POLL: What Are Your Favorite Genres of FICTION?

Check your favorite genres of fiction. Check as many as you like.


  • Total voters
    13

What Would Jesus Do?

All-Conference
Nov 28, 2010
34,600
3,744
113
I asked Gemini to list the top fiction flavors and got the answer below. That seemed perfect for a poll. Sorry, no room for all or none of the above or "I don't read."

1. Literary Fiction​

Focuses on character depth, psychological complexity, and philosophy. It is often driven by theme and style rather than a fast-paced plot.

2. Mystery​

Centers on a crime—usually a murder—that must be solved by a protagonist (an investigator, detective, or amateur sleuth).
  • Key Subgenres: Cozy mysteries, hardboiled detective, police procedurals, and whodunits.

3. Thriller & Suspense​

Driven by high stakes, tension, and a sense of urgency or danger. The protagonist is often trying to prevent a disaster rather than just solving a past crime.
  • Key Subgenres: Psychological thrillers, political thrillers, techno-thrillers, and legal thrillers.

4. Science Fiction (Sci-Fi)​

Explores the impact of actual or imagined science and technology on society or individuals. It is often set in the future, space, or alternate realities.
  • Key Subgenres: Cyberpunk, space opera, hard sci-fi, time travel, and post-apocalyptic.

5. Fantasy​

Features magical elements, supernatural occurrences, folklore, or entirely invented worlds that do not exist in reality.
  • Key Subgenres: High/epic fantasy, urban fantasy, magical realism, and dark fantasy.

6. Romance​

Focuses primarily on the romantic relationship between two or more characters. The central plot revolves around their love story, which traditionally concludes with an emotionally satisfying or happy ending.
  • Key Subgenres: Contemporary romance, historical romance, paranormal romance, and rom-coms.

7. Historical Fiction​

Set in a real historical time period, requiring accurate period details, social customs, and events, though the main characters and specific plot lines are usually fictional.

8. Horror​

Intended to frighten, scare, or disgust readers. It often evokes feelings of dread or terror through supernatural or psychological means.
  • Key Subgenres: Gothic horror, cosmic horror (Lovecraftian), psychological horror, and slasher/gore.

9. Western​

Set primarily in the American frontier during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Themes usually revolve around survival, law and order, vengeance, and the clash between civilization and the wilderness.

10. Dystopian / Utopian​

Examines social and political structures. Dystopian fiction presents a repressive, controlled, or degraded society (often under a totalitarian regime), while utopian fiction explores an idealized, perfect society.

Overarching Classifications​

Most of these genres fall into broader categories used by publishers and libraries:
  • Commercial/Genre Fiction: Books written with the primary intent of entertaining the reader within a specific, established framework (e.g., Romance, Sci-Fi, Mystery).
  • Speculative Fiction: An umbrella term that encompasses any genre with supernatural, futuristic, or imaginative elements (Sci-Fi, Fantasy, Horror, Dystopian).
  • Age Categories: Genres are often cross-classified by target audience, such as Children’s, Middle Grade (MG), Young Adult (YA), and Adult.
 

BelemNole

All-American
Mar 29, 2002
36,685
9,782
113
I used to mostly read horror and sci-fi but lately I read more fantasy and police procedurals.
 

BrainVision

Senior
Jun 6, 2020
413
824
93
I acknowledge this sounds like a Brian question but do you ever confuse them?
That is a legitimate question! I learned when I was really young that if I tried to read one book at a time that I almost never finished it due to getting bored. Once I started reading two books, then I could bounce between them whenever my attention waned and I would end up finishing both books in less than half the time of trying to finish a single one.

Usually, the writing style and content are so distinct that I never have any issues with getting them confused.
 
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AFM22

Heisman
Oct 31, 2022
16,549
31,492
113
I typically like most fiction, but prefer lit fiction I suppose.

Of those the ones I don't particularly like are sci fi or fantasy. I'll give them a shot as long as they're good. If it's campy shid then I have a real hard time getting into it and usually DNF.
 

52317Hawk

All-Conference
Jul 3, 2025
1,062
1,229
113
No comedic genre ala Hiaasen/Berry et al?

I voted for historical and thriller. One of my favorite books is Aztec (historical) and pretty much anything by King (thriller/horror).