fpw Wrote:Joe Konrath first mentioned it last year, and I heard it again recently at Romantic Times. So I looked it up.
John Clute says: "UFs are normally texts where fantasy and the mundane world interact, intersect and interweave throughout a tale which is significantly about a real city."
Well, that would certainly fit The Tomb: mythological Hindu demons transported from India to NYC to fulfill a curse/vow, ancient magic necklaces with healing powers that allow two characters to live indefinitely. They intersect and interweave with Manhattan and with Jack who is the ghost in the city's urban machinery.
The first recognized urban fantasies are either Faerie by Ray Feist or War for the Oaks by Emma bull, both published after The Tomb.
So, yes, there's a case to be made but I'm not entirely comfortable with it.
What do you folks think?
Legion Wrote:Wouldn't Dracula fall under the same category then? The reader and the monster are first shown a mystical old world where demons still hold sway. Harker ( and before him renfield ) are representatives of (then) modern civilization coming to this forgotten place.
Then Dracula moves to the then modern metropolis and brings his evil there. It is in this modern setting where the two halves really meet and clash.
I should think Dracula fits this idea perfectly for it's time.
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:Damn good point, Steve! And I think maybe we could fit Lovecraft in there too. Many of his eldritch settings are clearly Boston.
Legion Wrote:Agreed. I don't think it is really possible to say which is the first book, novel or story to fit this definition. Then again, I disagree entirely with defining or labeling anything into a particular genre or classification. When you put a title to something it implies limitations. Art should not know any limitations.
Bluesman Mike Lindner Wrote:I'll agree =expression= is limitless. But any art needs an understood definition. For example, a symphony is generally 3 movements. A quatrain is 4 lines. A sonnet has 14 lines, no more and no less. Even a rock song has a verse--chorus--bridge structure. Abide by these understood rules, artist, lest ye become Lou Reed!:eek:
XiaoYu Wrote:I think the word "fantasy" alone doesn't cover the action-adventure-horror-urban thriller combination that Jack's books are. To me, some parts are truly fantastical...but not flying horses and fairy dust kind of fantastical...Here be more confusion:
Legion Wrote:Dear Wapi,Heh.
Bite me.
Sincerely,
Steve.