CyranoJ
Ustuzou
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2015
- Posts
- 2,781
Okay. It'd be interesting to see that documentary if you're ever able to recall the title, thanks.
I have seen it claimed that a large number of male writers in the romance genre use gender-neutral or female pen names just generally, or write in husband-wife teams. So it's certainly possible that some subset of those are gay men writing straight (or whatever) romances. (Male romance writers are more common than we tend to think, but when they're successful they tend so often to get categorized outside the genre as just Literature -- Cf. The English Patient, Memoirs of a Geisha, The Notebook -- that it skews the overall picture. So it's hard for me to tell how all of this balances out.) For Romance as a genre, the RWA still estimates that just over four-fifths of the readership is female, which lines up roughly with the OP's statistics. I suspect the overall authorship skews rather similarly, but I can't actually point to any stats that say that.
I have seen it claimed that a large number of male writers in the romance genre use gender-neutral or female pen names just generally, or write in husband-wife teams. So it's certainly possible that some subset of those are gay men writing straight (or whatever) romances. (Male romance writers are more common than we tend to think, but when they're successful they tend so often to get categorized outside the genre as just Literature -- Cf. The English Patient, Memoirs of a Geisha, The Notebook -- that it skews the overall picture. So it's hard for me to tell how all of this balances out.) For Romance as a genre, the RWA still estimates that just over four-fifths of the readership is female, which lines up roughly with the OP's statistics. I suspect the overall authorship skews rather similarly, but I can't actually point to any stats that say that.