I think women "cross over" and read war-historicals,
A big, big part of the O'Brian audience is women. This is why I was so furious when all the reviews of the movie said it was only for boyz. In my circle, many women adore Sharpe; some of us did before it was Sean Bean.
Whereas I know other women who have no interest in Master & Commander (edit:the movie) because there aren't any female characters in it. Which...I don't really get, not in the least because Paul Bettany is hot, but also because I'm apparently really easy to please, story-telling wise.
an English Lit major that doesn't like Shakespere? Does not compute.) I told him it was style. I also reminded him that I don't like poetry and then it made sense.
Aimee is me. I still have scarring from when my English Lit profs shot laser beams at me from their eyes on hearing that I didn't particularly care for Chaucer OR Conrad very much, and while I'd write their papers for my grade, I could write one ten times more stunning on the value of Valley of the Dolls or Harry Potter.
I didn't fit their mold very well.
Well there were the native chicks on the boats that came out to trade with them...Huh. I liked the movie and didn't really think about it not having any female characters.
I could write one ten times more stunning on the value of Valley of the Dolls or Harry Potter.
AMEN!!
Lords how I wish there was a "Biographies of Silver Screen Stars 1920-1960" major. I'd have the frickin PhD.
the book in question isn't really part of its genre.
It TRANSCENDS, dearie. All good genre fiction is transcendent. Hah.
What's funny is, I couldn't get into O'Brien very well because of [what I perceive as] guyish tendencies in the prose -- it felt like shopping in the tools section of Sears, and seemed very short on plot. (I imagine his first is also his weakest novel, but I haven't tried any of the others yet.) Whereas I liked the movie fine.
I'd actually call Cornwell a crap writer, despite my reading and enjoying the first few Sharpe novels. Because I also read more than the first few, and after a while it was like, Okay, he can't have triumphed at
all
the battles in Napoleonic Europe, or else he would be named Wellington, not Sharpe. (To say nothing of the Mary Sueism that crept in like a stalking cat.) Part of my definition of a good writer is knowing when to stop.
Paul Bettany is hot ?!?!??!?!
Oh, well. All the more Russell Crowe for me.
I'm pretty sure my favorite genres are thought to be male-dominated, although women are all over the shamus business(private eyes) in books and in life. In fact, while I was researching that Thing I Might Write someday, somebody wrote that women PI businesses are the fastest growing segment in the industry right now.(And I'm sure you don't care.)
I still have scarring from when my English Lit profs shot laser beams at me from their eyes on hearing that I didn't particularly care for Chaucer OR Conrad very much
See, I love Chaucer, but that's as much as a history major as it is for his writing; he was John of Gaunt's brother in law.
Conrad? Not so much. Really, really not so much.