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Men vs. Women

That being said, I know many more men who refuse to even crack a book by a woman. I can see if you've read the author before, and were turned off, but based on sex alone? I would bet they miss a lot they would otherwise enjoy!





I just looked at his read books, a ton of his 5 star reads are women authors.

Its not because we are biased or something but usually female authors don't work out for us. Take Nora Roberts, for instance. We may love books by Nicholas Sparks while hate Nora Roberts at the same time.
The only exception is maybe the classics - with Daphne Du Maurier's Rebecca, Jane Austen, Bronte. However, even in classics, we do have a tendency to lean towards Doyle, Hugo or Hardy. The numbers are dominated by male authors even there.
I think that's the way it works. Nothing we can do about it.

Personally, I don't care either way. If it's a good book I am more than open to reading it.
I see this starting at a very young age, though. Think of your class in elementary school. The Tomboy (girl) was always more acceptable than the sissy (boy), who was always picked on and made fun of. (You couldn't pick on the tomboy; she'd probably bash you one, right?)
Vicki, are your male students resisting because they don't like what's in the book, or because they don't want to be caught reading a sissy 'butterfly' book? or any book at all, because reading anything is considered sissy (unless it's a comic book or a playboy...)
Vicki, are your male students resisting because they don't like what's in the book, or because they don't want to be caught reading a sissy 'butterfly' book? or any book at all, because reading anything is considered sissy (unless it's a comic book or a playboy...)

Nearly all of the takers were women, who were "eager and grateful" for the freebies while the men "frowned in suspicion, or distaste." The inevitable conclusion, wrote McEwan in The Guardian newspaper: "When women stop reading, the novel will be dead."
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from the article...(italics mine):
9 books and you're an avid reader? where do TNBBC members get pigeonholed?
Among avid readers surveyed by the AP, the typical woman read nine books in a year, compared with only five for men. Women read more than men in all categories except for history and biography.
9 books and you're an avid reader? where do TNBBC members get pigeonholed?
Richard wrote: "Megalobibliacs?"
nice word!
Interesting article, too. Thanx for posting it.
nice word!
Interesting article, too. Thanx for posting it.


Out of the 283 books I've listed as "Read", only 91 are by female authors. (Now, a good chunk of the 192 compiling my male author list is supplied by Stephen King, since I have read 50 of his books... give or take.) So apparently, I am approximately 2/3 more likely to read a male-authored book. Eeeenteresting. :)
I'm pretty much willing to read anything and everything that doesn't run away from me. I think that there might be a tendency for people to see books written by women as softer, and less willing to be the sort of rough & tumble books that "manly" men write. But I like all sorts of books, and I've read some books by men that make me cringe and wish the author would grow a pair, just as I've read some books by female authors that I wish would cut her characters a break once or twice...

I just know that men look at the world differently than women do. As a reader, you'll see that come out in their writing. Sure, there is some blending in the middle. It isn't subject matter, it is perspective. I don't have enough psychology education to verbalize this well.
Becky: Now I'm going to have to go and count (but not now, it's almost one in the morning)... but does anyone know (Richard?) what the male-female ratio of authors is? (I mean if there are 2% female authors and 98% male authors, more people would be reading male authors... you get my drift?)

I also find the distinction between female and male preferences (fiction vs. non-fiction) intriguing. Do most guys like to keep it real?
Personally, my preference/choice is generally guided by reputation and review, and certainly not by gender.
I love that expression! (dick-lit, I mean)



I know that is not exclusive to male authors, but that's what I think think the impression is. *shrug*


EDIT: Signing off. Bedtime in Amsterdam. Thanks for the entertaining chat.


A lot of it comes down to "authority", particularly in history - Alison Weir, Mary Renault, Antonia Fraser are great historians but against male writers in the same field the women are considered too emotional in their investigations of the past and therefore are deemed less of an authority on the subject.
I think colleges and universities still do not encourage reading of women authors. I went to a women's college and so was introduced to authors I probably would never have come intact with had I gone to the university in my state (based on friends at the university who were still reading Dickens and Melville in their classes while I was learning about Flannery O'Connor and Charlotte Perkins Gilman). Showing the world that there are women writers out there who do not necessarily write what is considered "chick lit" might help men and women realize there are literary women writers as well.

Then again I would ask the question: is that only because potentially serious and worthy females just didn't get the attention because men wouldn't jump on the bandwagon and read her stuff?
Maybe there are too many answers/suggestions to this question!


This does NOT surprise me at all. But, that's because unlike many of the people who have commented so far, I gravitate toward pink (and purple!) books. If they have sparkles, all the better! ;) (I'm actually quite serious though...)
I may be an engineer, but I am also VERY GIRLY. (My coworkers know I love to bring pink into the workplace as much as possible... Which isn't a whole lot...)
I am a woman. I think like a woman. I like to read about women (and their various ordeals). I read a lot of YA, chick-lit, and romance novels.... So it just makes sense that most of them were written by females....
My husband, on the other hand.... He's read the Twilight series, the Host, Harry Potter, Pride and Prejudice..... and I have no idea what other books by female authors. Not very many, I daresay.


I don't think it's fair to believe that women can only write about women accurately, or that only men can write about men accurately.

That's interesting ... I wonder if that's why she used initials for her name, to reach a broader audience and be taken seriously. I personally never knew that was written by a woman (although I've never read it).


*shrugs* I like pink. I like sparkles. I read what makes me happy. I don't particularly care what other people think! Plus, in a male-dominated workplace, I like to hold on to girly-girl femininity as much as possible. I don't see any "negative stereotypes" in pink, sparkly things. Pink and sparkly do not equate to "bimbo" or "unintelligent" in my book, they're just a color and a treatment that makes light bounce off things more than usual.
But I understand what you're saying. It's definitely NOT true that women only write about girly things. That's unfair. It's also not true that men can't write convincing female characters and women can't write convincing male characters.
But at the same time, if I were to write a book, I'd write it from a female perspective, since I live with a female in my head, and I understand how she thinks better than I will ever understand any man. (If I understood my husband better, maybe I wouldn't argue with him so much!)
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Any guys here that can lend their opinion to this? Is it simply a myth?