Do you consider the book to be Chick Lit?
- Kieran_Obrien
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Do you consider the book to be Chick Lit?
I think there's maybe a bit more going on in the narrative that opens up it's genre slightly, but it does hit all the chick lit tropes!
I'm a guy and I found it reasonably enjoyable anyway!
- CommMayo
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So, I guess great minds thing alike!
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That's odd, because I thought this book would be good to spark some discussion on the topic of chick lit. On the surface it's very chick Lit, but it's not marketed like that!
- bookowlie
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Great points, the two genres are viewed very differently. I think "women's contemporary fiction" is a good label for the story.bookowlie wrote: ↑23 Feb 2018, 14:48 I agree this book could be considered chick lit or the more modern term, "women's contemporary fiction."The main characters are a bunch of female friends and have girls-only get-togethers that are usually very light-hearted. I can see why an author might not want to market a book as chick lit since the genre is not usually taken seriously. Many readers look down on chick lit and don't want to read a book if it's labelled as such.
- Emma13
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Your comments are point on. At least in America, the default is white, Christian, and male. Any time a book or movie makes the focus other than that, it is labeled as other. Just look at how Wonder Woman and Black Panther have been received in the media. A chick movie and a black movie. Meanwhile, 90% of the feature films out there starring white men are just called movies.Emma13 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2018, 10:33 It is an interesting question. Just because the main characters in a book are male, we don't assume that only men will read it, so why do we make the opposite assumption with books about women? I guess we still have this idea that the default character is a male (probably white and straight, too).
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Good point!Emma13 wrote: ↑24 Feb 2018, 10:33 It is an interesting question. Just because the main characters in a book are male, we don't assume that only men will read it, so why do we make the opposite assumption with books about women? I guess we still have this idea that the default character is a male (probably white and straight, too).

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I personally can't stand the the chick lit concept. I think it's demeaning to women and makes it seem like women are not sophisticated enough to read serious subject matter. It makes me think of a fluffy beach read or a book that doesn't have too much of a plot or good writing.bookowlie wrote: ↑23 Feb 2018, 14:48 I agree this book could be considered chick lit or the more modern term, "women's contemporary fiction."The main characters are a bunch of female friends and have girls-only get-togethers that are usually very light-hearted. I can see why an author might not want to market a book as chick lit since the genre is not usually taken seriously. Many readers look down on chick lit and don't want to read a book if it's labelled as such.
- DustinPBrown
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People use "chick lit" but no one uses "dude lit" or anything similar for novels by people like Tom Clancy. It's a term specifically made to belittle any book that happens to focus on the lives of women, just like "chick flick" in films.bookowlie wrote: ↑24 Feb 2018, 23:27I personally can't stand the the chick lit concept. I think it's demeaning to women and makes it seem like women are not sophisticated enough to read serious subject matter. It makes me think of a fluffy beach read or a book that doesn't have too much of a plot or good writing.bookowlie wrote: ↑23 Feb 2018, 14:48 I agree this book could be considered chick lit or the more modern term, "women's contemporary fiction."The main characters are a bunch of female friends and have girls-only get-togethers that are usually very light-hearted. I can see why an author might not want to market a book as chick lit since the genre is not usually taken seriously. Many readers look down on chick lit and don't want to read a book if it's labelled as such.
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