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LATRAMEGenre reference

Every genre,
at a glance.

A way to name exactly what you're writing — or find exactly what you're in the mood to read. For every genre: its icon, a one-sentence definition, and ten touchstone works. Click any card to explore the scenes published within it.

Explore the genres

Non-fiction / knowledge

7 genres

Popular science

A guide-narrator explains — podcast format, fictional YouTube channel, impromptu lesson.

10 well-known examples
Cosmos (Carl Sagan)A Brief History of TimeSapiensKurzgesagtRadiolabBill Nye the Science GuyFreakonomicsThe Elegant UniverseVeritasiumMythbusters

Narrative history / documentary

Real historical figures told in story form — distinct from historical fiction, which is fictionalized.

10 well-known examples
The Rest Is History (podcast)SPQRDiscourse on InequalityThe Diary of a Young Girl (Anne Frank)Hardcore HistoryAlexander Hamilton (biography)Hiroshima (Hersey)In Cold BloodThe Wright BrothersKen Burns (documentaries)

Encyclopedia / bestiary / lore

Entries on the creatures, places, or characters of a universe — especially relevant on LATRAME.

10 well-known examples
The SilmarillionFantastic BeastsThe World of Ice and FireD&D BestiaryWarhammer 40,000 CodexElder Scrolls LorebooksPokédexMonster ManualThe Wheel of Time CompanionDiablo: Book of Cain

Educational / teaching tale

Moral tales, popularized for a young audience — distinct from YA fantasy, which is a genre, not a teaching tone.

10 well-known examples
La Fontaine's FablesAesop's FablesCharlotte's WebThe Very Hungry CaterpillarWinnie the PoohThe Little PrinceHorrible HistoriesThe Magic School BusPeter RabbitCurious George

Biography / memoir

Autobiography, life journal, memoir — the characters are real people.

10 well-known examples
Becoming (Michelle Obama)EducatedThe Diary of a Young GirlBorn a CrimeWildLong Walk to FreedomI Know Why the Caged Bird SingsJust KidsOpen (Andre Agassi)When Breath Becomes Air

Real true crime / reportage

The nonfiction counterpart to epistolary true crime, which is explicitly fictional.

10 well-known examples
In Cold BloodI'll Be Gone in the DarkSerial (podcast)Making a MurdererThe StaircaseKillers of the Flower MoonCatch and KillAmerican MurderThe Ted Bundy TapesSay You're Sorry

Literary Essay

A personal, argued reflection on an idea, a work, or society — no characters, no plot.

10 well-known examples
Notes of a Native Son (James Baldwin)A Room of One's OwnThe Art of the Personal EssayBad FeministThe Empathy ExamsConsider the LobsterAgainst InterpretationThe Death of the MothSlouching Towards BethlehemHow to Write an Autobiographical Novel

Historical / Adventure

8 genres

Historical fiction

A story set in a real period of the past, with or without historical figures.

10 well-known examples
OutlanderWolf HallAll the Light We Cannot SeeThe Book ThiefThe Other Boleyn GirlThe Pillars of the EarthGone with the WindMemoirs of a GeishaThe NightingaleBridgerton

Western

The American frontier, cowboys, law and disorder.

10 well-known examples
True GritUnforgivenThe Good, the Bad and the UglyYellowstoneDeadwoodNo Country for Old MenDjango UnchainedLonesome DoveThe Revenant3:10 to Yuma

Adventure / Survival

Characters facing a hostile environment, with physical survival at the heart of the story.

10 well-known examples
Robinson CrusoeInto the WildLife of PiThe RevenantCast AwayHatchetAlive127 HoursThe MartianWild

Steampunk

Victorian aesthetics blended with anachronistic steam-powered technology.

10 well-known examples
Mortal EnginesLeague of Extraordinary GentlemenLeviathanHowl's Moving CastleThe Invention of Hugo CabretGirl GeniusBioshock InfiniteWild Wild WestHis Dark MaterialsThe Difference Engine

Magical realism

The supernatural slips into everyday life without characters ever questioning it.

10 well-known examples
One Hundred Years of SolitudeLike Water for ChocolateThe House of the SpiritsBelovedLife of PiChocolatBig FishMidnight's ChildrenThe Night CircusPractical Magic

Gothic

A dark atmosphere, crumbling settings, family secrets, and latent supernatural dread.

10 well-known examples
DraculaFrankensteinRebeccaWuthering HeightsThe Haunting of Hill HouseCrimson PeakJane EyreThe Fall of the House of UsherMexican GothicNinth House

Superhero / Comics-style

Characters with extraordinary powers, following comic-book conventions.

10 well-known examples
Spider-ManThe AvengersBatmanX-MenThe BoysWatchmenInvincibleSupermanWonder WomanThe Umbrella Academy

Military fiction

War and military life at the center of the story, camaraderie and tactical stakes.

10 well-known examples
Band of BrothersAll Quiet on the Western FrontFull Metal JacketBlack Hawk DownThe Things They CarriedSaving Private RyanGeneration KillWar and PeaceApocalypse Now1917

Fantasy / Romantasy

15 genres

Classic / epic fantasy

A fully-realized secondary world, an epic-scale quest, and stakes that outgrow any single character.

10 well-known examples
The Lord of the RingsGame of ThronesAssassin's ApprenticeEragonNarniaThe Wheel of TimeMistbornThe WitcherShannaraEarthsea

Romantasy

Fantasy and romance fused together — the love story matters as much as the worldbuilding.

10 well-known examples
A Court of Thorns and RosesFourth WingFrom Blood and AshThe Cruel PrinceThrone of GlassSerpent & DoveDivine RivalsPowerlessA Court of Silver FlamesThe Iron Flowers

Dark romance

Romance with intense power dynamics, morally ambiguous characters, and a darker tone.

10 well-known examples
Haunting AdelineIcebreakerTwisted LoveThe KingmakerVerityCorruptCaptive PrinceNeon GodsReaper's PropertyPunk 57

Monster romance

The love interest is a non-human being — creature, monster — embraced as exactly that.

10 well-known examples
Ice Planet BarbariansA Court of Thorns and RosesIron WidowHouse of HollowThe Bear and the NightingaleBeauty and the BeastTwisted PalaceThe Shape of WaterWarm BodiesMy Roommate is a Vampire

Femgore

Horror/fantasy centered on female rage and revenge, with explicit violence embraced outright.

10 well-known examples
Promising Young WomanRevenge (2017)The VegetarianBoy PartsBunnyTender is the FleshMy Sister the Serial KillerThe Girl with All the GiftsCarrieJennifer's Body

Romance-horror

Romance that fully absorbs horror elements — not just a gothic backdrop.

10 well-known examples
TwilightBrideNinth HouseMexican GothicCertain Dark ThingsThe Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying VampiresHouse of Salt and SorrowsWhat Big TeethThe Invisible Life of Addie LaRueWildfell

Cozy fantasy

Low-stakes, comforting fantasy, often centered on a craft or a peaceful everyday life.

10 well-known examples
Legends & LattesThe House in the Cerulean SeaHowl's Moving CastleThe Ocean at the End of the LaneA Psalm for the Wild-BuiltBookshops & BonedustThe Very Secret Society of Irregular WitchesKiki's Delivery ServicePiranesiThe Tea Dragon Society

LitRPG / Progression fantasy

An explicit game system — levels, stats, quests — built directly into the narrative.

10 well-known examples
Solo LevelingHe Who Fights with MonstersMother of LearningThe Wandering InnReady Player OneSword Art OnlineOverlordLog HorizonAwaken OnlineDungeon Crawler Carl

Urban fantasy

The supernatural coexists with the real modern world, often in a city.

10 well-known examples
The Dresden FilesPercy JacksonShadowhuntersAmerican GodsNeverwhereKate DanielsRivers of LondonSandmanBuffy the Vampire SlayerThe Others

Portal fantasy / Isekai

A character crosses from one world — often ours — into another.

10 well-known examples
Alice in WonderlandNarniaRe:ZeroThat Time I Got Reincarnated as a SlimeSpirited AwayThe MagiciansCoralineStardustSword Art OnlineEvery Heart a Doorway

Fairy tale retelling

A classic fairy tale retold from a new angle.

10 well-known examples
The Lunar ChroniclesUprootedSpinning SilverWickedCinderElla EnchantedThe Bear and the NightingaleBeauty (Robin McKinley)Once Upon a Broken HeartSorcery of Thorns

Mythology retelling

A myth — Greek, Norse, or otherwise — retold from a modern or offbeat point of view.

10 well-known examples
CirceThe Song of AchillesPercy JacksonAmerican GodsNorse MythologyAriadneLore OlympusThe PenelopiadMythos (Stephen Fry)Elektra

Paranormal romance

Romance with supernatural beings — vampires, werewolves, angels — at the heart of the love story.

10 well-known examples
TwilightVampire AcademyThe Vampire DiariesHush HushFallenShiverBeautiful CreaturesThe Mortal InstrumentsA Discovery of WitchesTrue Blood

Grimdark

Dark, cynical fantasy in shades of moral grey, with raw violence — no easy heroism.

10 well-known examples
The First LawGame of ThronesThe Black CompanyMalazan Book of the FallenPrince of ThornsThe Poppy WarBlood SongRed SisterThe Broken EmpireWarhammer 40,000

YA fantasy

Fantasy for a young audience, a teenage protagonist learning to master their power or identity.

10 well-known examples
Harry PotterPercy JacksonSix of CrowsShadow and BoneAn Ember in the AshesThrone of GlassGracelingThe Girl of Fire and ThornsChildren of Blood and BoneA Wrinkle in Time