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The Slipstream Mystery
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The Slipstream Mystery

Among the questions asked to an author, the one regarding what genre his or her work falls into is a common recurrence. For a long time I dreaded that question, being unable to find a satisfactory answer – Fiction? Too broad. Science fiction? Too vague. Alternate Reality? Close, so close… Until I was finally told that my series, ‘The Fog Chronicles’, fitted into a niche literary genre: slipstream.

 

151217 The Slipstream Mystery

What is slipstream

I had never heard of this genre, so I turned to the web. The term was first used by author Bruce Sterling in an  article originally published in SF Eye #5 in July 1989. He defined it as “… a kind of writing which simply makes you feel very strange; the way that living in the twentieth century makes you feel, if you are a person of a certain sensibility.”

As it hardly shed more clarity on the concept, I dug a bit deeper, going through many articles and literary critic reviews on what this genre encompasses. Here is what I gathered: Slipstream is sometimes referred to as “the fiction of strangeness”, “the new weird”, “fantastika,” “interstitial”. Authors and critics seem to agree that it is, well , a slippery genre to pinpoint. More than a specific category, slipstream refers to novels with an approach, a feel even, that have in common a surreal, unreal or anti-real touch (to a stronger or lesser degree). It crosses boundaries between speculative and mainstream fiction by blending science fiction, fantasy, and literary fiction. There is no specific way to achieve the slipstream effect: what matters is the fantastic if not strange experience it creates.

 

Most individuals do not enjoy being labelled and put in a box. Similarly as an author, being pigeon-holed into a specific genre is unpleasant. However, the elusive concept of Slipstream attracts me. Simply by trying to define it, 151217 The Slipstream Mystery (2)one already enters the essence of weirdness of the genre. The reader is floating between the real and the surreal.

 

The world within slipstream literature is more often than not based on ours, with average, normal people displaying the same reactions, emotions, fears and hopes as you and I would. It is this normality in the face of unusual circumstances that marks the eeriness feel of the genre. The writing, too, is inventive. It bends the mind not just of the reader, but of the writer as well (often, I found my plots, words and style changing along with the unexpected turns in my stories). Yet there is always a logic behind the fantastic of the unfolding events which enables the creation a new or alternative reality. It is a very challenging, original, empowering way of writing, less conventional and more experimental. It is not only a genre but a kind of writing, with an emphasis on style, giving slipstream its literary essence.

 

Writing a fiction that weaves the real and the unreal is taking a risk. Weird is not the most obvious selling point for a novel and might alienate readers. However, despite the term defining this genre being relatively unknown, its audience is growing rapidly. Many authors have enjoyed best-selling successes with some of their novels qualifying as slipstream: Margaret Atwood, Anthony Burgess, Haruki Murakami, Don DeLillo, John Banville, John Fowles, and also Paul Auster and Dino Buzatti. Even Gabriel Garcia Marquez has been referred to as a slipstream author! It proves that readers are open-minded to the laws being broken in literature – maybe because it symbolically reflects that the modern world doesn’t make much sense either.

 

As a consquence, what is the point of labelling a book to a literary genre? With the rise of internet and the possibility of multiple categories, keywords and virtual shelves for any given book, a too wide range of niches and new labels actually render those meaningless. From ‘Chick Lit’ to ‘Women Sleuths’, 151217 The Slipstream Mystery (3)passing by ‘Nordic Noir’ to ‘Occult Horror’ or ‘Metaphysical & Visionary’, in all honesty, I have been lost among the online sections of book retailers for a long time.

 

Anyway, sadly, there is rarely a ‘slipstream’ section. So what will it be for Gatekeepers? Which sub-sub-sub category should my novels fall into? From an author’s point of view, whatever more mainstream genre my work might be labelled, it will never be as perfectly wonderfully strange and unexpected as ‘Slipstream’.

Thank you for reading,

Yours, Virginie.