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I was reading a mystery last night that turned out to be a lot shorter than I expected because the manuscript pages were single-sided. The book turned out to be less than 280 pages long. Despite this lack of length the author managed to fit an entire plot between the two covers.

It's comparatively rare for an SF novel to be that short and nearly unheard of for a fantasy novel to be under 300 pages. I've also never seen a mystery that came close to the brick-like dimensions of many F&SF novels. There seems to be a hard limit of about 400 pages over in mystery.

Mysteries also eschew the cliff-hanger ending and the book-fragment approach, which I greatly appreciate.

Does it make sense to ask why modern [1] F&SF readers appear to prefer longer lengths than do mystery readers?

1: I have a number of older books upstairs that come in under 200 pages and like the mystery they all have complete plots.

Date: 2008-12-28 06:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] pompe.livejournal.com
Well, I know that I'd buy more fantasy and SF if the publishers/authors tried to keep a median length below 300 pages. I hate having to read what essentially would be the length of an entire PKD novel without having the plot show up decently but instead having to suffer how the author spends a hundred pages introducing too many characters and providing too many infodumps.

And seriously, people talk about how it is because of all the world building which has to fit in. If that were true, wouldn't the world building be better?

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