Garage Sale tomorrow
May. 16th, 2002 10:58 pmAm exhausted and covered with dust; have been hauling stuff up from the basement for our two-day garage sale which starts tomorrow. This has been a traumatic experience as Rob and I have vastly different opinions about what we should keep versus what we should pitch or sell. If I wasn't married to this man, I'd probably own about a third to a quarter of what I own now.
Started reading another novel today, a first novel. Unfortunately, it starts with a trope that I've really come to hate. So many fantasy novels starring a female protagonist open with 1) a group of thugs rapes the heroine and/or destroys her home and kills her family, and she spends the rest of the novel acquiring magic so she can get revenge or 2) a group of thugs almost rapes the heroine and/or destroys her home and kills her family, but she fights them off with her superior magical powers.
In this one, she fought 'em off. Well, the hero helped. I rolled my eyes when I got to the part about his silver wolf-like stare.
I want to read more novels that get the female protagonist moving without a sexual threat. Please: think of other reasons for women to go out and have adventures.

heidi8 pointed me to this article about the world of fan fiction. Quite interesting.
Peg
Started reading another novel today, a first novel. Unfortunately, it starts with a trope that I've really come to hate. So many fantasy novels starring a female protagonist open with 1) a group of thugs rapes the heroine and/or destroys her home and kills her family, and she spends the rest of the novel acquiring magic so she can get revenge or 2) a group of thugs almost rapes the heroine and/or destroys her home and kills her family, but she fights them off with her superior magical powers.
In this one, she fought 'em off. Well, the hero helped. I rolled my eyes when I got to the part about his silver wolf-like stare.
I want to read more novels that get the female protagonist moving without a sexual threat. Please: think of other reasons for women to go out and have adventures.

Peg
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-16 09:44 pm (UTC)I know writers are told to begin by placing the protagonist in difficult situations, rife with conflict... but it does seem that it's always that particular situation? (And isn't that situation, sans rape, straight from Conan the Barbarian? Come to think of it, why is the big threat for men "I'll kill you", and the big threat for women "I'll rape you"?) There must be a million and one other ways (at least) to get a quest-plot moving.
I do think that the female-quest plot idea (AKA coming-of-age) deserves to be explored -- but the writer doesn't have to kick off the plot by immediately threatening the protagonist sexually. If that's inherent to the rest of the plot (for example, Robin McKinley's excellent and scary Deerskin), okay -- but just to have rape thrown into the mix as a garden-variety threat is dirty pool. Even if it was historically common, and all that.
*grrrr* power.
Haven't read Deerskin
Date: 2002-05-17 08:58 pm (UTC)Re: Haven't read Deerskin
Date: 2002-05-17 09:08 pm (UTC)Deerskin is good, but very emotionally difficult to read; I read it, pondered it, and then couldn't re-read it for nearly five years. But it's definitely worthwhile.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-16 09:59 pm (UTC)-M
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-16 10:22 pm (UTC)I'd have thought the rape-and-revenge scenario would have died out by now. Wish you had mentioned title of book, so I can avoid it in future.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-16 11:08 pm (UTC)I don't read much fantasy, either, so I don't have other titles right to hand. I'll ask around and see what comes up.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-17 06:03 am (UTC)Hmmmm.... Interesting thing to think about. And good luck with the garage sale -- I'd have a lot less stuff if it weren't for my husband, too.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-17 08:43 am (UTC)they didn't start with that premise, no, but my (possibly too dim?) recollection is that both books were rife with scenes of the heroine being under sexual threat or close to being seduced because of magical influence--to the point where, if the books hadn't been heavy enough that something might have broken, i might have hurled them across the room.
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-17 10:01 am (UTC)Jo Walton's The King's Peace starts out with a rape, as well, but one that is very well handled; it has after-effects and consequences not only later in that book itself, but in its sequel: political and social consequences (as opposed to what I'd consder the primarily personal and emotional consequences of the rape in Deerskin).
(no subject)
Date: 2002-05-17 06:22 am (UTC)out and have adventures. <<<
This is sort of why I've fallen off the fantasy genre, myself. I hope you'll post if you run across a fantasy novel with a strong heroine who takes initiative to be the heroine, rather than simply reacting (if that makes any sense). Actually, the only fantasy heroine I really love any more is Terry Pratchett's Granny Weatherwax. :P
Do you enjoy mystery novels? Elizabeth Peters has crafted a couple of wonderful heroines. Peters studied archeology, and has written non-fiction texts on ancient Egypt, and her mystery protagonists reflect Peters' frame of knowledge. I prefer her Vicky Bliss novels; Kathleen Turner reads them on audio books, and I only mention that because Kathleen Turner is perfect as art historian Vicky Bliss. Don't be misled by her name; Vicky rocks. Peters has also written a very long series starring Englishwoman/archeologist Amelia Peabody. That series begins in the mid-1800's, is written in a sort of tongue-in-cheek style harkening to pulp fiction of that era, and is set mainly in Egypt.
Jan Burke's Irene is also a nifty heroine. And of all of Dorothy Sayers' Peter Wimsey mysteries, my favorite is Gaudy Night, in which Wimsey's eventual wife, Harriet Vane, takes center stage (the story is told from her perspective, and she solves it with minimal help from Wimsey who is mostly absent).
Mahoney
also in search of good female protagonist
I love Elizabeth Peters!
Date: 2002-05-17 09:02 pm (UTC)Re: I love Elizabeth Peters!
Date: 2002-05-20 01:41 pm (UTC)You should give the Vicky Bliss novels a try. I'm partial to those in which John Smythe appears (my favorites are Trojan Gold & Night Train to Memphis), but in order:
Borrower of the Night
Street of the Five Moons
Silhouette in Scarlet
Trojan Gold
Night Train to Memphis
I'd wax appreciative about what a wonderful character (and heroine) Vicky is, but Netscape keeps shutting down, and now that I'm trying to post this darn comment for the fourth time, it's almost time for me to leave for the day...
Emma's
Date: 2002-05-17 08:36 am (UTC)Emma's War for the Oaks starts with the menace of faery in the form of a black dog & mysterious man. Also, a destablized ex.. but no rape or destruction of home. Also, Eddi, the heroine is playing guitar in the first scene in a college bar. This to me establishes her immediately as an independent strong person - a rock musician - up in front - face out to the world = full on expression of self. boom. no tragedy required. This woman is self possessed and ready to kick some butt at the get go. I admired her from page one.
Re: Emma's
Date: 2002-05-17 09:07 pm (UTC)Re: Emma's
Date: 2002-05-30 05:07 pm (UTC)http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0765300346/qid=1022789720/sr=1-1/ref=sr_1_1/103-2077896-7667861