Women are Different From Men

Posted by Bob on January 31, 2007 at 10:46 pm  
Filed Under How Things Work

OK, that’s not a profound statement.

But as I tell people, “I don’t know anything about sex. I was MARRIED.” So I have little to tell you about women as a sex. But there is something about women as WRITERS that fascinates me.

Women writers tend to fall in love with the male characters they create. Agatha Christie was very upset with the fact that Hercule Poirot became so popular. I quote her word for word, “I wouldn’t have minded if I had made him HANDSOMER.”

Anne Rice admitted that she fell in love with her character The Vampire LeStat. If you read Inglis Fletcher’s books, you will see that she was in love with Duke Roger. Colleen McCollough was so in love with her version of Julius Caesar that it is almost embarrassing to read it.

Which probably explains why a really good female writer is the best possible read in these genre. No man can throw his whole being into fiction the way a woman can.

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Comments

2 Responses to “Women are Different From Men”

  1. shari on February 1st, 2007 at 7:15 pm

    NOT SPAM
    NOT SPAM

    If you want to know “what women want” look at those fictional heros women writers create. At least those women who don’t write feminist tripe.

  2. Papillon on February 1st, 2007 at 10:59 pm

    NOT SPAM
    NOT SPAM

    I love it when our men delight in true, God-given femininity.

    As a little girl, I would often develop crushes on male characters in books; rock stars and celebrities didn’t interest me at all. The first object of my affections was Jonah from Playing Beatie Bow http://tinyurl.com/2gjjrt when I was 9 or 10. Oh, what a wonderful young man he was, teaching his bright little sister Latin, geography and history in a time when girls didn’t go to school!

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