Elestar wrote:
Lady Elanor Mimetes wrote:
Out of interest, Elestar, what roles do your women take on in your books? Do you make your warriors female, or do they take a more 'womanly' role in your books. I'm curious because you said you were trying to change the norm, so I was interested in what kind of roles your female characters take on in your books.
Thanks for the interest! My female characters tend to take on all kinds of roles--I've had warriors (one even led a civil war, of course, she was an elf) assassins, entertainers, herbalists, pirates, mothers...one of my favorites was a farm girl who was forced out of her home and ended up on a quest; she wasn't a warrior by nature, but she was pushed into a survivalist scenario. I don't like to limit roles by gender. But, more often than not, my female protagonists are in a more aggressive role (warrior, pirate, Chosen One-Quester type). Hopefully that answers your question--let me know if it doesn't, I'll try to elaborate some more.
Ooh interesting! Thanks for expounding!
Do you ever struggle with creating women in those kind of roles, as in do you struggle in keeping them feminine or do they come across as very macho? Not that it matters a great deal, there are some macho women, it's just sometimes (probably more in films though than in books) women who are put in those kind of roles (warrior, pirate etc) they can come across as - I don't know, women who have been put into a man's role if that makes sense. Do you struggle to find an even balance, do you try to stay away from that kind of portrayal or does it not bother you?
Caeli wrote:
I am so unbelievably happy that you are all struggling with this conundrum. Okay, well, I'm not happy that you are struggling, per-say, but that I am not alone in this struggle. I, like most of us, it would appear, thought I was alone in this. So a big thank you to Elanor! We could have our own support group.
Anyway, time for something constructive, ay?
I don't write primarily male characters in lead roles because of what I read, though I suppose that on a subconscious level it could be affecting me. I write male characters more often than female because you can do so much more with a male character.
I agree with what Kitra said. Girls can be strong and athletic, but it's often not where their true strength lies, and writing a female lead (or a lot of females in the cast) of a story, especially a fantasy story, is a difficult thing to do. After all, you don't want to come out with a host of females who (to borrow from my sister's analogy) might say 'I AM WOMAN. HEAR ME ROAR.' That is often what you seem to get in stories with a lead girl, especially fantasy and sci-fi where the character must often be strong physically. It is much more natural for a male to fit that role.
Also, I think for girl writers, if we split the people we know and love into two categories of 'friends' and 'role-models' I think a lot of us might find there are more females in the first category, and more males in the second. (That's just a thought, of course, not a rule.) To me, this comes from the God-given way we look up to our fathers and in seeking out husbands. (Which verges on a completely different subject, so I'll back away from it now. Again, that's just an opinion and everyone will find it to be different.)
I struggled with this, not for the single books I write which may incidentally have a male lead or hero, because I think it is perfectly natural for a guy writer to sometimes have a female lead, or heavily female cast, and for a girl writer to have it vice-versa. It was when I came up with an idea for a series of four books each with a different main character, and ALL OF THEM GUYS,

that I started to worry. (Since then, I've managed to change three of the major characters of the story, including one of the POV characters to female and it is working ever so much better for the story, but again I digress.)
I am personally looking around for books/blog entries/articles/etc. on writing strong female characters (not necessarily on a physical level) because I know it to be an area where I am weak in my writing and need to improve.
Sorry, that was a bit long-winded...

*Chuckles* I am glad I brought it up, it's always nice to be able to talk about it and realise you're not alone in writing struggles!
Funny thing is, when I consider my Historical Fiction novel, although my two MC's are male, I have plenty of female characters in the book, and I don't feel I struggled with those. Which leads me to believe even more it's maybe because of the genre.
We should do some work shops where we have to write a short fantasy story where the lead MC is a female, for good practice.
