Kids/Teens Book Club discussion
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Why Does It Seem That Girls Read More Than Guys?
This is an excellent question. I just checked, out of our 50 top commenters, only 4 are guys. Yourself being one of them. I dont actually know why that is. Im friends with so many boys at school, and only one of them actually likes reading. I dont think reading is either masculine or feminine. Its something everyone can enjoy. Sure some books are aimed more for girls, but some are aimed for guys as well. There should be very few books which fall squarely into either category.
You're a boy, what do you think the reason is? Im sure you might now better than me...
Anyway, on a side note, any boy that reads novels gets extra points in my book. I'd rather go out with a boy who reads than doesnt. But thas just me.
You're a boy, what do you think the reason is? Im sure you might now better than me...
Anyway, on a side note, any boy that reads novels gets extra points in my book. I'd rather go out with a boy who reads than doesnt. But thas just me.

The only exception is war books. Guys will consider reading a true story about war (books like: Black Hawk Down) more masculine than Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings.
Gah, silly guys! Actually, Thinking it over, more guys than I thought read. Like, half of the "popular group"'s guys have read Harry Potter, and talk about it in class. They're not ashamed. And their pretty much the 'coolest' guys in the year. But they wont read anything else. And apart from that group and my friend I mentioned before, no guys read. Not even my brother, and he's grown up around books. I suppose, for anyone to read, they have to start at an early age. Plenty of girls dont read either. Those who start reading books as soon as they can are most likely those who love books. Girls or boys.



That makes more females, and still, not many.. I wonder if there is any difference when the females are older, or not.

Most of my guy friends at school that actually like to read, read war stories ect, like you mentioned above. The 'popular' guys that do read are not ashamed that they read and Jess's later comment about plenty of girls not reading is pretty accutate too. I also pefer to date a guy who reads than one who doesnt.
On another note, Black Hawk Down is a pretty good book i don't normally read that sort of stuff but i thought it was pretty good.
The idea that guys don't read is quite legit, though quite a social stereotype. I have a guy friend who reads and I told my friends about that and they asked whether he was gay.... It was weird.
Personally, I think guys who read are cute.
Personally, I think guys who read are cute.
Hannie wrote: "Personally, I think guys who read are cute. "
Seconded.
My guy-friend who likes to read doesnt read war stories and stuff. Me and him share books. We both love The Knife of Never Letting Go, The Hunger Games, The Book Thief. So yes, boys not reading (and if they do read, its about war) is definitely a sterotype. It is kinda true, but equally so for girls.
Seconded.
My guy-friend who likes to read doesnt read war stories and stuff. Me and him share books. We both love The Knife of Never Letting Go, The Hunger Games, The Book Thief. So yes, boys not reading (and if they do read, its about war) is definitely a sterotype. It is kinda true, but equally so for girls.
Yeah, a guy recommended Vampire Academy to me.
Another guy recommended Darke Academy!
Another guy recommended Darke Academy!
I find nerdy, cute boys just amazing!
I love reading. And it is stupid to be on a site called GOODREADS if you think reading is lame.

The point of my terrible attempt at a joke is that (at my school at least) it seems like a mostly even divide of boys who hate to read and girls who hate to read. And since we are talking about reading, read this: I mean pretty much everybody. It's less of a "Oh girls like to read so much more" than it is "Oh nobody likes to read at all."
Why do girls seem to read more? No idea. At all. At first I thought it was old stereotypes that have still survived (boys do the tough things and games outside, girls sit inside and read and knit and clean), but I'm soooo not convinced of that.
Dang man, somebody needs to get up on some research on this! I must know the answer!


I'll also look to see if I can find any statistics.
I go to a girls school. I have a limited amount of guy friends. One? Two?

I'm a guy and I love to read, but boys brains are simply wired differently than girls. Many more boys are diagnosed with ADD and ADHD than girls - boys, by and large, there's always exceptions, can't/won't sit still long enough to read a book. Video games appeal much more to their need for stimulation as far as entertainment goes.
Like I said, there are always exceptions (heck, I'm one of them) but I really believe this to be true.



yeah, I'm gonna go with what Amelia said, it makes a lot of sense. It's the truth. Not all books, but a lot. And sure, some guys can read them, but it's primarily girls. Some books are uni-sex, but I think the majority of those readers are females, as well.

I don't really think romance dominates the book industry...Not yet at least.

I happen to disagree there, to a certain point, and also sort of agree. I think the issue is not that they publish books geared toward girls but that they are perceived as publishing books geared toward girls. It's not cool for a boy to read if it's a book meant for a girl. That's why the difference is so much more noticeable in YA than children's or adult–because that's who they market to.
Personally, I believe that is a bunch of nonsense. Your example is that the majority of books contain romance, an element for girls alone. I can only speak for myself, but I, a girl, do my best to avoid romance in a book. Yes, I understand that it's going to happen, but a book about a love story? Not a chance. That's why I can read very little YA realistic fiction. For some reason authors, particularly YA ones, have decided that a book must have romance. I'm sure (actually I know) this is a factor that turns some boys off, but it does the same to me. By that logic, it should attract some boys as well, if to a lesser extent.
I personally think that the idea of books aimed at boys or books aimed at girls is stupid. All it does is stop people from reading books that might otherwise interest them because "That's a boys'/girls' book". These stereotypes, I believe, contribute greatly to the lack of boys who read. If they don't like war books, or are tired of war books since so many are the same thing over and over again, what else are they supposed to read without looking like a nerd?


Kate wrote: "Personally, I believe that is a bunch of nonsense. Your example is that the majority of books contain romance, an element for girls alone. I can only speak for myself, but I, a girl, do my best to avoid romance in a book. Yes, I understand that it's going to happen, but a book about a love story? Not a chance. That's why I can read very little YA realistic fiction. For some reason authors, particularly YA ones, have decided that a book must have romance. I'm sure (actually I know) this is a factor that turns some boys off, but it does the same to me. By that logic, it should attract some boys as well, if to a lesser extent.
"
Yes yes yes! I hate romance books! I cringe every time I walk past the 'romance' section in the book shop. And I avoid so many books because of it. YA novels do not NEED to include love triangles and so much romance. That would probably stop boys from reading so many books-it does for me even.
"
Yes yes yes! I hate romance books! I cringe every time I walk past the 'romance' section in the book shop. And I avoid so many books because of it. YA novels do not NEED to include love triangles and so much romance. That would probably stop boys from reading so many books-it does for me even.

This is true. I don't really let what others say to me affect my personality, but sometimes if I am lonely, bored, or just frustrated at something: I will read. Or if something is going on in the background of my life, then reading can also act as an escape.
At the whole romance deal: That is a good point. I know a lot of people that consider The Hunger Games as "girl books". Ironic that I know older men (including authors like Stephen King) that read and loved the books.
I disagree on The Hunger Games. Collins did it well. Romance is an important part of the story, but its in the background: a sub-plot, if you will. Boys do actually like The Hunger Games; I've recommend it 3 guys, they all loved it. I think that book isnt aimed for a particular gender.



You guys all have excellent ideas.




Wow, that's a really long response. I got my information from two publishing Q&A sessions, where a team of editors and publicists from the biggest houses (Harper, Little Brown, Simon and Schuster, etc) talked about why they sign the books that they do. They said that the majority of submissions they receive are from women. Most of these books contain heroines as main characters. There's a bit of psychology that goes into it: most women write from a female POV. Sure you have noteworthy exceptions like J.K. Rowling or Angie Sage (and you have the opposite, guy writers whose main character is a girl, e.g. Frank Beddor and Garth Nix). Frankly, the majority of teen fiction books contain some kind of romance angle, and quite a lot of these books have that particular angle as the **main** focal point of the story. I acknowledge that that is a subjective argument because different people notice different things when they read, but in books aimed at teens (read: teen girls), the MAJORITY of stories have some kind of angle. And when 1) there's a very pronounced romance angle...especially if you have the inclusion of love triangles or the "OMG we can't be together because ______" 2) the POV is a girl anyway, and 3) said POV is either really aggressive in personality or wishy-washy, that makes it even harder for the average guy to connect. Every guy? Of course not. From my experience, though, and from what I've observed, guys have a hard time relating to girls who are portrayed this way. It can be reversable: I am actually more inclined to read a book with a guy protagonist (Septimus Heap, Harry Potter, Percy Jackson, Taran the Assistant Pig-Keeper, Eragon, etc.) than a girl (because I'm personally sick of all the whine), but I can't stand some guys' portrayals (like how authors like John Green, for example, choose to portray guys...absolutely cannot relate).
It's all in marketing, really. Stats show that in the 14-21 range, most readers are female. Most prospective authors, according to the panels I observed at BEA, are females. It's kind of a circular effect. More guys need to write for submission, AND more publishers need to release those books, which will (I predict) result in more guys reading. You can't create a market when there isn't a product. But if I had a dime for every time a guy has asked me "Do you know of any good book...yeah, and it's not a 'girl book' is it?" I would be in pretty good financial shape.

Wow. Can't really argue with that. I'm curious, are these studies mostly for teen lit, or all books? Either way, I'm finding that really really interesting.


Woah. But this is great, and I find this to be true.

Yeah, the panels was for YA, and one of the editors kept referring to it as "teen fic." The funny thing is, I sat in on the "Middle Grade" (technically YA, but the younger end) panel, and they said pretty much the opposite - their readers were mostly guys and they were wondering how to get more girls to read :P

Yep, so true. There are tons of books outside of the YA fiction spectrum.

Talk about a long response. But yes, mine was quite long. The thing is, you would rather read about a boy protagonist than a girl one. I don't care whether said protagonist is male or female, so long as it's a good character. Girls will read books about boys. Many boys will not read books about girls.
The other thing is, there may be more submissions with female protagonists than male at the moment, but not only was that not true until recently (so the majority of books are still male-focused), it's not true across the board. There are tons of books about girls, yes, but try to find a good strong female character, particularly in an adventure book, and it becomes much harder. This may sound a little odd, but it's an argument I've heard from experienced, professional authors, and one I believe: girls have have been forced to "adapt" and read books about boys; boys on the other hand, for the most part, have not had the same issue. It's a lot less common to find a romance book from a male perspective, because supposedly boys don't care about that, but it's also a lot less common to find a good adventure from a female perspective, because supposedly girls don't like that. But there are exceptions to every so-called rule and you get to a girl like me who would rather read adventure, or a boy who would rather read a romance. I will still read the book if the POV is male, the boy will not read the romance if the POV is female. Part of that is personal inclination, but part of that is the fact that society has drilled it into us that it's okay for girls to read about boys, but not for boys to read about girls.
Sorry about another long response.

I have to agree wholeheartedly with Andrea and a couple of the others regarding all the "drama" romance that exists in so many YA stories. Why do so many authors want to give such bad examples of relationships to teens? I groan inwardly every time I think about "sparkly" vampires. ; )
Books mentioned in this topic
Halo: Evolutions Volume II (other topics)City of Bones (other topics)
Skulduggery Pleasant (other topics)
The Replacement (other topics)
The Replacement (other topics)
More...
I might just be over-curious, but I wanted to know all of your opinions anyways. Is it because guys think reading is not "manly"? Is it because girls have a more active imagination? What do you think?