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Does anyone else have this issue or am I just a Misogynistic Pig.

Posted on 3/23/24 at 11:29 pm
Posted by Kingshakabooboo
Member since Nov 2012
677 posts
Posted on 3/23/24 at 11:29 pm
I have been an avid reader my entire life. In the last few years my eyesight has declined with age and I have started using audiobooks almost exclusively. Back when I was buying books to read I stayed pretty close to authors I knew or from recommendation from friends with similars likes. I found that with the ease of downloading free audiobooks from library that I branch out more and try many more different authors. If I don’t like it I just send it back and go in to another one.

Well I have come to a realization that I can’t stand books written by women. I never really thought about it before but I never really read any women authors. I have probably downloaded over 20 different audiobooks over the last year by women authors and I haven’t been able to finish even one of them. Can’t really place my finger on any one reason why but I just can’t seem to like any of them. Anyone else have this issue?
This post was edited on 3/23/24 at 11:32 pm
Posted by prplhze2000
Parts Unknown
Member since Jan 2007
51350 posts
Posted on 3/24/24 at 8:49 am to
Dunno. I like to read Rand and Paglia.
Posted by blueridgeTiger
Granbury, TX
Member since Jun 2004
20224 posts
Posted on 3/24/24 at 10:40 am to
I've read at least 20 books in the Marcus Didius Falco series by female writer Lindsey Davis. I recommend you give at least one a try.

Also, many of Agatha Christi's novels have kept my attention.
Posted by DrDenim
By the airport
Member since Sep 2022
429 posts
Posted on 3/24/24 at 11:14 am to
It definitely matters what you read. Care to share any specific books that you couldn't finish. Was there any pattern?

There's definitely nothing wrong with you just based off of you having your own taste. You may have just tapped into a particularly bad (for you) vein of writers that don't resonate with you. It could happen with men too. There's a lot of writing out there. Ursula K. Le Guin seems to be universally loved, and from the first time I read something of hers I could see why...it's damn good stuff. It may not suit you, but you could try her out.
Posted by rebelrouser
Columbia, SC
Member since Feb 2013
10578 posts
Posted on 3/24/24 at 3:05 pm to
Female authors and protagonists are the flavor of the moment and are generally pushed to the forefront. Look at any best books of the year lists for the last few years and they are often dominated by female authors. You can't argue that female authors haven't been brilliant though. Agatha Christie and Patricia Highsmith are two personal favorites of mine.
Posted by Hoodie
Donaldsonville, LA
Member since Dec 2019
2986 posts
Posted on 3/24/24 at 9:23 pm to
I love women. Hell, I’ve got two daughters.

Still, I don’t like books written by women, podcasts hosted by women, or female sports announcers.

I just don’t want to hear women’s voices unless I have to, I guess. Don’t feel bad.
Posted by hogfly
Fayetteville, AR
Member since May 2014
4634 posts
Posted on 3/24/24 at 9:30 pm to
Barbara Kingsolver, Joan Didion, Annie Dillard, Donna Tartt, Louise Erdrich, Annie Proulx, Octavia Butler, Flannery O’Conner. Lots of female authors I love. Those are just off the top of my head.
Posted by Ace Midnight
Between sanity and madness
Member since Dec 2006
89483 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 10:18 am to
On the fiction side, I read a lot of Anne McCaffrey (Dragonriders of Pern) and thought most of it was very good - probably undderated. I also like Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.

On the non-fiction side, Annie Jacobsen's book are extremely well-written, even if some of the topics are a little sensationalized.

Finally, Barbara Tuchman's The Guns of August is one of the best books, on any topic, in any genre, ever.



Posted by blueridgeTiger
Granbury, TX
Member since Jun 2004
20224 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 12:17 pm to
quote:

Barbara Tuchman's The Guns of August is one of the best books, on any topic, in any genre, ever.


Her Distant Mirror is a fantastic history.
Posted by nes2010
Member since Jun 2014
6754 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 1:00 pm to
I read some of the Murderbot Diary books recently, written by a woman. I enjoyed them.
Posted by Tigris
Mexican Home
Member since Jul 2005
12349 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 2:08 pm to
quote:

I read a lot of Anne McCaffrey (Dragonriders of Pern) and thought most of it was very good - probably undderated.


I read a lot of her stuff many decades ago. Better than average for science fiction. The female sci-fi/fantasy writer I really liked was Ursula LeGuin. I've been going through several of her books recently and she is about as good as anybody I can think of, in sci-fi or anything else.

quote:

Barbara Tuchman's The Guns of August is one of the best books, on any topic, in any genre, ever.

Agreed.

All that said, when Audible.com has their daily deal it's almost always a female writer, and by now I dismiss it without giving it serious consideration.
Posted by Loup
Ferriday
Member since Apr 2019
11214 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 2:28 pm to
quote:


I read some of the Murderbot Diary books recently, written by a woman. I enjoyed them


I listened to the first one on a road trip and it was really good. Fast paced and easy to listen to. I need to see if the library has the rest.
Posted by S
RIP Wayde
Member since Jan 2007
155424 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 2:34 pm to
I guess genre is a factor

Agatha Christie and Lois Duncan have many good books

I even sort of like a couple Jane Austen classics

Mary Shelley is another
Posted by LaLadyinTx
Cypress, TX
Member since Nov 2018
5990 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 2:55 pm to
Good ones. Of course, I love the Outlander series.

But stay far away from Kristin Hannah. Almost all my friends love all her books. I find them to be whiny, annoying, and sad. I'm ok with The Nightingale. But nope to all the rest.
Posted by scrooster
Resident Ethicist
Member since Jul 2012
37593 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 5:48 pm to
quote:

Dunno. I like to read Rand and Paglia.

They're not woke women in the sense of third wave feminists. They're more like cool butch chicks you'd wanna slam some beers with.
Posted by MSMHater
Houston
Member since Oct 2008
22774 posts
Posted on 3/25/24 at 8:37 pm to
Try some Fonda Lee Green Bone Saga on audiobook. Pretty new. First book in the trilogy came out in 2018. Asian gangster fantasy. Good stuff!
This post was edited on 3/25/24 at 8:38 pm
Posted by lsugorilla
PNW
Member since Sep 2009
5522 posts
Posted on 3/26/24 at 7:43 pm to
I like Anne Rice, Gillian Flynn. Agatha Christie. Mary Shelley, Harper Lee, Shirley Jackson, JK Rowling, Ayn Rand,
Posted by Roscoe14
Member since Jul 2021
169 posts
Posted on 3/28/24 at 5:40 pm to
Lois McMaster Bujold wrote great sci fi/fantasy for years. Check out the Vorkosigan Saga and The Curse of Chalion.

Went off the rails a bit on the last few books.
Posted by shinerfan
Duckworld(Earth-616)
Member since Sep 2009
22188 posts
Posted on 3/28/24 at 7:15 pm to
Have you read Anne Rice's The Witching Hour? Julien Mayfair ranks high among my favorite fictional characters of all time.
The Feast of All Saints is another of her best. She really brings historical New Orleans to life in all its creepy, decrepit glory.

Colleen McCullough's Masters of Rome series is really good. I believe it's seven books starting just after the death of the Gracchi brothers and going all the way to the ascension of Augustus. Gaius Marius and especially Lucius Cornelius Sulla both just jump off the page. It's well researched with extensive citations. By far the best and most accurate historical novels on Rome that I've come across. (Little known but fascinating tidbit on Julius Caesar: Sulla was such a terrible horseman that he rode a donkey on campaign. When his wife finally persuaded him to allow Caesar to step down as Flamen Dialis and embark on a military career he stipulated that to teach JC humility he was forbidden from riding a horse. So for the first 10 or so years of his military career Caesar also rode a donkey. That's how scary Sulla was.)
This post was edited on 4/4/24 at 11:31 am
Posted by PrezCock
Florida
Member since Sep 2019
598 posts
Posted on 3/29/24 at 4:06 pm to
I've found that sometimes female authors have a problem if their main protagonist is a man. I feel like they incorporate too many feelings into what the man is thinking. Robin Hobb's Farseer Trilogy is a good example. Funny think is, it was recommended to me by a woman. I just felt like the main character was too emotional.
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