stand out to either of you, from any genre, that really challenge that preconception of genres? 


    sofia

    Right. I mean, I feel like all the fantasy I read is kind of, like, character driven.

    Jen Brown

    Mmm.

    sofia

    And I wouldn't even say that it's outside the norm to have it not be that way. Because I think it's not just for me about the worldbuilding, but also the characters, right? Like I have to care about the characters.

    nicholae

    Yeah.

    Jen Brown

    Yeah. Yeah.

    sofia

    Because even like we were talking last time about Murderbot.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    sofia

    And like the world there, it's like, who cares, right? Cause it's kind of like any old planet and they're on space stations, and space stations are never that interesting. They're just like places you pass through, like an airport. But Murderbot, itself, is like the main draw, right? You're there for them, or ‘it’ [speaking of Murderbot’s gender]. You're like there to see how much it doesn't want to care about this thing it ends up caring about. So I think that's…yeah, I think it would be hard actually to find something that doesn't do that for me, that I actually finished.

    Jen Brown

    That's real. And, like, what I think of is…actually, the first thing that came to mind with that question is the [books] that *don't* do that in my reading journey, or the [books] that felt like they didn't.

    nicholae

    Mm-hmm.


    Jen Brown

    And this is no shade [laughter] because we all come of age at different times…and different books, you know, hit for different things. But I was thinking about the early young adult / YA boom of, kind of like, mousy white girl protagonist who is a mirror for a presumably white reader. And everything…the trappings of diversity around that character, i.e. one stray black vampire over here, one, ah…you know, disabled character over there—everything exists to further the main characters, almost like delusions of, [in a whiny tone] “I'm not special, but oh everything revolves around me.” Like… [laughter]

    sofia

    [laughter] I would love to name names.

    Jen Brown

    [laughter] I know. Okay. I will name one name because it's old at this point. But the Divergent series for me really did that.

    sofia

    Oh, okay. Yes, yes.

    nicholae

    And that was a whole explosion of books exactly like that because of the market and commodification of that particular kind of narrative, which made every white person feel like they were the main character in their lives.

    sofia

    Yeah.

    Jen Brown

    That’s right. Yes.

    sofia

    Uh-huh. Mm-hmm.

    nicholae

    If they didn't already.

    Jen Brown

    In a dystopian universe that somehow they were subjected to oppression within, not actually, almost like getting to imagine themselves as not the oppressor, but the oppressed.

    nicholae

    Right


    Jen Brown

    Which is, yes, as you say, like there was a whole market for that. And I think when I was thinking of like, “Oh, I love character driven speculative fiction,”...[I meant] I then am excited for the type of character, or the person we choose to follow, being outside that dominant frame that was set with some of those books.

    sofia

    Yes.

    Jen Brown

    Not all YA did that or does that. This is not me bashing YA. I do love YA. But there were books. There were books….there were…there were several books, like y'all said, that just...used that formula. And it almost felt like, well, this isn't a real character that I can—like you say—Sofia, care about.

    sofia

    Yeah.

    Jen Brown

    This person feels like a cardboard cutout for your white reader to graft themselves onto.

    Sofia

    Yeah,

    Jen Brown

    I cannot do that. I'm not reading this book feeling like I can do that.

    sofia

    Mm-hmm.

    nicholae

    And I wonder if one of the the things that draw us to certain genres, in particular, like magical realism, like sci-fi, like fantasy, et cetera, is that not only are there main and key characters who are not white, but there's also the possibility of imagining a totally different world that doesn't center white and Western worldviews, ontologies, epistemologies, right?

    Jen Brown

    Yes.

    nicholae

    That's something that is so much harder to do in any other genre because, you know, “literary fiction” tends to be quite realist.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    nicholae

    But in sci-fi and fantasy, you can imagine a totally different world, right?

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    nicholae

    With a different history, a different present, and a different future. And that, to me, is really powerful.

    Jen Brown

    Yes! that part

    sofia

    Okay, this is…Jen, when you were like, “this is like the kind of thing I don't want to read…” Have you guys ever read Only a Monster?

    Jen Brown

    No.

    nicholae

    No, I haven't.

    Jen Brown

    Who wrote that?

    sofia

    Ah, Vanessa Len.

    Jen Brown

    Oh, no.

    sofia

    So it's really interesting. And the third book is coming out this August. So you'll get the whole trilogy done, which like, I gotta tell you, there's cliffhangers at the end of each one…and it's….ahh I can never wait. I'm like, why, why are you making me wait? Um, but it actually hasn't been that long. I think maybe only a year between each book. But Only a Monster is YA. and I guess it's like fantasy. It's very character driven. And like even the world building is really light. But like you can get into it because it's sort of like our world. It mostly takes place in England, I think.

    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.

    sofia

    And the character finds out that she's technically a monster who can like travel in time.

    Jen Brown

    Mm.

    sofia

    But it's like an inherited trait, like a family trait. And then there's like also other things, like other magical things that people can do.

    Jen Brown

    Ooh.


    sofia

    But it's still very like, in this world in a way, like an alternative version of this world. And um it kind of like flips a lot of genre stuff on its head. You get a lot of like twists and turns you don't see coming. There's like a sprinkle of romance.

    Jen Brown

    Love that.

    sofia

    Even a sprinkle of a love triangle. Um, and it's like, you know, it's sort of like the question of like, who's a hero, who's a monster kind of thing.

    Jen Brown

    Mmm.

    EDS

    sofia

    And part of the reason they're monsters is because in order to travel through time, they have to take it like, they suck off like pieces of people's lives. Like they just have to like touch somebody, I think.


    Jen Brown

    Ooh, like stealing.


    sofia

    And then it like sucks away like a couple years of their life in order to travel.


    Jen Brown

    stealing time all that oh cool


    sofia

    Yeah, stealing time. Yes, that's what it is. Yes, super cool. The magic is super interesting. Like I said, really like light world building, but not in a way that you even really notice. You're like, oh, I'm suddenly immersed in this world. It's amazing.

    The characters are really interesting. There's like a lot of side characters. And then my God, when you get to the end of the second book, you're gonna be like, what the fuck just happened? Did I just read that? But that's also what happened at the beginning of the first book.

    sofia

    And i don't know how she managed to do it again, even like leveled up and not sorry, but not just like Sarah J Maas, who people are like, oh my God, she just blew my mind.

    Jen Brown

    Wow. Yes.


    sofia

    I like those books too, but this is not that.


    Jen Brown

    Right. Right.


    sofia

    This is way better, sorry. 


    Jen Brown

    Okay. I got to add that to the list. I love that.


    sofia

    so good.


    nicholae

    Shots fired.

    Jen Brown

    I love that

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    nicholae

    What is a genre?


    Jen Brown

    Mmm I was thinking about this leading up to us recording. You know, I was thinking, okay, in my mind, a genre is something that has, it's it's a way of categorizing the type of thing something is.

    And that thing is defined by the signposts or in this case, the reader expectations that people come to associate with books like that. So if it's fantasy, most people expect a magic system.

    Or if it's science fiction, most people expect science somewhere or technology or something like that. So I was thinking like it's It's the little blobs that we pattern recognize. We sort of pattern associate books.


    Jen Brown

    And then we get all flustered when we're like, oh, this thing doesn't fit in anything. It's so interesting.


    sofia

    Yeah, and we were talking about how like all of, you know, we like categories to a degree. And I do think like some of this is marketing because, and as you, you know, you already mentioned some like the speculative fiction stuff of like, oh, this gets to be speculative fiction because we want it to like make it snootier for people.


    Jen Brown

    True.


    Jen Brown

    Yes.


    sofia

    versus like some real hardcore.


    Jen Brown

    Get it on the New York Times list.


    sofia

    Yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly, exactly. and think it's like really, to me, more about marketing. But then also, you know, nicholae, you said before about like people think it's formulaic.

    And I think there's definitely, as Jen said, expectations. But especially, I think this is like even more true of romance because romance has like really specific genre specifications that I don't think any of the other ones do necessarily. At least, i don't know, someone correct me.


    Jen Brown

    Yeah. Mm-hmm.


    sofia

    But like, for example, yes.


    nicholae

    It's also a really old genre. I mean, romance stories are one of the oldest kinds of stories.


    Jen Brown

    Good point.


    sofia

    Right. And I think it's like, it has to have a happy ending. And then is there there's like some other genre convention that I can't remember. Is it like romance has to be the main story line?


    Jen Brown

    Yes, right. Like it can't be the B plot.


    sofia

    Right.


    Jen Brown

    There are stories with romance.


    Jen Brown

    Even if it's a happy ending, it it wouldn't be a romance book.


    sofia

    Yes, exactly.


    nicholae

    And I wonder if that's, so I don't know a lot about romance. It's not a category that I read a ton, but from some of the work I did in a former life in a different position, it seemed like quite a few, what I would call romance novels, romance stories did not in fact have happy endings.


    sofia

    Then it’s not romance.


    nicholae

    so i wonder if So I wonder if that's always just been the case. I mean, obviously romance as a category has coalesced into something as we know it now.


    sofia

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    But has that been true across time?


    sofia

    I think even the older romances I've read, but I haven't read like all the way back to the beginning, But I do think, well, I do listen to Fated Mates, which is like a romance podcast.


    Jen Brown

    Yes. Mm-hmm.


    sofia

    I know Jen does too, but it's like, and they've, they actually go back and like talk to trailblazers is what they call them. Like people who have been like the first of whatever to do something in romance.


    Jen Brown

    Yep.


    sofia

    And I feel like that is like a genre convention they've said seems to have always existed. i don't know, maybe I'm not remembering correctly.


    Jen Brown

    No, I was going to layer in that they have an actual history episode. That was like one of the first ones I listened to.


    sofia

    Oh yeah, okay.

    Jen Brown

    It was like they covered the whole like where romance began to where it is now. And I think you're right. I remember them saying the happy ending has always been part of it in response to women being fridged and or kind of harmed excessively in other fiction things, genres.


    sofia

    Yes, you're right. Right, horror for example.


    nicholae

    That's good to know. Cause I was going back to like Romeo and Juliet, which obviously does not have a happy ending.


    sofia

    But that's not a romance in the traditional sense.


    nicholae

    Well, that's a good question. Like what makes it a romance? I know we're getting like maybe too deep into the romance part of it 

    sofia

    No, I never think so.


    Jen Brown

    Never too deep.


    sofia

    Mm-hmm. [laughter]


    nicholae

    but i know Romeo and Juliet is, Romeo & Juliet is a play.

    I would consider it a romance story. know obviously it's a tragedy as well in certain respects


    Jen Brown

    I was going to say, i think it's a tragedy. I wouldn't call it a romance.


    sofia

    It's a romantic, romantic tragedy, but not a romance.


    Jen Brown

    Yes. Romantic. Yes.


    nicholae

    oh that's yeah that's a good distinction


    sofia

    Yeah, because I would even say that like romance authors and like true blue romance readers will ride really hard for this and say, if it doesn't have a happy ending, it's not a romance.


    Jen Brown

    Yep. Yep.


    sofia

    Like period, the end. [laughter]


    Jen Brown

    And like, right, we can have different sub genres under the romance umbrella, like a dark romance where maybe it's more like tormented or tortured.


    sofia

    Yeah.


    Jen Brown

    But it's it is funny because I also think there is ah an element of ah like a larger association of like at least in the past, of women writing fiction as being romantic. Like, I remember having not read Jane Eyre, having not read Wuthering Heights. And even though Wuthering Heights is like definitely not a romance, why did I watch it?


    sofia

    no


    Jen Brown

    I didn't read it. I was watching one of the adaptations. But I was like, ooh, get a little Pride and Prejudice fix here. It's not. It is so not.


    sofia

    I know.


    Jen Brown

    And I think sometimes labels get applied to things across genres based on the author's identity. And sometimes those labels are mistaken.


    sofia

    Yeah, like women's fiction.


    Jen Brown

    um Yes. Yes. Right.


    nicholae

    Yeah, that's that's so helpful because some of the novels that I would put in the kind of classic romance genre, like like Madame Bovary, Gone with the Wind, 

    sofia

    Oh, no. [laughter]

    Nicholae

    Anna Karenina, like those to me are romance stories.


    sofia

    Romantic tragedy. [laughter]


    nicholae

    Yes, they're they're very sad.


    sofia

    Oh my God, no.

    sofia

    But see, like, for example, there are things like bully romance where like the…


    Jen Brown

    oh right


    nicholae

    Iike the comfort harm stories.


    sofia

    Yeah, it's like so weird where the... Well, I've actually only read like the male main character is the bully and then the female main character is like the pursued later. Because usually what happens... Well, the only kind of bully romance i like is when...They're bullying the female character because actually what they do is really like this person and they're too dumb to realize it. And then they have to like do a whole 180, right?


    nicholae

    It's so romantic.


    sofia

    That's what I mean, right? It doesn't seem like it would be romance, but um it's like the wooing of this person because they're like, I did you so wrong. So I have to bend all the way backwards and like turn almost into basically a whole different person in order to win this person over. And then, you know, like seeing that storyline. And again, there's very few authors who can do this well. And so I actually don't really like bully romance except for like two.


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm, mm-hmm, mm-hmm. I might need to check out those two for, you know, research because I haven't read any of this, but I'm curious.


    sofia

    Are you writing a bully?


    Jen Brown

    No, no, no. Just research. I mean, that's a loose excuse to be like.


    sofia

    i see what you're saying.


    Jen Brown

    Oh,


    sofia

    Never Sweeter, Charlotte Stein is one of them. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.


    Jen Brown

    okay. Noted.


    sofia

    It's like it's ah kind of amazing what she does where you're like, I hate this person and now I fucking love this person.


    Jen Brown

    I'm always impressed by that in terms of any author who can do that with a character, especially if it makes you by the end really, like you believe the change. You're like, oh, I'm rooting for this person, whereas I did not in the beginning.


    sofia

    Yeah, but again, it's like most of the time I don't like bully romances because you're like, yeah, this is not romantic at all, especially if you're like 


    Jen Brown

    Right. This is just emotional abuse.


    sofia

    Yeah, it's just like, I think also part of what makes that one good is that you didn't see any of the bullying. We're like past that part.


    Jen Brown

    Oh, that's a smart choice.


    sofia

    So now we're at the part where he's like trying to woo her.


    Jen Brown

    Uh-huh.


    sofia

    Because once the bullying is actually in there, I'm like, ugh, gone. I'm not, I can't read this.


    Jen Brown

    Right. Right. And see that, and y'all know, writer brain here, that is a smart authorial choice to make. Like what's on the page and how that influences the reading experience.


    Jen Brown

    Like why does that need to be there? You can just say he was an asshole or they were an asshole.


    sofia

    Yes.


    Jen Brown

    Whoever the romance interest is, you can say they were an asshole.


    sofia

    Yeah.


    Jen Brown

    But what is the what is the purpose of showing it?


    Jen Brown

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    In that podcast, I think it was that you mentioned where they're tracing the history of romance.


    sofia

    Oh, Fated Mates. Yeah.


    nicholae

    What did they trace it to? Like what genres to or what time periods and context did they trace it to?


    Jen Brown

    If I remember right, I think they went as far back as the 70s or the 60s. And they they had like mentioned specific names of stuff.

    I will definitely dig that episode up for a show notes.


    Jen Brown

    um Because I don't remember if they connected it to a genre. I just remembered them talking about second wave feminism, this idea of like women. And they were very this why I think Sofia and I like this podcast, because they're both two white women. They're very aware of their whiteness. And they were acknowledging like, yeah, this was the let's be real. the The roots of romance started with white women's like feminist awakenings and sort of wanting to write elements of desire That were more with a gaze that felt authentic to them and not through a gaze that was like patriarchal.

     

    nicholae

    Right.


    Jen Brown

    um But I don't remember if they connected it to a specific genre. Like I don't remember them saying it began with literary or like it sounded like it was just like fully...women started writing romance. Oh, I think they were talking specifically about it started in a smaller way with like small presses, you know, like um Harlequin, which is not small, but I think at one point there were zines and small presses like Harlequin that just were like, we're going to focus on women's fiction, like send us your stories.

    And then, you know, local book clubs and reading groups sprang up around those offerings. And then once it started to show that it was profitable, You had larger companies, you had Avon Books. They were tracking it as like publishers began to take note and were like, there's money here.


    sofia

    Hmm.


    nicholae

    That's so fascinating and helpful I mean, this makes so much sense why we're thinking about it differently. Cause I was thinking about like medieval feudal court culture and the kinds of stories that were told there that really, you know, you know, aristocrats who needed entertainment, who wanted, that wanted to reflect particular worldviews and values. And I think especially thinking about desire.


    nicholae

    And so what was, it what acceptable forms that desire could take, what relationships should look like. So I'm thinking about genre and romance in particular as not just particular, a particular like pattern and content, but also what it's doing in the world and why it emerges where it does. So form or a genre emerging within a particular cultural context and why.

    And I think I was tracing it way further back in time. And so this is helpful to kind of think about it more in terms of the the way we think about romance now and its emergence in particularly mid-century, 20th century. Of course, we can go back to the the Jane Austen's, right?

    But specifically in its marketing and commodification in the 20th century is is very helpful for me in thinking about it.


    sofia

    Yeah, because I realized like, yes, Pride and Prejudice is like, I think often named as like one of the first romances. But I don't think because like you said, her her contemporaries like, oh, my God, did I just forget her name?

    The Wuthering Heights. oh Emily Bronte.


    nicholae

    Bronte


    sofia

    Right. Literally was like, it's not Emily Dickinson. It's the other Emily. um where you know they're like sort of writing i guess it seems kind of like a similar vibe but it's like gothic horror almost 

    nicholae

    Right, right. Which is why I like it. [laughter] I don't want a happy ending. Don't give me one.


    sofia

    Right. Everyone must die. 

    nicholae

    That's what I want.

    sofia

    And maybe, but like, okay, let's, let's go talk about horror because i don't really read horror. And I'm always curious, like why i don't want to be scared. [laughter] I don't want to be scared walking down the hallway of my little apartment that someone's going to pop out of the bathroom. And there's like, you know, only so many rooms. I live in New York City. Like there's not a big apartment, but I don't want to be scared. [laughter] Trying to feel like, Oh, somebody about to pop out of there. So like, why do you guys like horror?


    Jen Brown

    ah I think I wasn't – I wouldn't have called myself a horror reader until relatively recently. And I think it's because I didn't understand – like, I think it's because I was thinking of horror, first of all, in a film context, because I was never somebody who liked, you know – slasher movies or like super murdery gore.


    sofia

    Mm-hmm.


    Jen Brown

    But then over the last couple of years, I started to pay more attention to like horror subgenres and realizing, oh, just like fantasy, just like sci-fi, horror has different subgenres that I am drawn to. Like specifically something about homes as horrific is like, it's just like catnip to me. Like I think Even though there's probably a lot of books, I'm sure there's books that touch on this before it, but the first one I read of ah recently was Mexican Gothic. And that was so...


    nicholae

    So good.


    Jen Brown

    Oh, my God. Something about the way that the house and the body and and just the self in that. and Oh, yeah. I don't know. I just I loved that one.

    So homes. And then the body is a site of monstrosity. There were some short stories that did this really well. um there's ah it was really unsettling. It a short story called. A Study in Ugliness by H. Puyo, I believe. And it's a um it is like this story about a character, a girl in all-girls boarding school dealing with the monstrosity and the ugliness of girlhood, of coming of into oneself. And this character is like dark. She does some very dark things by the end of the story. And it's almost like she ends up meeting that darkness in a mirror, like she sees this dark version of herself in a mirror, this thing that's like infesting her that feels like it's taking her and she gives into it.

    And I think that's why I'm drawn to horror. It is about confronting the dark, scary parts internally or surrounding in a place that should feel safe but doesn't.

    But then outside of that, like, I still don't like murderer stories. I don't I'm not here for like it needs to be like that kind of horror for me to get into it.


    sofia

    But isn't it too much like real life? [laughter]


    Jen Brown

    I think maybe that's why I like it, because I'm like, oh, I feel that inner sense of like, what if I'm a monster? What if there is this part of me that I don't want to like, I just I feel almost comfort seeing a character go through that

    sofia

    Oh, interesting.

    So you like body horror?


    Jen Brown

    I do.


    sofia

    Oh, no, I think I get grossed out by it.


    Jen Brown

    That's real. That's real.


    nicholae

    See, i'm I'm on Jen's wavelength on this one. Home, it's really psychological horror, I think, is what vibes with me the most.


    Jen Brown

    Mmmm


    nicholae

    And for me, many of these stories, these horror stories that focus on the home and the body actually are psychological horror in a certain respect.


    nicholae

    I know I talked a little bit previously about House of Leaves.


    nicholae

    To me, that was the first horror story that I really or contemporary horror story that I really loved and resonated with me and just shifted what I thought about in terms of what was compelling to me in literature and what a story can do. Of course, House of Leaves is an experimental novel. It's really weird in all kinds of ways. So that was very evocative and compelling to me as well.

    But it's something to do with the idea of a place can be more can be bigger, can contain multitudes and also horrors that it doesn't seem to be able to, that it defies your expectations and your perception of what reality is and what being in a place can feel like, what you can experience there.


    sofia

    Hmm.


    nicholae

    That to me resonated with me and I think my experience, one of the reasons why I really like body horror, I mean, I like body horror of all kinds, and that started at a pretty young age with the Kronnenberg David Kronnenberg movies and series like the Hellraiser series.

    um and And those movies, I'm talking about movies now, but the Hellraiser series is based off of a series of books by Clive Barker, which actually kind of perfectly helps me illustrate this point


    sofia

    Oh, OK.


    nicholae

    because I think a lot of horror for many, for many queer and trans people, but also for many queer and trans authors, body horror is a way to, to explore the way our bodies feel and are acted upon that realism just can't quite capture, can't quite express.Right? So some of the really early horror novels and horror stories that resonated with me did explore some of these issues.

    you know I'm thinking of Caitlin Kiernan and Poppy Bright and Clive Barker but also Octavia Butler, right? You know, exploring some of these elements of body horror that help us understand like what our bodies are, what they can do, how they're constrained and imprisoned and en acted upon by outside forces and particularly cultural forces and, you know, our families,

    people we interact with as we move through the world, that to me was not something that I could put into words at the time, but was nevertheless really resonant for me and my experience of otherness. And I think sometimes even objection as a kid that that i that I felt in the world, that I felt in my family. And that interest of mine in this particular genre has definitely stayed with me across time. I mean, I'm thinking of, you know, Her Body and Other Parties short story Collection, which is so good, Gretchen Felker Martin's Manhunt, River Solomon, Akwaeke Emezi, I may be saying some of their names wrong, but those kinds of stories and ways of exploring the body have just really worked well for me in the present and I feel are of a lineage with some of these older stories that I was really into when I was younger.


    sofia

    Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. And I think I always like want to read some of those. like ah you know Actually, the body horror thing that I realized I don't like body horror is actually an Octavia Butler book, but I can't remember which one now. It's like, ah are they aliens or something?


    Jen Brown

    Is it the Xenogenesis trilogy?


    sofia

    Yes.


    Jen Brown

    It's Dawn and...


    sofia

    Yes. I tried to read Dawn.


    Jen Brown

    Yes, I like those.


    sofia

    And then there was something with tentacles or whatever.


    nicholae

    I need to.


    sofia

    and I was like, oh, no, no.


    Jen Brown

    Yes.


    sofia

    Okay, sorry. Goodbye. 


    nicholae

    I eat that stuff up.


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.


    sofia

    But like if there's tentacles, but they're for some reason in like like sci-fi, like if you guys have read Stardust Grail, there's tentacles in that.


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.


    sofia

    But that doesn't been gross me out for some reason.


    Jen Brown

    hmm yeah


    sofia

    I think because the character already came with tentacles. Like it was just a tentacled thing and it wasn't like an add-on or something that like popped up later. um ah yeah I don't know why it just like really disturbed me and then I'm like, oh, can't go on.

    But then I'm also like the person who I was watching Orange is the New Black. And do you remember like this scene the scene when Crazy Eyes pees on the floor?


    Jen Brown

    yeah


    nicholae

    Oh, yeah.


    sofia

    Then I was like, oh, I'm sorry, I'm out. I can't watch the series anymore.


    Jen Brown

    Ah [laughter]


    nicholae

    Well, if you can't do pee or tentacles, you have just eliminated so much fan fiction.


    sofia

    and I didn't.


    Jen Brown

    [laughter] Yes.


    nicholae

    We will not be doing an episode on kinky fan fiction. Sorry, audience.


    sofia

    No, no, no.


    Jen Brown

    Oh, no, we must.


    sofia

    I've read, okay, I've read romance with tentacles and actually that does not bother me.


    sofia

    It's just like in certain, I guess, context where I'm like, there wasn't supposed to be tentacles there. Hilarious.


    nicholae

    That'll be a me and Jen episode.


    sofia

    yeah


    nicholae

    if you If you would like an erotic fanfiction episode, like and subscribe.


    Jen Brown

    I got some recs.


    nicholae

    Let us know in the comments.


    Jen Brown

    That's right. I love it.


    sofia

    ah


    Jen Brown

    Yeah. Yeah.


    sofia

    No, no, no, no.


    Jen Brown

    i love it


    sofia

    Not for me.


    nicholae

    So you're not into horror. Jen and I are into horror. What are some other genres we just don't fuck with?


    Jen Brown

    mmm


    nicholae

    For me, I will say it is kind of historical fiction. Never been that interested in it. It has never done much for me, but I'm curious if anyone else fucks with it because I could be convinced.


    Jen Brown

    yeah


    nicholae

    I'm starting to be convinced on romance, but they've got to be queer.


    Jen Brown

    YES


    sofia

    I think, no, yeah no, yeah.


    nicholae

    Sorry, cis straights.


    Jen Brown

    Yeah, well, for sure. For sure. yeah


    sofia

    then there's definitely a romance for everyone is how I feel, i think.


    Jen Brown

    That's right. That's right.


    sofia

    But anyway, that's just me, but we will find the one for you.


    Jen Brown

    Yes, we will.


    sofia

    In fact, I will start looking immediately.


    nicholae

    Turn this episode into a recommendation engine for me, please.


    sofia

    Yes. Okay, one of my favorite things to do. Historical fiction depends. They have to be... It has to be pretty specific. And I don't even... I can't even think of any off the top of my head right now that... I, like, really used to, like, historical fiction when I was, like, maybe high school, college. I read a lot of historical fiction. And, like, the one that I can think of off the top of my head was this, like... um It was like a series based on Napoleon's wife. I don't remember which Napoleon is it the first, second or third? Who knows? One of those, the main one. um He was married to this lady named Josephine. And so like it was a trilogy feature like about her life. And that was really interesting to me. But now I'm like, oh, is it featuring a white person during World War Two, like Boresville. Isn't that like all of them now? um Or like they get really popular and I'm like, oh, my God, who cares?


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.


    nicholae

    It just seems like there's, yeah, it just seems like there's a lot of overlap between historical fiction and military fiction and absolutely hard pass.


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.


    sofia

    I just like don't care.


    sofia

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    No, thank you.


    sofia

    Yes.


    Jen Brown

    Extreme hard pass.


    nicholae

    I don't need to read about war unless it's happening in space or involves magic.


    sofia

    Yes, exactly.


    nicholae

    But I… does anyone remember the Clan of the Cave Bear book or that or that series?


    sofia

    Yes.



    Jen Brown

    Mm-mm. Mm-mm.


    nicholae

    Because when I was a very young child, when my mother was grocery shopping, I would sit in the magazine and like a mass market paperback section and just read those books. So this is like sort of an exception, I guess, to 

    Jen Brown

    Hmm. Hmm. Hmm.


    sofia

    Is that historical fiction?


    nicholae

    it's prehistoric fiction because it's about like Neanderthal and Cro-Magnon humans.


    sofia

    Oh.


    nicholae

    So it's basically fantasy, you know?


    sofia

    Right. I never read it, but I saw it everywhere. Right. That's kind of like where I land now is that if it's historical, but it's sort of alternative history, then I'll read it.


    Jen Brown

    See, yeah, I just don't, I don't know.


    sofia

    But I...


    Jen Brown

    Yeah, I can't really get into historical fiction. i I don't include romance in that because I think like Beverly Jenkins has a ton of historical stuff I want to dive into.


    sofia

    Special. Yes.


    Jen Brown

    But yeah, I'm with y'all. I can't, I can't touch it. Can't touch military. and I don't care. I think all of this or a lot of it dovetails with my extremist, No-go, which is just like white people solving crimes. So anything to do with mystery, crime, thriller, suspense. I just don't, I don't care. I don't care for your heroic, hero worship thing. And it's all it's just, it it gives always a light vibe of copaganda, no matter what it is. even or like authoritarian ganda.


    sofia

    Yeah,


    Jen Brown

    Like authoritarian ganda.


    sofia

    yeah, yeah. yeah


    Jen Brown

    It just feels like we're trying to say that the systems of punitive harm ultimately lead to positive outcomes. And I just don't think that's true.


    sofia

    No, agree.


    nicholae

    Yeah, it feels inherently very, that genre, I think thrillers, cop fiction, detective fiction, it feels inherently very conservative in the sense that it, I guess it seems like they often, obviously there are subversions of this. I'm thinking of The Crying of Lot 49, 47, which is it? 49.


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.


    sofia

    forty nine


    nicholae

    49. I just had a moment where I doubted myself. So obviously there are exceptions like The Crying of Lot 49, but for the most part, they seem… like they kind of fundamentally uphold a particular kind of faith in, you know, rational authority, social institutions. You know, you have the hero who can come in and restore order by solving crimes, suggesting that I think justice, it prevails and these social systems work.


    sofia

    yeah


    nicholae

    And i don't believe that at all. And I certainly don't want to read about, you know, cops, solving crimes and and doing good in the world when they do so much harm. So to me, that's just never been interesting to me.


    Jen Brown

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    and And to the extent that I hardly even think about thrillers or crime dramas or things like that.


    Jen Brown

    And it's oversaturated. I mean, my God, like every TV show, like Fox is only standing still outside of its excellent animation, like Bob's Burgers, because of like shows about these things. I don't know. there's There's always an NCIS. There's always a, there's always something.


    sofia

    I know, talk about formulaic, that's formulaic.


    nicholae

    absolutely


    Jen Brown

    Yes.


    nicholae

    but there are ones that i think do a good job


    Jen Brown

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    just speaking of tv of subverting that you know Pokwe DXW for example i think is really excellent


    Jen Brown

    Oh, I haven't seen that.


    nicholae

    and she is kind of kind of solving she's investigating things we'll say without giving too much about away


    sofia

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    there's and there's a mystery


    sofia

    Yes. Yeah, I, you know, to go back to the military stuff, I generally don't like military stuff either. But have you read Yoon Ha Lee's Nine Fox Gambit and like that trilogy?


    Jen Brown

    I still need to read that.


    nicholae

    no


    sofia

    Because that's technically military sci-fi, but it's like, you know, like some of the other examples we've talked about.


    Jen Brown

    Hmm.


    sofia

    It's also about colonization and like the, I mean, I don't even want to say that because it makes it, you know, like sometimes when you're like, oh, this is like a tough but necessary read. And it's not really that. It's just like, this is what it's about. But it's also like so just so good that, You're like, yeah, that is, it's like reading, oh, like reading N. K. Jemisin, where you're like, I like to think of them sort of like, in similar ways, where you're like, I'm reading about really dark, heavy stuff, but they're so good at it that I don't mind. And, you know, technically the main characters are military characters, but the... What happens is is like this general who, it's like sci-fi, so it's all in space, but this the main character does this, like manages to win this like military campaign when they were all like, oh, she couldn't do it because she did some I forget the right word, but it's like they use math a lot. And, you know, I'm i'm not really down with math all the time, especially not in my sci-fi. But in this particular book, I'm like, oh, this makes total sense. Like, I don't need to know math in order to understand what's happening in the world. But she uses like some, it's almost like math is a religion to like the empire that they live in.


    Jen Brown

    Mmm.


    sofia

    And she uses what What is the word that's like, you're not, you're going against the religion. Oh my God.


    Jen Brown

    Oh.


    sofia

    um


    nicholae

    apostasy


    sofia

    Heretical. No, heretical.


    nicholae

    heretical


    sofia

    Yes.


    Jen Brown

    Mmm.


    sofia

    Heretical math. And somehow manages to win this battle because of it. And so as her reward, quote unquote, she gets... um They give her the um consciousness of a military general from like years ago, like decades or more, who's like kind of going insane and they have to share a body. And it's real wild, but it's so good. um It also kind of fucks with genre because the military general that enters the body, like she's She's technically a she/her and then the military general who enters her body is a he/him. And then you'll see what happens. I'm not going to tell you anything more, but it's a very interesting military sci fi that I wouldn't even categorize like in the normal way that military sci fi is done.


    Jen Brown

    I love when they're, I mean, I think that's the dope thing about genres in general. Like, even if there's categories we overall don't love, there's still things subverting in those categories because that's real.


    sofia

    Yeah, and then you're like, that's the only one I'll read of that.


    Jen Brown

    Yeah, exactly. Exactly. It's the exception. Although to be honest, my last, absolutely not.


    sofia

    Yeah.


    Jen Brown

    And I have yet to find anything that will actually fit this is anything with a writer as a main character.


    sofia

    Yeah.


    Jen Brown

    That is a genre too. That is a sub genre to me that I cannot stand because I am a writer. And I just feel, it feels so, feels very navel gaze-y.


    sofia

    Like them. Like the main character is a writer?


    Jen Brown

    Yes, and the story is about or partially about them struggling with their their art.


    sofia

    good writing. Yeah, okay.


    Jen Brown

    I don't mind stories about artists, other kind of art, musicians, painters, but like something about writers writing about writers.


    sofia

    No,


    Jen Brown

    I don't know. I can't do it.


    sofia

    so that's fair. mean I mean, don't even know if I really read any of those.


    Jen Brown

    There is, i mean, Nettie Okorafor just released like The Death of the Author, which that might be the only one I try to give a chance.


    sofia

    Oh, yeah.


    Jen Brown

    Everything else?


    sofia

    but you haven't read it yet.


    Jen Brown

    Mm-mm, mm-mm.


    sofia

    Yeah, I was curious about that too.


    Jen Brown

    Not yet. Right.


    sofia

    Yeah, the last thing I won't read is memoirs of white women learning to be brave.


    nicholae

    Pass


    Jen Brown

    I know that's right.


    sofia

    Hard pass. um Sorry, just not interested.


    Jen Brown

    Yup.


    sofia

    I can't. Okay, who's the one who's like really famous, who's like married to a soccer player?


    Jen Brown

    Like, oh, is it Victoria Beckham?


    sofia

    Like she she was like a, no, she was like this woman who, um,


    Jen Brown

    No.


    sofia

    She was married to a man. She had children with this man. And then something happened where she was like, i don't care about this man anymore. He's done me wrong or whatever. They divorced. She realizes she's gay. Yeah, Glennon Doyle. And now she's married to Abby Wambach.


    sofia

    And she has like a ton of these these memoirs and they have like a podcast and shit.


    Jen Brown

    Oh.


    sofia

    I think one of the books was like, I'm a some kind of animal, like a tiger or whatever. And I'm like, oh my God, give me a fucking break. You're not a tiger. You just like suddenly learn to be a person like your own person. And it you can do things yourself. Like, I don't know. It just seems like so weird to me that like, she's such a big deal. And the people fucking love her.

    Oh, Untamed, yes, thank you to Imani, our producer.


    Jen Brown

    Wild. Huh.


    sofia

    Yeah, anything else we won't read?


    Jen Brown

    I don't think so. Not for me.


    nicholae

    Yeah i'll read basically anything if it has a good recommendation


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm. Yeah.


    sofia

    Yeah.


    Jen Brown

    Yeah.


    sofia

    Well, also depends if the person likes the same kind of stuff I do. Yeah,


    nicholae

    What about microgenres you know the kind of rise and proliferation of microgenres is that something that you all ah paid attention to ah participated in you know i'm thinking of when you were talking Sofia i was thinking about the dandelion dynasty series, like silkpunk.


    sofia

    yeah, yeah.


    nicholae

    you know like very specific microgenres


    Jen Brown

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    Is that something that you all think about whenever you're reading or looking for things to read or recommending things


    sofia

    I mean, you both know I love a dark fantasy academia.


    Jen Brown

    yeah


    sofia

    If it's dark academia and it's got fantasy elements, I'm in.


    Jen Brown

    That's also on my list. Yep. And the one book I can say, and this is one that was like out there everywhere and I was excited to read it, but Ace of Spades, literally i was reading that book at like 1 a.m. My heart was pounding.


    sofia

    Mm-hmm.


    Jen Brown

    I had to turn. It was the first kind of really horrific, like horror in the sense that I think it was trying to be super suspenseful and it was working. Because there's Babel by R.F.


    sofia

    Right.


    Jen Brown

    Kuang, which is horrific, but it's right.


    sofia

    That's different


    Jen Brown

    It's it's a different kind of horror. This was like, oh my God, I got to turn the page and don't know, just see what's happening. So yeah, academia, horror dark academia or horror in academia, I'm into it. And then my other one was like, it's not actually, and don't think it's actually a microgenre, but I do love a space fantasy that has a politically epic scope with queer women caught in like a colonial system. Or I say space slash fantasy. So it could be space fantasy or just fantasy. But like The Traitor Baru Cormorant will always hit for me right every time.


    sofia

    Oh, I love that book.


    Jen Brown

    It's going to do it every time. Yeah.


    sofia

    Did you finish it? The trilogy?


    Jen Brown

    No, because I'm trash.


    sofia

    Me neither.


    Jen Brown

    I need to read the, I'm halfway through the second book. But A Memory Called Empire um by Arcady Martine.


    sofia

    Okay.


    Jen Brown

    Yeah, that's always going to do it for me.


    sofia

    I know, but side note about that one, which I did enjoy, but like, didn't you find it interesting that the ones who were like considered like other and marginalized were like essentially the white people.


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.


    sofia

    And it was like, everybody else was dark.


    Jen Brown

    Right. You know what?


    sofia

    And I was like, ooh.


    Jen Brown

    That's a really good point. I didn't think of that. Because, right, everybody on her little station like, yes.


    sofia

    Yeah, they're all white.


    Jen Brown

    .Good point.


    sofia

    Yeah. But I also like that micro-genre.


    Jen Brown

    What about y'all?


    nicholae

    i did i talked a little bit about body horror but i think the other one that again these kind of subgenres or microgenres i think i'm stuck in the nineties when i first discovered reading and so i still think about things in these larger categories but i do find the proliferation of microgenres incredibly fascinating and in some ways really helpful in some ways i think they reify kind of commodification of literature but on the other hand i also think there's a potential argument for the democratization of


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm.


    nicholae

    genre and taste as well because it allows people to find things that maybe escape capture by the market of course they're published but you can also find things outside of


    Jen Brown

    Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. Yes.


    nicholae

    kind of large market for publishing but so i don't i don't necessarily have sub or micro-genres that are named in a way that i could articulate and then express here but i really like ecological horror so that's


    Jen Brown

    yes


    sofia

    Hmm.


    nicholae

    the form of horror or sci-fi so i just adore Jeff Vandermmeer in almost everything he writes and the Southern Reach Trilogy


    Jen Brown

    Hmm.


    nicholae

    i mean just ruined me compelled me i really enjoyed the way that he explored both the the horror of the environment and environmental catastrophe but also the ways in which it impacts the body and it to me that series really helps show how intertwined and entangled our bodies are with our environment so what happens the environment also impacts our bodies


    sofia

    hmm


    nicholae

    so even if i wouldn't necessarily always find myself being drawn to what's sometimes called climate fiction although i loved Oryx and Crake when it came out so maybe i do, Terraformers i think is a really cool book but there is something in particular about Annihilation the first book and the series that did such an incredible and evocative job of conveying how the environment and the body are just they suffuse each other um and how the the ways in which the environment degrades and i guess basically what i'm trying to say is the porosity our porosity with our environments and how horrifying that is to realize but there is the reality of it and that has i think


    sofia

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    consequences for how we think about our relationship with the environment too and those books do such a good job of not being didactic about it but just showing it and the horror of that and what the body can go through


    sofia

    Mm-hmm.


    Jen Brown

    You said that so beautifully.


    sofia

    And also is the reason I don't read that stuff. yeah


    Jen Brown

    and like You captured exactly why. I can't touch that book. That is on my list. I've only seen the movie, but obviously not.


    sofia

    Oh, how was the movie?


    Jen Brown

    I...


    sofia

    looks scary as hell.


    Jen Brown

    It was terrifying. There was like one part I was literally, I still think about it and it gives me shivers. so But that made me want to really pick up the book.


    sofia

    Oh.


    Jen Brown

    And I think I saw online that the author did not like the movie. Like, I think he felt like there were things about it that didn't capture.


    sofia

    Oh.


    Jen Brown

    This is like an old tweet. I could be misremembering.


    sofia

    Yeah, yeah, yeah.


    Jen Brown

    um But I think he, yeah.


    sofia

    I believe you.


    nicholae

    yeah i liked the movie but i did not think it was a good adaptation


    Jen Brown

    Hmm.


    nicholae

    and the book


    sofia

    Yeah,


    nicholae

    the book Annihilation in the whole series are so incredible


    Jen Brown

    Yeah.


    nicholae

    that i don't think that they lend themselves well to film adaptation or adaptation at all in any form they just need to be read for what they are


    Jen Brown

    yeah


    sofia

    makes sense. Well, are you guys reading anything fun right now? Or looking forward to something you want to read?

    I can say what I'm reading because I mentioned it last time, but I actually started it for real. Sky Daddy by Kate Folk.


    nicholae

    yeah i want to read that


    Jen Brown

    hmm hmm


    sofia

    So funny. Cause you know, like, I think I talked about this where I was like, it has an absurd premise, but sometimes there's like not enough to like keep it going where it's just like really relying on the premise to be the whole thing. And I think this so far it's doing it for me.


    Jen Brown

    hmm


    nicholae

    I’m really excited to read some of these romance suggestions that i know will be forthcoming from both of you


    sofia

    Oh yes, yes, yes.


    nicholae

    Also you know i'm very curious about maybe this genre doesn't exist but what about like there is you' are both going to laugh at me it's called romantasy never mind


    Sofia & Jen

    [laughter]

    nicholae

    but you know maybe that would be a good


    Jen Brown

    Yeah. I'm


    nicholae

    entree for me


    sofia

    No, not for you. No, no.


    nicholae

    okay


    Jen Brown

    not for you [laughs].


    sofia

    Because I gotta say most romantasy is like kind of not good.


    Jen Brown

    Yes.


    sofia

    Like it just kind of like, well, there's good.


    Jen Brown

    That's it. Sadly.


    nicholae

    life ruined!


    Jen Brown

    i think


    sofia

    Okay. Actually, I think there's like old stuff that's better and that people like kind of, yes.


    Jen Brown

    Before it was called romantasy. Yeah.


    nicholae

    yeah i need some good queer romantasy or romantic sci-fi hook me


    sofia

    Okay. Okay. oh I got you. I just got to think about it for a bit.


    Jen Brown

    Yes.


    nicholae

    What about you, Jen?


    Jen Brown

    So i I am reading The Memory Collectors, which is like not really of note because it's for, well, I shouldn't say that, but it's for my family's book. I love you, mom. I love you, sis.


    Jen Brown

    It's not that it's not of note. It's just like i if I was, it's interesting because if I was going to pick up a book, I probably wouldn't have picked this up. But it's it's been interesting to read. It's kind of light speculative.


    But i think I'm also still enjoying, like when I'm not reading books, I think I'm also looking forward to playing more story-rich games. So like um I feel like a big – I never grew out of that –


    nicholae

    yes!


    Jen Brown

    That vibe of choose your own adventure stories being my jam from childhood. And I still love things like that. And there's a whole subgenre or not a subgenre. There's a whole genre of games that are called visual novels, which I think originated in Japan. um but they also have filtered here and there's tons of them now. Like indie developers will make games and there's a really good one that I think I'm going to replay called When the Night Comes by Lunaris Games. And it's a it's a very like fun, queer, dark, speculative game where you're sort of playing a, um man, I forget even, I think you're some kind of like hunter of things not like of like speculative creatures because there are different things in the book there's like a or different creatures there are there's like a well like a wolf guy and so ah


    sofia

    Not like a… wolf guy.


    Jen Brown

    and a vampire there's a vampire very very hot vampire There's like a really cute witchy guy you can get with both the wolf guy and the witchy guy because they had a relationship before the game started. And so you can encourage, you can either just encourage them to get back together or yeah, or you can have a beautiful polycule.


    sofia

    Oh my god.


    sofia

    ah love it.


    Jen Brown

    That's always my choice route is the polycule. And it's actually really well done. There's also like a really, really hot. Okay, now I'm just getting into the weeds of this. I'm sorry, let me... Let me wrap it up. I will replay that game because that's...


    nicholae

    go off


    sofia

    Now I'm interested in playing that game and don't really like games.


    Jen Brown

    Oh, I think y'all would like it. Because, you know, it's like a visual novel is just, it's all just story choices. So you're not even like, there's no button mashing. There's no controls.


    sofia

    Yeah, but like, I don't, I like to read, like, I think, you know those games, oh my God, what those called? The games where, like, you know when you used to play Super Mario, it was just like in a row, like, versus like, and now I will go in this direction and that direction and any fucking direction I want.


    Jen Brown

    Oh, platformers. Yeah.


    Jen Brown

    You just want like a linear.


    sofia

    Yeah, just give me a linear story.


    nicholae

    but there's a lot of reading


    sofia

    You made all the choices.


    nicholae

    there's lots of reading in the visual novel


    Jen Brown

    There is a lot of reading. Yeah. And it is mostly linear because the little choices, like in When the Night Comes, the little choices you make are more about how you'll deal with a thing, but you're still going to get to that thing.


    sofia

    i don't know, guys.


    Jen Brown

    It's not like you'd miss it entirely.


    sofia

    Okay. Okay.


    Jen Brown

    It makes me sad because I don't think you would vibe with like Baldur's Gate 3, which is my other obsession because there's a lot of variation in that game.


    sofia

    No.


    Jen Brown

    But


    sofia

    Just pick the story. Just tell me the story. I'm not trying to make the story myself.


    Jen Brown

    that's what's so addictive. Okay. We have a whole episode on this.


    sofia

    know. But you're a writer and I'm a reader.


    Jen Brown

    Yeah, you're right.


    sofia

    I'm a reader.


    Jen Brown

    You're right.


    sofia

    i only read. i don't make choices.


    Jen Brown

    yeah


    Jen Brown

    That's real.


    nicholae

    tell me the story. Jen have you this is not a visual novel but have you heard of or played played Omori


    Jen Brown

    No. What does that familiar, though?


    nicholae

    it's a it's a psychological horror like


    sofia

    Oh, you already said words I don't like.


    nicholae

    in a jrpg kind of


    Jen Brown

    I've heard of this. Yes, I've seen it.


    nicholae

    it's it's very cute very horrifying very beautiful it's not queer there is a queer character


    Jen Brown

    okay


    nicholae

    like some of the queer undertones are really downplayed in the story unfortunately


    Jen Brown

    okay


    nicholae

    but i adore it it's so good the story is so incredible it is very dark


    Jen Brown

    okay


    nicholae

    but maybe check it out its


    Jen Brown

    um ah


    nicholae

    it's beautiful the soundtrack is so good highly recommend it i have played it and i've watched people play it multiple times i got really hooked


    Jen Brown

    Noted. Okay, this is, and it's got real good reviews on Steam. I will be playing this.


    sofia

    I won't, but you can let me know.


    Jen Brown

    Ooh. Right.


    sofia

    Sorry.


    Jen Brown

    We all know what we love. That's that's important. You gotta know yourself.


    nicholae

    an episode where we just watch jen play a video game


    Jen Brown

    It's a Let's Play. I wonder if there are Let's Play podcasts. That's interesting.


    sofia (outro script)

    Thanks for listening! This has been the We Reads Podcast, which is part of We Here: an inclusive, private community for Black, Indigenous, and other Library or Archives workers of color. If you want to learn more about us, visit the We Here website: we here dot space. That’s we here dot space. And if you’re a BIPOC library or archives professional, or an LIS student, join one of our private space communities for solidarity and professional support. ’Til next time.


    Credits script:

    The We Reads podcast is produced by Imani Spence and hosted by Jen Brown, nicholae cline, and Sofia Leung. Our intro/outro music was created by Kamari WV. This podcast is supported by a grant from the Mellon Foundation as part of We Here’s dream-shaping project. Big thank you to the We Here Grant advisory team and the rest of the We Here family for all their support to help make this podcast possible. Special shout-out to our pets: Junior, Blue, and Hamlet and Beckett for keeping it real on the recordings.

 

Show Notes

Books, Authors, and Media Mentioned

Series 

Standalone 

Podcasts

Video Games (new show notes boss; UNLOCKED)

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Episode 1: Getting to Know Us