What does sf often get grouped with in bookstores and what


What does sf often get grouped with (in bookstores)?

What "will leave the casual browser in little doubt as to which of these three possible categories a particular book belongs"?

Who decides what a book's cover will be?

Note: "Regency-clad" (3): The Regency was the period between 1795 and 1837 (the latter part of the reign of George III of England and the reigns of his sons George IV, as Prince Regent and King, and William IV) and was characterized by distinctive trends in British architecture, literature, fashions, politics, and culture.

Unlike other (popular) fiction, what do sf and fantasy (and perhaps supernatural horror) do openly?

What does sf often provide because it explores "imaginative alternatives to the real world"?

How do readers, according to James, react to the label "sf"?

What is the first category of sf book which are not labeled science fiction?

What is the second category of sf book which are not labeled science fiction?

What benefits and drawbacks does James identify in ghettos (literary ghettos in this case, but likely applicable to geographic/social/cultural ghettoes as well)?

How does James define a genre?

For James, why does genre sf "not constitute the whole of sf" (i.e., what else should be included in discussions of sf)?

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