Fiction
Related: About this forumDo any of you ladies or men notice any differences in books by female authors?
I myself prefer men authors. Some exceptions - Penney, McCrumb, Bolton and some I will remember sooner than later...
I notice that women have a really different outlook on their romantic male characters and make them into really loving, caring, protective and perfect people who stay awake at night dreaming about the woman.
Maybe they never had the experience (when they were young) of giving some guy their phone number, sure that he's as crazy about her as she is about him, and waits for the phone to ring and it doesn't. Have any of you figured that out? I never did....in books he always calls....
I have the feeling I will delete this post, mostly because I wasn't able to express my feelings well enough to be understood...
Back to my subject question...what differences do you men or ladies see in books written by women?
Scuba
(53,475 posts)Watching this thread should be interesting.
Arkansas Granny
(31,828 posts)The woman authors of that genre generally focus on strong, self-reliant, adventurous women instead of analyzing the romantic issues of the male characters in their books. The biggest differences I find between male and female authors is who the main characters of the books turn out to be, not how they are portrayed.
mvccd1000
(1,534 posts)For the most part, I've given up on female authors, for exactly the reasons you mention. I think we're not alone, as many of the places I've worked overseas have "take 1, leave 1" book areas for English-language books. Invariably, those bookshelves end up full of books by female authors, with not a sign of a Tom Clancy, Stephen King, Michael Connelly, or Lee Child to be found. The books written by women don't seem to move off the shelves, while the ones written by men won't stay on them.
It seems unfair, and every once in a while I go back and try one that seems like it should be good, but I just don't enjoy it enough to try another.
One exception is Gayle Lynds; I remember her ghostwriting or co-writing with another notable author (Robert Ludlum?), and I really enjoyed her books.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)His Lynd books were among his best. And yes, she is good-looking.
marions ghost
(19,841 posts)aren't as good as men?
Some reasons?
mvccd1000
(1,534 posts)It's not that women writers aren't as good as male writers; perhaps it's simply that I don't connect as well with the point of view from which they tell the story. At least in my favorite genre (mystery/thriller), I'd rather read about HOW the protagonist was sneaking around in the night, looking for a car to hotwire, not what she was thinking and/or feeling as she snuck around looking for the car.
I also enjoy the mechanical or technological details in the stories; I cringe when I read of someone shooting a gun that doesn't exist, or hotwiring a car in 15 seconds flat, but not dealing with the ignition/brake interlock that keeps you from shifting out of park, etc.
There simply aren't a lot of female writers who either a) write those kinds of stories, or b) get the details right if they do.
I guess I'd sum it up by saying it has nothing to do with the quality of writing by female authors; it's simply the disconnect between the style of storytelling most of them provide vs. the type of stories I enjoy reading.
Little Star
(17,055 posts)Women are good at that type writing.
MaineDem
(18,161 posts)I haven't read any of his books but they say he writes like his mother and her books were considered cozy, I would think.
Little Star
(17,055 posts)fadedrose
(10,044 posts)was cozy till he killed off my favorite character in his books. Damned fool.
I'm first on the list for his next new one and I'm giving him another chance.
Doss is cozy, as well as scary and funny.
Except for a few women, I like men writers best...
Little Star
(17,055 posts)but I never thought of either of them as cozy writers. But what the heck do I know.
Glad your gonna give CJ another chance.
Ya know Rose, soon as things calm down around here, I think I'm going to end up with a lot more time for reading now that I'm a widow. Sounds strange to say that.
Angry Dragon
(36,693 posts)MaineDem
(18,161 posts)I don't read a lot of romances. Even the women authors I like write murder stories - Penney, Crombie, for example.
I don't recall ever reading a book along the lines of Clancy, Child, Baldacci that was written by a woman.
I think I disagree about the women authors' male characters always being perfect. I just finished Louise Penney's Three Pines series (waiting for the new book due in August) and her characters have several flaws.
WEB Griffin was making me angry by the way he was portraying his main character in the Presidential Agent series. He was very condescending toward women. I guess I wasn't his target demographic.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)She can spot a bad guy as fast as she can a good guy and describes him to a T...
bemildred
(90,061 posts)I've never seen a female author focus on the "technical details", of sex and violence for example, in the way that some male authors will (John Updike, Cormac McCarthy); or male authors focus on inner emotional life in the way that female authors often will. And yet when I consider authors like Margaret Atwood, Leslie Marmon Silko, V. S. Naipaul, Kazuo Ishiguro, or Proust, I am reluctant to grant even that much.
When I was younger, I preferred male authors in the modern western tradition, now I look for authors who are not that in one form or another (female, pre-modern, non-western, all or some of those).
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)bemildred
(90,061 posts)I tend to be kind of old school these days, I think.
However, I've been thinking about this since I wrote that, and I think I would say that gender stereotypes in authors are breaking down, as in other areas. Something that has been going on for a long time, but which has really accellerated since I was a kid. A good thing too. Let's you have lots more choices when you want to take your mind out for a walk.
Edit: one of the things that first started to annoy me with SF was the plastic female characters (e.g. Heinlein), the mystification of gender, and it's really only modern authors who at least attempt to be realisitic that I read now and then today.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)kindle and those authors has open my eyes in many ways, from different perspectives. but that is where i am really seeing a certain man author that i have no desire to read. a lot of adolescence male fantasy. on the other hand, there is an openness in different story telling. for example. so many published authors is white main characters. thru kindle there is much more diversity. little gay publishing, from choices in library. kindle has more selection.
bemildred
(90,061 posts)They open things up, fewer gatekeepers between the writer and the reader. Of course you have to do your own weeding out too.
One of my complaints about Cormac McCarthy is that his women do not satisfy.
Otherwise as to what you say: yep.
I will take a look at Ms Brennan.
Gotta go.
Little Star
(17,055 posts)writing styles seem to be from different prospectives even when addressing the same subject matter. I doubt I am well spoken enough to articulate what I see.
I enjoy men's writing more on certain subjects and women's on others.
MaineDem
(18,161 posts)Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)and have no preference. What I do notice from both in modern books that is annoying to me is the super-beautiful, super-intellegent, super-sexual, super-everything female characters. As a woman, I feel so inadequate when I run into these characters, and they are like the skinny, airbrushed photos of models----an ideal that no one will live up to, and it is too unbelievable. And I have noticed that female and male authors are both to blame.....or maybe it is the reader preference that they are writing for.
I like characters with flaws.
marions ghost
(19,841 posts)you so rarely ever see a "real" female--always the stereotypes
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)in both books and movies. No flaws, can run around all day and all night and still look gorgeous and kick ass. Doesn't do a thing for me!
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)I have no flaws, can run around all day and night and look gorgeous and kick asses.
Maybe you should switch to Cheerios.
Right now, I'm trying to sell the Statue of Liberty - wanna make an offer?
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)And I need to know what kind of vitamins you are taking too.
Please tell me, how to you avoid those bags under your eyes when you don't get any sleep????
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)keeping you up cause you're thinking about them? Or are you doing a working 28-hr day in 24?
Take melatonin - it's not a drug, and it helps you to fall asleep and it's not hard to wake up when you take it. It's a food supplement. It's good if you need to get up early and can't fall asleep worrying about getting up early
I take Biotin (for hair), Pantothenic acid (for energy and it's always listed on shampoos, etcs.); psyllium (metamucil) and some stuff for cholesterol (sp) and am in the middle of an order to Puritan's Pride (online) whose B1G2F expires on the 14th...then it's back to B1G1F...
Sorry you asked?
I don't really take vitamins - I have them and every couple weeks if I miss too many good meals, will take one. "C" if I have a cold...
Sorry everyone, please ignore...
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)when I can't sleep, I get up and grab my book to focus my mind away from the rest of that crap.
BlueIris
(29,135 posts)Last edited Sun Apr 29, 2012, 08:08 PM - Edit history (1)
I have read some books by male authors that contained extremely realistic female characters, even when the actual protagonist was a woman. Ira Levin's The Stepford Wives, and William Gibson's Pattern Recognition are such novels. But by and large, I do not find the women in novels written by men to be either compelling or believable.
bemildred
(90,061 posts)ZombieHorde
(29,047 posts)The romance in The Name of the Wind is that way, and that was written by a guy.
Lydia Leftcoast
(48,217 posts)but I don't like most American male mystery writers. They're too caught up in the impossibly rich and handsome hero with supermodel women throwing themselves at him.
I much prefer the Brits and other Europeans: Henning Menkel, Arnaldur Indridason, Peter James, Peter Robinson, Andrew Taylor, Reginald Hill, Robert Barnard, Colin Cotterill, James Church, to name a few.
The women writers I like, both American and otherwise, tend to be pretty down-to-earth: Sue Grafton, Sara Paretsky, Faye Kellerman, Ruth Rendell, Yrsa Sigurdardottir, Deborah Crombie, Susan Hill, Denise Mina, Val McDermid, Dana Stabenow.
fadedrose
(10,044 posts)since I started reading fiction....
I never wanted to leave our border, felt un-American or disloyal or something..and I don't know what a "cozie" is. I thought it was a book your were comfortable with because of familiarity with the characters....I have foreign "cozies."
Centepede Shoes turned me on to Penny, and I found out that I liked foreign books. And some of my most favorite American authors I no longer care for that much - I still read them but am let down most of the time.
I haven't tried evey author in your list, but I did try Indridason, and for me, it was too somber, bleak. But I love Cotterill, Hill, 'Church, Fowler, Beaton, Burdett and a few others.
One you might like is the one I have now, The Keeper of Lost Causes by Jussi Adler-Olsen (Denmark). Usually I keep track of where I am in the books hoping I'll finish it soon, but I want this book to last. It's about Carl Mørck, an experienced homicide detective in Department Q, and his assistant Assad, in Copenhagen, Denmark.
I'm really disappointed that his 2 books that come after this one aren't available yet. I will put myself on the list...
http://www.stopyourekillingme.com/A_Authors/Adler-Olsen_Jussi.html
JitterbugPerfume
(18,183 posts)Last edited Tue May 1, 2012, 09:44 AM - Edit history (2)
shows pretty good mix of male/ female authors. Margaret Atwood, Susan Jacoby,, Barbara Kingsolver, Naomi Klein and Toni Morrison are all represented.
I read a lot of Sci Fi, and for that I prefer male authors like Philip K Dick, Kim Stanley Robinson Issac Asimov to name a few
I read a lot of Cormac McCarthy , Kurt Vonnegut, John Steinbeck.
All told I probably read more male authors by a small margin
Rebecca Skloot did an excellent job on The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, just as Isabel Wilkerson wrote the wonderful book The Warmth of Other Suns
Another favorite is Jared Diamond and of course my favorite iconoclast, Richard Dawkins.
Of course I could never leave out Douglas Adams--that just would not be right!
Men/ women have different outlook on sex, violence and even at times a view on the role of male/female that is disturbing but if it is appropriate to the setting it doesn't bother me much
Rowdyboy
(22,057 posts)For the last three years I've been constantly reading and rereading Colleen McCullough's series "Masters of Rome". It's seven volumes of wonderfully detailed Roman history from the era of Julius Caesar. The attention to detail in battle tactics and strategy would stereotypically imply a male author. But there is also a considerable focus on emotional relationships between these amazing historical personalities which could be more stereotypically feminine. She did an incredible job of historical research and I'm well into my second reading of the fifth volume of the series. She also wrote the enormously popular pot-boiler "The Thorn Birds" back in the 1970's.
Other authors I've recently read include Stephen King and his son Joe Hill (who is awesome!), and Stephen Baxter (an excellent British hard sci-fi author). I've also read Doug Preston, lincoln Child and Chelsea Cain in the last few months. I want to read more Cormac McCarthy.
I guess overall I've spent about equal time with male and female writers. I really think both bring differing perspectives that I enjoy.
Good to see you, friend and happy to share my recent reading list. If you like hard sci-fi you would love Stephen Baxter's "Flood" and "Ark".
dimbear
(6,271 posts)Alice.
She wrote as a man just as long as it pleased her, and essentially nobody guessed she wasn't.
Fascinating and tragic life arc, too.
raccoon
(31,457 posts)Wikipedia said that. Whaddya know?
Bruce Wayne
(692 posts)So maybe it's more socially engineered role positioning rather than the inherent genetic qualities of each sex.
seabeyond
(110,159 posts)Last edited Wed May 9, 2012, 08:31 AM - Edit history (1)
man a hero and the woman the soft hearted prostitute or stripper. i like a more in the middle. i find a consistency in male authors where i cant stomach the presentation of female in their books
then there are authors like childs and koontz that just dont have that in their books
and authors like sanford that tries to keep it out and slides only a bit.
i guess it is what world view is on what extreme bothers a person.
but i think there is balance in both gender authors and extreme
justiceischeap
(14,040 posts)but how that author writes the characters. I prefer female protagonists--tough, independent and smart. Finding one of those in books that don't turn that female character into a vapid "girl" when she meets Mr. Perfect is a challenge. That is where my problem lay with most modern fiction. Almost everything written, either by male or female authors, has romance in it now. If I want to read romance, I'd read romance... but it is still such a strong market that it's bleeding into everything. It almost seemed that is was forced into the Hunger Games trilogy.
clyrc
(2,299 posts)But I enjoy male authors, too. I don't know that I really notice a difference. Maybe I'm just not paying attention to patterns.
closeupready
(29,503 posts)are written by men though, I will admit to that.
I think part of that is simply that there are some authors I really enjoy, and they have written so much and I read at such a slow pace that I've got enough to occupy my reading time probably through the end of my life, lol.
But I like Agatha Christie.
I've got some other classics written by women, like Baghdad Sketches by Freya Stark (travel essay, non-fiction), some Margaret Mead (anthropology, not fiction), Silent Spring, Rachel Carson, but they are mostly non-fiction works.