Today's guest blogger is award-winning, historical romance author Lee Rowan, who answers the question: "Why would a woman want to write a gay romance?"
I hate it when that question is asked, with its assumption – usually an assumption that the questioner is not even aware of – that a woman would be incapable of writing a sympathetic male character unless he was a man who wanted to have sex with women.
This ubiquitous question peeves me on a couple of points – the first, of course, is the notion that any writer should be required to explain why she writes anything. A writer explores human experience, and while I find it astonishing that anyone would want to write about a cannibalistic mass-murderer, I don't see any reason to grill Thomas Harris about his reasons. The second is that this is a question I've only ever heard posed to women, and it is generally uttered either in a peremptory, how-dare-you tone by gay men (and occasionally lesbians) or with a dead-fish-held-at-arms-length shudder by folks who don't believe same-sex couples have 'real' romance and if they do, they shouldn't, so there.
Why did Robert Parker write a lesbian character in the eponymous "Looking for Rachel Wallace?" Why did Patricia Nell Warren write "The Front Runner?" Why was Armistead Maupin's main character in Tales of the City a young straight woman from Cleveland, Ohio? And can you tell me who, who, who wrote The Book of Love?
"Why do you write that?" Does it mean you have Deep Dark Secrets? (Well, in my case, being in a long-term marriage to another woman at least neutralizes the idea that there's anything secret.) Could it be, just possibly, that a writer finds it interesting to write about people who are not like herself? The idea of a writer writing about "the other" isn't exactly 21st century. What was Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley thinking when she wrote Frankenstein? Was Bram Stoker sneaking out at night to bite ladies in the neck as research for Dracula?
And how about you mystery writers? What's with all these corpses, you bloodthirsty creatures?
Never mind that there's one obvious answer to the question: the writer has a story to tell, and it happens to be about characters who aren't June and Ward Cleaver (we will pass mercifully over their younger son's obscene nickname...) Never mind that while the field of romance offers the best chance for a new writer to break in, the standard romance formula is so rigid that there are literally programs that will construct the plot while you wait, and a writer who wants to explore new territory is pretty restricted; never mind that love worth risking death for is heady stuff to write; never mind that the more people who realize that love is love, and the particular configuration of body parts is secondary the less fear there will be of "the other" and the less fear, the less hate...
Gee, why would anyone want to write that?
Which makes me wonder ... Do mystery writers get the same sort of flak about your choice of topic?
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For mysterious reasons of her own, Lee Rowan writes about pretty sailors in love for Linden Bay Romance, and is working on an M/M Regency to be published by Running Press in Autumn, 2009. Meanwhile, her latest release, Eye of The Storm is now available. Visit Lee's website: www.lee-rowan.net Lee also has a blog. Find it here.