{"id":796,"date":"2019-03-13T23:21:05","date_gmt":"2019-03-13T22:21:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/readerwitch.com\/?p=796"},"modified":"2019-03-13T23:21:05","modified_gmt":"2019-03-13T22:21:05","slug":"female-authors","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/readerwitch.com\/2019\/03\/13\/female-authors\/","title":{"rendered":"Am I imagining things or these patterns do happen in modern female-authored literature?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Initially I thought I was choosing my books wrongly (and maybe that\u2019s indeed the case). I tried different authors, settings and storylines, but kept hitting upon the same themes and characterisations as if there was some code of conduct on what stories to tell. Have you noticed these things too?<\/p>\n
Here are the things I noticed:<\/p>\n
While female characters can be multilayered, male characters are there with one trait only, they are mean. They often don\u2019t have any grounds for that apart from being men.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Those cardboard wrong-doers are already enough to ruin a story but what really infuriates me is that in the end of the story the same asshole or some newcomer becomes a knight in shining armour and rescues the woman to her happily-ever-after. Seriously?! You just created a whole story where a woman suffered because of a man but the final message of the book is find yourself a better man<\/em>?!<\/p>\n <\/p>\n2. Pregnancies<\/h2>\n