Are there any women writers who don't write about affairs, adultery, and sex?
Are there any women writers who don't write about affairs, adultery, and sex?
Children's book authors.
>Im an incel who blames women for all my problems
All writers include those things because it's a normal part of life
Yes, hundreds.
Nice projection.
Let's have them.
It's the case 99% of the time. Would someone in a happy relationship come here to complain about women all the time? lol no
I like Philip K Dick but those are the three things I wish he would just omit from his writings.
The topic isn't complaining about woman. I'm looking through women writers and those are the only topics I run into; I want something different.
Every book ever written is, at some level, about sex.
I'm sure, theyre probably rather boring though.
t. Jew
Toasty roastie
I mean life has to literally revolve around their vagina since theres a point where doesnt even work as intended anymore. The trope is that men are a slave to their genitals but it really seems to be the opposite
Savitri Devi
The only exception to all female writers is Ayn Rand. It’s very odd. She’s stricly philosophical and in some way connects with the male nature. Was she a tranny perhaps? Or was it just a jewish genetic defect?
Can anyone name some writers without a sociology debate
I hear she was pretty batshit though
Is that why she's shat on by feminists
stupid and false
Most of them really. No more than male writers, who are if anything, more willing to write about sex in its many aspects. You have Austen and the Brontës, who yes, wrote romance, but were honestly very tame. I can vouch for Austen more than I can the Brontës, however, I don’t really recall anything of the sort. There’s also people like George Eliot, Sor. Juana de la Cruz, Virginia Woolf, Flannery Conner (weird list, but bear with me), etc. Honestly, great female writers where sex, adultery, and affairs are important to their works are more exceptions.
emma goldman
>not answering OP's question
>Most of them really.
No, just no. And blatantly lying doesnt change that
Why would you want to read a book that doesn't include those things? That's like 80% of life excluded
Except in Atlas Shrugged there is adultery between Dagny and the other fucker, so not really
Prove it. Female writers are no more prone to writing about sex than male writer. Honestly I could come up with a list of male writers who write about sex, adultery affairs more easily than I could female writers. Granted, there are generally more male writers, but the pint the point still stands. Tolstoy is provocative by OP’s standards.
**adultery, and affairs
The statement isn't that only women write about relationships and related themes, but that they do it far more frequently. Just imagine for a second, all disciplines where there are pretty much no women and only men and tell me which of these are related to relationships and sex.
>economics
>philosophy
>theology
If we are not lying to ourselves, we will quickly convince ourselves that men essentially have a monopoly on these subjects, which constitute a huge part of literature
Now let's move on
>YA
>fiction
>novels
I will leave out the epics as those are also male dominated for obvious reasons. Are you still going to object to the notion that women write less about relationships and sex than men?
I enjoy reading Le Guin. Not my favorite books but I liked reading them
I’m going explicitly off OP’s standards, which only includes adultery, affairs, and sex, not even relationships or romance. And just on that, not including economics, philosophy, and theology, absolutely nothing of that sort, women are no more prone to writing about that than men, if anything less. Especially in the forms you mentioned, in fiction or novels. Sex in literature comes mostly from men, and I’m hoping that seems obvious. Generally speaking, women are far more concerned with the idea of emotional intimacy than actual sex, the idea over the actual image. That is why ‘porn’ for women is mostly written erotica, with little emphasis on sexual acts and more on intimacy and elaborate scenarios. This is extremely important, as it explains that women care less about sex. But yes, women writers will perhaps focus on relationships more. But that’s not important, since we’re trying to answer OP’s questions, which was specifically focusing on sex, adultery, and affairs. as for the last two, that would be an endless game of just naming names and examples from literature (which we can do), but I really rather not to.
Unless you wish to count every single self-published e-book author who writes cowboy erotica (and honesty that proves my point more than anything), women really don’t write more about sex than men, they might even write less.
I probably agree with you that if you limit yourself to only fictional literature you wont find that many more writing about sex and adultary. However, the writing discipline encompasses a lot more than this and saying
>not including economics, philosophy, and theology, absolutely nothing of that sort
isn't really fair since it shows males have other interests when it comes to writing where as women pretty much only writes about relationships, and yes, sex and adultary
no, a lot of books transcend sex you fucking wizard
Marguerite Yourcenar
Simone Weil
Mary Shelly.
Yeah, me.
When I was in a happy relationship I still came here to complain about women, just not the one I was dating. People are shit, but women are a special flavor of it.
Stop blaming others for your own problems
Yes
>are there any *modern popular* women writers who don’t write exclusively about sex
No
Except J.K. Rowling but that’s because she wrote a children’s book and infantile women refused to accept that they were written for eight year olds
who the fuck poured that pint?!!
WIlla Cather avoids that shit almost like she was traumatised
Uncle toms cabin I suppose
it's a nonic pint glass, that's more or less the correct pour to get an imperial pint of beer with the right amount of head resting on top
based and chadpilled
Sayaka Murata sorta does, but she's a bit of an autistic incel herself, like the female robot.
seething cope.
>open dostoyevsky book
>sex and romance
>open bukowski book
>sex and more sex
>open homeric epic
>sex and cuckoldry
what is it with male writers and sex?
High T
big if true
The Secret History
dona tartt?
>autistic incel
understatement, narrator of convenience store woman is literally a sociopath
Evelyn Waugh
People read books to get away from life, not further drawn into it.
Idiot who ignores thread.
She writes of sex a lot in her fiction books.
>reading other peoples experiences isn't being drawn further into life
are there any incels who don't create multiple threads a day asking "why do women" "are there any women who"
you have to understand the mind of the incel. i can assure you they're going crazy. they live in a state of absolutely hating women but also being unable to stop wanting them. this can't be healthy and will produce virginity induced psychosis.
No no no but seriously folks, i don't even hate women, but we all can agree on this, right? Women are simply trash. Come on, you know it. Your mom sucked stinky dick and licked hairy sweaty balls dude. They're an inferior sex by nature, doomed to always be dominated. If you don't agree with this, i suggest you to read:
Based Schoppy - On Women
Unbased but Redpilled Weininger - Sex & Character
I'm not an incel yet still hate women lmao, wtf is with betas and this mentality of sucking on vag flaps
Yes I know, the Pulitzer is a meme but this is a really good story with layered symbolism (Christian symbolism for those it matters to) about families and death and she expanded it to a trilogy no less. The other 2 books aren't as good but the adultery is implied and part of a larger underlying motif.
hot
Bait but some people actually think this way.
Every think you are just gay?
i hate women but everyday i cry to the fact that i have no qt gf to cuddle with to sleep. no qt gf to kiss me softly on the lips. no qt gf to enjoy life. i hate them because they're dumb, it's not even the fact that they find me disgusting, it's just that all women i've ever talked to were brainlets and unintersting normies. the interesting intellectual ones (if they even exist) are fucking chad and would never talk to an ugly virgin. it's hell being born a male desu, you have this uncontrollable drive of longing for such a dumb sex
Wtf dichotomy is this? Lmfao. Were most men in history secret fags than? Cmon lad
Is this a trollpost or a serious one? It plays like a trollpost.
Wisława Szymborska
Her poems are quite good
An yea, she won a Nobel prize for her work
>normie
You know we can use the word normalfag on this website right?
>he lit a cigarette
>his glass of whiskey also lit a cigarette
I still don't think men have recovered from this
Male writers, am i right? Haha
>How many male writers does it take to screw in a lightbulb?
>Women would never understand.
Is this bait. I'm tired and honestly what the fuck is even is the?
I feel like a proper sociopath would be better at recognizing the social issues regarding their behavior. But yeah, I did understate it a bit and sociopath is probably a better descriptor.
Well, are there that many MALE authors who completely avoid those topics? Perhaps a few, but not many. Certainly not many good authors (by our standards).
But whenever a call comes across the wire for good female writers, I always recommend Alice Munro. Her books touch on sex and affairs, but they are never the true substance of the story. The substance is usually her familial relationships, her community, and the characters that populated it. I first read Dance of the Happy Shades in 2015 and enjoyed it. I read Lives of Girls and Women in 2017 and loved it. Good writing, good characterization, good dialogue, and a good feel for the setting of the stories.
this book was great, read it several weeks ago.
if you are the user that has talked about it in the past thank you for the recommendation, very uplifting read
Any economics books, most philosophy books, most theology books. Need i go on?
This quote is fucking retarded.
This
>male author who completely avoids these topics
Lovecraft.