The Sword and Laser discussion
changing tastes in authors
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Steven
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Mar 02, 2018 09:21PM

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I don't consciously seek out women to read but the fact is that a lot of the best SFF lately is done by them and I want to read the best stuff. That's also why I read Daniel Older, Yoon Ha Lee, Victor La Valle and others. I think we're a bit spoiled - the white guys are still there but they've been joined by women and both men and women of color and we're reaping the benefits of seeing a more open landscape - more really good fiction.
Frankly, this is why I love the movement toward diversity. Not (just) because of the social justice angle important as that is, but because I'm selfish for myself and for society and when we get more people doing a thing... writing SFF, doing physics, researching diseases, whatever... we all get more. And it's not just more of what we had it's more new stuff too.
I definitely read more female authored Sci-Fi and Fantasy books than I used to and that is mostly through Sword and Laser and this community introducing me to them.
I never excluded female authors when I was choosing books and read many great books by women throughout my life.
But It did seem to be dominated by men back in the 70s and 80s when I started reading Sci-Fi and Fantasy.
I never excluded female authors when I was choosing books and read many great books by women throughout my life.
But It did seem to be dominated by men back in the 70s and 80s when I started reading Sci-Fi and Fantasy.


Even back in the ‘70s and ‘80s I always read books by women. For every Larry Niven book there was a Katherine Kurtz novel. For every Jack L. Chalker book I read one by Anne McCaffrey. It almost certainly skewed towards men simply because there were more male writers, but not by much. Julian May, Kate Wilhelm, Octavia Butler were all on my must-read list.
My favorite book as a young boy was Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder, followed by The Call of the Wild/White Fang by Jack London. After that I went on to the Hardy Boys (written by men) and Nancy Drew (written by women). So I think my tastes were set to “gender neutral” at a young age.

I do read more female-authored books because of Goodreads groups and members as well as some podcasts I listened to.

Of my favourite authors, the majority are female.
I'm guessing the reason I'm mainly reading these authors is because they're smegging good.





When I was younger I would get thrilled over the latest 1000 page opus by King or Jordan, but nowadays I'd much prefer a brisk 350 page read.


I think you are right. I think the fact that they have been successful since then shows that female authors can produce good books, as can male authors, if they are not blocked from publishing.
Just think of the books we've missed out on because the publisher judged people not by the quality of their writing, but by the contents of their underwear.

The cold hard facts of the matter are these: more women than men read books. People tend to read books written by authors of their own gender. You do the math.
Of the top 10 best-selling authors in history (writing in English), the only men on that list are William Shakespeare and Harold Robbins. The rest are women: Agatha Christie, Barbara Cartland, Danielle Steel, Jane Austen, J.K. Rowling, etc. Christie sold more books than Shakespeare and he had a 400-year head start.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Three-Body Problem (other topics)The Fifth Season (other topics)
Little House in the Big Woods (other topics)
The Call of the Wild / White Fang (other topics)