Female authors > Male authors?

Lukifell

New member
I keep noticing a trend that started with JK Rowling, then Stephenie Meyer, and now Suzanne Collins. I've read a male writer's blog post just now, where he claimed he received rejections for his manuscript stating "Sorry, it's a great novel but if you were a woman author, and your protagonist a girl, this would sell."

Anyone out there know anything about this? Are people now more inclined to read female authors and female characters?
 
I don't care about the gender of the author. If I enjoy the book, I read it, whether or not the author or character is female. I'm not sexist.
 
You know a few years ago that was the opposite reaction. It's funny that wheni was a teen most movies and tv shows were geared toward teen boys. Now it seems that tween and teen girls demographic is where the money is at.

Att he end of the day it's all about money. Sorry about guys blog you read. if his books is good then it will get published by someone and it will most likely do well. I remember hearing the story of a this romance novelist that was rejected 18 times, that book went on the be a bestseller and she wrote over 20 novels at the time each one going on to be bestsellers.
 
I'll tell you what's going on in this corrupted, apologetic world: extreme, modern day interpretations of "civil rights" have protected unendowed women beyond their deserving. Publishers--purely on a social basis--find that it's easier to take a chance on a female rather than male. Actual merit is a thing of the past.
 
I don't care of the author's gender, or the main characters gender either. I think it's stupid that they rejected his story because of the genders!
 
I've read plenty of good books from both genres, and I've noticed a big difference between male and female writers. I've found that female writers write more emotional stories. They want to draw the reader into a love story, or something that deeply impacts the main character. Their descriptions are accurate, too. Male writers seem like they write more suspenseful novels. I've also noticed they write more, but less description. What I mean is that they like writing about scenery, but they give you just enough description where they let you fill in the blanks, so that the story is more fitting to each individual reader. So when people say that "there isn't a difference between male and female authors", but they couldn't be further from the truth.

I think that after the Tamora Pierce came out with all of her series' about female warriors, more authors write about stronger women. I guess the Twilight series added to this as well. Who wants a strong women and wimpy men in every book they read? It'd get boring after a while, don't you think?

But trends come and go. A decade ago, barely anyone would sign a woman writer, now it's all they do. It's like this vampire craze that everyone is hyped about. (I don't know about you, but I'm sick of the word: vampire whenever I walk into a bookstore nowadays) Eventually the hype will die out and publishers will move onto the next best thing. The publishing business is like the fashion business. They have to keep up with the consumers, otherwise they won't sell and get money. Sure, it might not be fair, but that's life. They have to do what's right for the business.

As for me, I read anything that pops out on a bookshelf. I know it's not right to judge a book by its cover, but seriously, who doesn't? You can't tell me, you walk into a bookstore and pick out the most boring-looking bookcover and read the back flap, right? I go for the most exciting looking book, not the author, the genre, or who the main protagonist is.
 
No one will willingly admit it, even if it is true.

It's not strictly gender though, but more about the different style and subject matter of the genders. Dan Brown and Scott Westerfield are more widely read than Toni Morrison and Barbara Pym. Stephanie Meyer and JK Rowling are more widely read than Umberto Eco and Ian McEwan.

What's the common thread here? Mass market appeal.
 
That is really odd because studies show that young/teen boys are less inclined to read female protagonists and female authors. Part of JK Rowlings success is that she published under JK, and not JoAnne, thus not giving young male readers the 'turn off' of seeing a female author. Her main character is male.

Young women will read either female or male protagonists so traditionally there has been less emphasis on what appeals to them.
 
I don't understand why people keep comparing female and male authors. I doubt that gender has anything to do with good writing.

Even though a lot of female authors seem to be writing for young adults right now, there are a bunch of males that are successful, like Scott Westerfield (Uglies) and Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson Series).

The former has a female protagonist, but the latter has a male protagonist.
 
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