By Jennie Shortridge
The novels I write are
categorized as women’s fiction, even though my latest, Love Water Memory, has both a male protagonist and a female protagonist, and is the
story of a harrowing brain disorder and its aftermath. You could imagine John
Irving or Nick Hornby or Garth Stein writing about such a thing (in fact
they’ve written about very similar things, and fall into the category of
“mainstream” fiction).
And yet, I’ve decided
to come down on this issue exactly where novelist Elizabeth Berg does. When
asked if she minded her work being categorized as women’s fiction, she said
something like, “I love women! I love writing for women. Why would I mind?”
(Why indeed, when women buy the vast majority of books?)
When women write
fiction, we tend to share ideas, experiences, and revelations about solving
problems, about surviving and thriving through difficulties, about love and the
power of compassion and understanding. Women are biologically hardwired
for empathy, and the only way to write fiction that feels true is with great
empathy for your characters.
And yet, women often
get subtle (or not so subtle) messages that empathy and compassion are not as
important as power and might, in both the literary and the real world. Don’t
believe it. If more leaders were women, integrating compassion into decision and
policymaking, our people and our planet would be far better off.
And if more readers
understood what makes women’s fiction matter, we could change the world, one
reader—female or male—at a time.
______________________________________________________________________
Jennie Shortridge is
the author of Love Water Memory and four other acclaimed novels, as well as
a writing teacher and avid volunteer. She is co-founder of Seattle7Writers, a nonprofit collective of over sixty
published authors in the Northwest who work to give back to their community.
Find her on Facebook, Twitter, her blog JennieSez, and atwww.jennieshortridge.com.
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