What makes Urban fantasy?

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“It’s Fantasy in a city,” but where's the city?
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What makes Urban fantasy?

If you said "It's Fantasy in a city, duh" you'd be right.

Then where's the city?

You see, one of the things I've always taken into account when writing my UF novels is that the city is a character. Like the Enterprise in Star Trek, the city itself plays a significant part in the story. It was one of my big problems with Anita Blake novels I never got a sense that the city was a part of the story. The novels took place in Saint Louis, but they felt like they could have taken place anywhere. The same with Larry Correia's Monster Hunters or Carrie Vaughn's Kitty Norville series.

They felt like modern fantasy, but not necessarily urban fantasy.

For example, when I think of a sense of place, Correia's Monster Hunters live in a southern compound. There are forests. There are swamps. There aren't many cities, except in "Monster Hunter: Legion," where he trashes Las Vegas, and sections of "Siege" that took place in Russia. With Carrie Vaughn, Kitty Norville's town could be any town with a radio station on one end, and wilderness on the other... even though it's supposed to be Denver, nothing felt that distinct.

My memory may be failing me, but to be honest, if there were distinct elements of each city, they left no impression with me at all.

At the very start of Urban Fantasy, Fred Saberhagen set Dracula in Chicago. Saberhagen's "Old Friend of the Family" ended with a vampire throwdown, on top of the frozen river running through the city.

For Jim Butcher's Harry Dresden, Chicago is deeply relevant for the setting, especially in his most recent novel, "Battle Ground."

On the other end of the scale, Urban Fantasy makes the setting seriously matter.

Correia's "Grimnoir" series makes each city feel distinct, especially as he trashes it.

Despite the fact that she's often listed under romance, Sherrilyn Kenyon's Dark Hunters world usually did a fairly good job capturing the setting of New Orleans and getting a feel for the city as a whole--from the atmosphere to the accents.

John Ringo did much the same for Monster Hunter Memoirs, both in New Orleans and the other cities his hero Chad was stationed.

Russell Newquist's "War Demons" gave me a good sense of Georgia— up to and including a final fight in a football stadium.

Even in fictional cities like Silver Empire's superhero novels, each city has a unique tone and feel to it. Morgan Newquist does a great job in building her Serenity city— which feels very corporate, with put-on sophistication that reminds me of Manhattan elitists. Kai Wai Cheah's "Hollow City" vividly reminds me of San Francisco culture with Chicago corruption. It was much the same in Kim Harrison's "Hollows" series -- she's altered the world so much that I have no idea how much of her Cincinnati is real and how much is fictional, but it is distinct.

Look at "Saint Tommy NYPD" or "Love at First Bite." They're both less "New York City" novels as they are local neighborhood novels. New York City is made up of local areas that are as distinct from each other as cities are from one another.

With "Love at First Bite," Manhattan vampire bars feel different than fighting vampires in a Queens cemetery, which feels different than working around San Francisco (even before San Francisco streets turned to feces and needles). The vampire bar near Mount Sinai isn't the bar near Alphabet city.

For Saint Tommy, he doesn't have to deal with mafiosi or a heavy street gang presence, because they're in different neighborhoods... except for MS-13, which is closing in on several fronts. Heck, even the tactics of fighting in each neighborhood is different. In Brooklyn, you can launch an armed ambush by hiding armies down side streets. In King's Point, individual homes have their own personal docks.

In later books, there's local geography and sites that you don't have in any tour book.

Of course, there's a car chase that requires not only knowing traffic patterns, but also ways around them.

In fact, that's part of what gives many of the above UF novels their feel--the city has an overall feel, and each neighborhood has their own feel. A major plot point of "Battle Ground" involved a fae army walking into the wrong part of Chicago, as well as local architecture being tactically useful... even Chicago pizza is a plot element. No two parts of Kim Harrison's Cincinnati are alike, but the overall feel of the city is consistent. "Monster Hunter Legion" could only have taken place in Las Vegas for multiple reasons. The same with Fred Saberhagen and Chicago.

So, TLDR: in Urban Fantasy, the city should be a part of the story, a player in its own right, with its own feel and own distinct areas. Otherwise, it's contemporary fantasy. Don't get me wrong, all but one of the authors mentioned here have written great books. But are they urban fantasy?

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gunhilltraingunhilltrainover 2 years ago

Well, there is a difference between fantasy/science fiction and more realistic fiction. Although, I have read some science fiction, including futuristic stories, that have made good use of the settings. The novel that Soylent Green was based on had "world building" in the sense of of creating a dystopian future New York. (It was set in 1999; the movie in 2022.) It took the existing city (of 1966) and depicted it failing into ruins and chaos.

As or crime stories, the Noir series by Akashic Books has each volume set in a particular place and generally does an excellent job with most of it.

There is nothing wrong with knowing a place first-hand and using it for fiction. John Updike was at his best in Brewer, PA, based on his hometown of Reading. Faulkner almost always used his home state of Mississippi; Joyce was usually in Dublin or some other part of Ireland, I think. There are many other examples.

Ilfen1Ilfen1over 2 years ago

Hmm I kinda disagree. It would of course be a bonus if the city were a character, but to me Urban Fantasy is just about mashing Fantasy tropes likes vampires, dragons and magic with a setting that has some semblance of obeying the the rules of modern society.

It involves a lot of world-building in and of itself with regards to how much the author tries to "gel" fantasy with modern civilization with all its trappings and comforts. It's all about entertaining "what-if?" scenarios and taking them to their logical conclusion: THEN this happens.

What if vampires exist in modern society and we could mass-manufacture blood packs for them? THEN, presumably they could live openly in our society. There'd might be new diseases. There'd certainly be a lot of crime etc.

What if powerful dragons existed in our society and could disguise themselves as human? THEN they'd probably be the head of mega-corporations and try to amass wealth and power for themselves etc...

If the "city" has a character all its own, great. But that's not the defining feature of Urban Fantasy. In many ways I think Urban Fantasy has similarities to Sci-Fi in the amount of speculation that's possible.

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