Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The vast majority of the feedback I have receive is from men. Now I'm wondering, do men read romance novels?
No.
We write them, almost always using a female nom de plume, but we don't read them.
I'm guessing the only reason you get feedback from men is because your stories have sex and you're a woman. The two are irresistible to men. If you had women and sex in a shoe catalog, men would write you.
And I write erotica of all sorts and most of my feedback comes from women.
To be honest, I don't read romance. They don't appeal to me. I recently won an e-book romance. I started reading it and stopped at the first major plot turn. I thought it very contrived.
But I know lots of women who loved it.
I believe in this case I'm pretty representative of a lot of men. Which is highly unusual.
Mainstream romance novels are contrived. You're right about that. They're downright silly. I can't read them now, but I did when I was about 18.
However, if such a novel read as a real story, I am beginning to think men would read it. But then, maybe it would no longer be considered "romance."
That's probably the thing. I've read many good novels that contain romance. But if you make it realistic, it's not puppies-and-unicorns perfect anymore. It gets messy, it gets tangled up in the rest of life, os you have to write about that too. And either way, I've never seen anyone successfuly stretch just romance out over a whole damn novel without adding other parrallell themes. (I can't even manage it in my short stories, predominantly labelled romance.) In which case the hero get to do other things. Save the world, solve the case, travel there and back again or something, AND get the girl.However, if such a novel read as a real story, I am beginning to think men would read it. But then, maybe it would no longer be considered "romance."
http://media.collegepublisher.com/media/paper999/stills/9bpywd3h.jpg
Men read romantic *stories* not novels. You won't see a guy on the subway reading a bodice ripper mainly because the main, pov character in such novels is female (men almost always want a male pov character unless it's a lesbian story), and because they don't want to get picked on by other men. But I get lots of responses on my on-line romance stories here from men. Note that all my romances either feature men as the main pov character or switch pov's between the guy and the girl.
My biggest hits with men in the romance category are "shy guy" stories where the guy is a lonely sort and the woman is very sexy, and the two rescue each other with romance and a lot of sex.
There are a lot of romantic gents out there, but the pov of romance novels rarely cater to them--it caters to female romantic fantasies, not male romantic fantasies.
Well, I love Jane Austen's novels and they are all female POV. And when I read Persuasion it is Anne I identify with, not Captain Wentworth. It's her story, after all, not his.Men read romantic *stories* not novels. You won't see a guy on the subway reading a bodice ripper mainly because the main, pov character in such novels is female (men almost always want a male pov character unless it's a lesbian story), and because they don't want to get picked on by other men. But I get lots of responses on my on-line romance stories here from men. Note that all my romances either feature men as the main pov character or switch pov's between the guy and the girl.
My biggest hits with men in the romance category are "shy guy" stories where the guy is a lonely sort and the woman is very sexy, and the two rescue each other with romance and a lot of sex.
There are a lot of romantic gents out there, but the pov of romance novels rarely cater to them--it caters to female romantic fantasies, not male romantic fantasies.
My biggest hits with men in the romance category are "shy guy" stories where the guy is a lonely sort and the woman is very sexy, and the two rescue each other with romance and a lot of sex.
The vast majority of the feedback I have receive is from men. Now I'm wondering, do men read romance novels?
Most of the people that write it are as well.Funny, the vast majority of the feedback I have received on GM stories has been from women.
I've never seen a guy reading a romance novel.
The vast majority of the feedback I have receive is from men. Now I'm wondering, do men read romance novels?