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Working in a used bookstore I see a lot of formerly popular titles. Every so often a novel will come out that is really popular with with women but the author never writes anything nearly as successful again. "Bridges of Madison County""Love Story" "A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" "Forever Amber" and many more. I can't think think of similar one hit wonders in books popular with men. Why is that?

davsmith4156 5 May 26
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0

They said it all in one book!

0

Maybe the respective authors were permanently mentally drained and exhausted by the subject matter.

0

That's a good question. A bit depressing too.

1

Catch-22 maybe? do Androids dream of electric sheep?

1

I am jealous that you work where you do! Could I ask you to look for a book that evades me?

What book is that?

@davsmith4156
The Far Pavillions book 1. Book 2 falls out of the sky and hits me on the head, but I can't find book 1.

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Upon reflection, Joseph Heller was kind a of one hit wonder but he took a long time between books. Robert James Waller pushed out a lot of books in a hurry and ruined his brand. Mind you, this isn't a discussion of literary quality. By a "good" book I mean a popular one. This is about authors who had one big hit and either followed it with a few turkeys or nothing at all. It struck me as odd that a lot of authors with a female readership only seemed to have one good book in them. Betty Smith wrote two more books after "Tree" but even she thought they were inferior and she quit. Harper Lee never published anything after "To Kill a Mockingbird" except for that thing that came out right before her death that she might or might not have wanted to see released.
Erich Segal went back to teaching classics, Grace Metalious put out a sequel and that was it for her.

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Do men read books that much? The men in my family that read, are reading biographies, science and politics!

You're kidding , right?

0

Interesting case in point, Tony Hillerman wrote several novels with Jim Chee as the protagonist, failing in love with a non-Native American he finally falls for his coworker, another Tribal policewoman, Bernadette Manualito. Then the author dies (Tony Hillerman) and his daughter takes over (Ann Hillerman). The relationship between the characters Chee and Bernie is totally different, at least to a guy. The plots are just as good though, complex and simple at the same time, emphasizing Tribal culture and interesting history in a well described landscape. Anybody else read Hillerman?

I did. Chee was interesting, but I preferred Joe Leaphorn for authenticity

@seaspot_run I liked him too, what I liked most was was the culture.

0

There's always Roth's Portnoy's Complaint.

But I imagine men tend more to "stats" and completist attitudes and thus more likely to read something and read everything by an author when they find something they love by that author.

I also suspect the huge hits are most notable for being read by people who don't normally read much. These read something that gets huge to be in on it and then duck out of reading. These skew towards women as there is still a view that if women read too much they will have trouble getting a man. Yes, seriously.

As somebody who makes a living from book sales I abhor that attitude.

@felix5 It's something a surprising number of people say even still. I read quite a lot and if I am sitting somewhere may well get someone asking me if I'm not worried my reading will interfere with my meeting someone.

2

Women respond really well to stories about how even if they are a taken-for-granted housewife, a poor person, or a plainer person, there is a glamorous, romantic (rich? or at least HOT) man out there who will see them for who they really are and love them completely and not just in spite of their perceived flaws but perhaps because of them.

BTW, I massively fecking hated the Bridges of Madison County book.

I'll leave it to the guys here to say what resonates with dudes, but I don't think it's really all that different except guys do seem to want to see themselves in a protagonist that is stronger, suaver, more dangerous than they are IRL (aka James Bond). There is a lot of wish fulfillment fantasy in many popular novels pitched at one sex or the other.

@seaspot_run Ian Fleming's James Bond series was very popular with men in the 60's & 70's. One popular author for men is Cormac McCarthy's, 'The Road' and 'No Country for Old Men. He appeals to a mans way of thinking about dilemmas and how to overcome the odds intelligently.

@NotAndrew

I have to agree.

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I'm watching the pbs series about the great American novel, or the American read. I've ready many of the top books. I'm somewhat disappointed and surprised. I'm sort of a book worm.a friend teases me, I'm the only person he knows who can intellectually discuss Theodor Dostoevsky. I don't know why some people prefer one type of book over another. I love them all.

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