YouareviewingentriesfromMcRant

AdvisoriesonRomanceNovels

by SB Sarah Wednesday, August 29, 2007 at 05:37 AM

I got my most recent RWR in the mail the other day, and since my entire job as a giant pregnant lady is to relax, gain weight, and sit around waiting, I read it cover to cover. Usually I skim it, check out the contest winners, look at the articles and who wrote them, and read a piece here or there. But hey, I sit down now, and I don’t move voluntarily for at least an hour, so bring on the reading material.

And hello, page 4’s Letters to the Editor! I laughed out loud. Did anyone else notice this one?

Madeline Baker, she doesn’t like the cussing:

I continue to be shocked by the language in some romance novels I’m reading. It’s unfortunate that more and more authors feel the need to use the “F word” in their books, but even worse, the word “Motherf...” has cropped up in two of my recent reads. It’s bad enough when language like this is uttered by the villain, but when it comes out of the mouth of the heroine… well, I’m just plain stunned. Surely it’s possible to write a gutsy heroine without having her talk like a gang member.

Here are a few choices of response that pop to mind:

1. Bitch, please.

2. Racist and classist undertones aside, I’m as offended by books titled Cheyenne Surrender as you are by the word “fuck.”

3. Fuck that!

4. Gang members? Only gang members say “fuck?” Seriously?

Perhaps the problem is the reading material she’s choosing, which she addresses in her letter:

Lately I’ve read several books that have ‘paranormal romance’ on the spine. In my opinion, a good number of them haven’t been romances at all, and that includes the one I threw across the room just last night....

Demons and vampires and werewolves, especially the ones that want to kill you, will totally stop if you speak nicely and say, “Please.”

I doubt if it will ever happen, but I’d like to see some kind of rating on books so that I’ll know what I’m getting before it’s too late.

Now that there, THAT is an IDEA. Why did we think of that?! We here at the Smart Bitch HQ, we got us some Photoshop. There need to be warnings on books!

Our advisories, let us show you them:

More,more,more!>
Picture of {name}
242 comments Bookmark to del.icio.us Add to Technorati favorites Digg this post on digg.com RSS
Categories: Ranty McRant

Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.

Romance,Respect,andRanting

by SB Sarah Wednesday, August 22, 2007 at 11:41 AM

Bitchery reader Sarah (not me, another Sarah) send me a link to a long rant from LK Hamilton’s bulletin board about why the genre gets no respect. Sarah (not me) attributes the rant to LKH’s PR person Darla, though I’m not easily able to figure out who it is specifically. I’m not logged in so I can’t view profile data, and I really don’t want to join or log in. So I’ll take her word for it.

Either way, the rant? All oooooover the place. Sarah (not me) says that she’s certainly speaking out, but she’s not sure what on exactly. Me either. However, a few parts of the many many words jump out at me:

But no one does genre bashing better than the romance genre.

Sadly, I think romance readers are its worst enemy. No other genre tags its authors with disparaging names like Mary Sue or any of its variations, flinging it about with disdain as if it was utter fact.

More,more,more!>
Picture of {name}
113 comments Bookmark to del.icio.us Add to Technorati favorites Digg this post on digg.com RSS
Categories: Ranty McRantThe Link-O-Lator

Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.

BecomingJane

by SB Sarah Tuesday, August 07, 2007 at 06:20 AM

Ah, yes, “Becoming Jane.”

I personally would love to become Jane. She dresses marvelously, can synthesize and formulate a reply to a tricky question with immeasurable speed, and runs a powerhouse of a website with an instinct for content organization that makes me dizzy with envy. I can only imagine that her closets and pantry are equally organized. She probably owns a labelmaker.

However, in order to Become Jane, I’d need to do a lot of overhaul of my dizzy self, starting with - wait, sorry? Beg pardon?

I don’t get to Become Jane from Dear Author?

Oh. So, what’s all this email in my inbox about how I should get angry about Becoming Jane? The review of Becoming Jane? In Salon? Which wouldn’t recognize it’s own intellectual superiority complex if it tripped over it on the way to its messy, disorganized closet?

Are you sure we can’t talk about how I should become Jane? No?

Fine.

Seems Stephanie Zacharek has written a most (is anyone surprised?) condescending and misinformed review of Becoming Jane, a film which she didn’t like all that much, and in attempting to describe why she didn’t like it, she calls it a “misguided movie [that] imagines Jane Austen’s life as a genteel, tasteful Harlequin romance.”

More,more,more!>
Picture of {name}
90 comments Bookmark to del.icio.us Add to Technorati favorites Digg this post on digg.com RSS
Categories: Ranty McRantThe Link-O-Lator

Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.

RomanceisBadforYou!SoisPornography!AndSex!

by SB Sarah Monday, July 02, 2007 at 10:28 AM

Suitable for the Head Up Our Ass Department, we have a red alert sent to us from Bitchery Reader iffygenia who directs us to this jaw dropping piece of journalism: Is there Harm in Reading Romance Novels?

Sarah: Oh dear Lord. Not this bullshit again. The right-leaning is as dipshitted as the left-leaning, and my greatest regret is that I’m not on site to see Candy’s head explode when she reads this commentary and rebuttal, written by Shaunti Feldhahn and Diane Glass.

Did you read it? Seriously, do NOT have food in your mouth. You might choke. 

More,more,more!>
Picture of {name}
80 comments Bookmark to del.icio.us Add to Technorati favorites Digg this post on digg.com RSS
Categories: NewsRanty McRant

Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.

NothingButRed

by SB Sarah Thursday, June 21, 2007 at 06:39 AM

Have I mentioned here that I exist in something of a news fast? I rarely if ever read the news. I might hear a few seconds of an update on the radio, and I see the backs of other people’s papers on the subway, but I’ve been on a news fast for a long time, mostly because I don’t trust a word that comes out of any major American news outlet. That’s a longer story.

The other reason is that lately, I am so incredibly hormonal. I really can’t figure out why. *rests hands on giant round gestating stomach* If I just sit here a minute I might come up with a reason… I can’t really put my finger on it. But yeah, most of the time, the news upsets me more than a little. I’m a lightweight. I admit it. Well, that’s not really the right word. I’m as big as a barn, and not light in weight at this time, but hormonally and emotionally speaking, I’m a bit of a wuss.

So reading about the following made me exceptionally glad I wasn’t wearing mascara today. I was crying out of rage and sorrow, and out of incredible pride and admiration.

On April 7, 2007, Dua Khalil Aswad, a 17 year old Yazidi Iraqi girl, was pulled into a crowd of men, some of whom were family members, and beaten and stoned to death as an “honor killing.” She had been seen in the company of a man of a different faith, a young man who was a Sunni Arab. Armed policemen were there, and the entire murder was captured on handheld video. No one did a thing to stop them or to save her. She died of a fractured skull and a broken spine.

A month later, Joss Whedon wrote about Khalil on Whedonesque, and his entry inspired a group of people led by Skyla Dawn Cameron to put together “an anthology of responses to Khalil’s death and the issues Whedon raised in his original essay ([the] culture of misogyny, violence against women, and the need for equality). It will be printed through Lulu.com, with all proceeds going to charity.” The planned release date is the one year anniversary of Dua Khalil’s death, April 7, 2008.

The book, Nothing But Red is seeking writers and artists to participate - and all formats, media, and genres are open - as well as volunteers to help put the book together. The first article will be Whedon’s original post, though the organizers are looking for anything that serves as a response to Khalil’s death. Submissions are being accepted from 1 August 2007 until 1 November 2007.

You can find out more at the Nothing But Red site, or email Skyla Dawn Cameron directly. But spreading the world is of the most help.

Picture of {name}
16 comments Bookmark to del.icio.us Add to Technorati favorites Digg this post on digg.com RSS
Categories: But...that's not really about romance novelsRanty McRantThe Link-O-Lator

Tags: This entry has not been tagged yet.

Page 7 of 21 pages « FirstP  <  5 6 7 8 9 >  Last »