No not at all. They are predicable and should really be marketed as YA. |
Not really. |
Oh give me a break. I assume we’re all women here responding to this thread, and it’s a bit sexist of you to lump all women together. As if we all must respond the same way, or have the same opinion. As far as I checked, women are capable of debating and arguing and have spirited differences. I completely reject your claim that it’s misogynistic to dislike Colleen Hoover books! What a laughable idea. And of course I respect her wild success! Good for her! But that’s not the topic, is it? |
NP. I associate men who play fantasy football and place bets on dangerous sports as low IQ. -- /s Both this and the PPs' opinions on women being base and uneducated are ridiculous. |
Totally agree. I worry that books full of abuse and trauma are marketed as romance and are being gobbled up by young people. There are teens reading that stuff...at least we knew VC Andrews books were batsh!t crazy. Some of these kids think the abusive husband in It Ends with Us is romantic because he has sex scenes. |
*begins basic |
You clearly didn't read my post because I'm not suggesting that AT ALL. |
I'm with you are supporting women in publishing. I pretty much only read female authors. I'm happy when people read, whether it's via books, ebooks, comics, graphic novels, audio, etc. Reading is reading. That being said, I don't think that means problematic female authors get a pass. However, I think we absolutely can be critical of a woman who is writing books where women are abused and manipulated. Also, there's the her defending her son (over 21) some shady interactions with a 16 year old. So...yeah. Not a fan. |
This is where I draw the line. Like in general you do you but her books portray some horrible stuff as romantic and that's not okay. Like November 9, the male lead scars the protagonist in a fire, stalks her, sexually assaults her and this is portrayed as romantic. They end up together. Girls posy on social media about how romantic it is. It's one thing to not write well, it's another to romanticize abusive relationships |
I'm not disagreeing with that -- I'm upset that women stereotype women who read certain genres and/or denigrate an entire genre. That's it. As I said, women are not a monolith. We are free to like what we like. Again, the problem is devaluing literature of genres that women are particularly drawn to. |
I read Verity and found it to be predictable, with shallow cookie-cutter characters and boring sex scenes. Apparently this is one of her deeper works, too. I have no interest in reading another book of hers |
Why can’t we say our honest thoughts, though? If some of us see her books as “basic” (basic formula, in other words), and likely most women who read them like easier reads, I don’t see anything wrong inaccurate with those assertions. |
Gotcha. There are definitely people in this forum to do that and I'm with you. I love genre fiction and enjoy romance. ![]() |
Why do you insist on using "basic"? If you insist that you have to express yourself honestly, it feels dismissive and judgmental. What's wrong with "commercial?" As I've said, that is the industry designation. Can you not see how "basic" is derogatory to the writer and readers? Even "light" or "escapist" is better than "basic." |
It was my first time using that term. I think many people see her books that way, and multiple people have used that term on this thread. I don’t see it as derogatory. I’m not insulting the readers, just the books 😉 Maybe some Hoover readers will eventually agree and start reaching out for better books! |