osprey_archer: (books)
osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2013-02-07 09:46 pm

Girl Books for Girls

Yesterday, after I completed my list of favorite child characters, I realized that all the characters I’d listed were girls. It’s not that I avoided male protagonists as a child - I read pretty much everything - but clearly I imprinted on the girls.

Every so often I’ll stumble on someone bemoaning the fact that there’s nothing for girls to read that has good role models, and, okay, have you looked at children’s literature recently? And by recently I mean “within the last two decades.” Because for most of my childhood I did nothing but read and I never had a problem finding books with heroines I enjoyed.

If you’re looking specifically for books about Girls Who Fight, then yes, the pickings are rather slim. There’s all of Tamora Pierce’s books. And Crown Duel. And The Hunger Games and Graceling and, oh, the Narnia books, and the Fearless series which is admittedly a bit out of date, and the Gallagher Girls series - they spy, I’m assuming they fight? - and the Samurai Girl books and, oh wait, I lied, there are PILES of books about girls who can probably beat you into the floor.

Which is great! But frankly, if Girl with Sword is the only kind of character who falls under your “good role model” rubric, then you - and I say this as someone who loves Girls Who Kick Ass books! - are doing this wrong.

There’s a huge selection of awesome girl characters, and moreover, there has been basically since Jo March in Little Women proved that awesomeness sold. Early twentieth century fiction teems with amazing heroines! I am an expert in the field. Brave girls (with swords and without!), smart girls, funny girls, artsy girls, imaginative dreamy shy girls, and any one of these characters can be a good role model.

Which is not to say that girls’ fiction is totally perfect in every way and we ought to stop fretting about it; but we should fret about things that are actually problems. Sheer quantity is not an issue in Anglophone fiction and hasn’t been for over a century.

[identity profile] thegreylioness.livejournal.com 2013-02-12 04:16 pm (UTC)(link)
Robin Mckinley's The Hero and the Crown and also her The Blue Sword are also great girls who fight books.

(Was searching Tamora Pierce interest and saw your blog, sorry for dropping in. ;) )

[identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com 2013-02-12 06:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Nice to meet you! I always like talking to drop ins.

And I bet there are stacks of books about Girls Who Fight that I forgot to list, because it really is a trope that's all over literature these days.

[identity profile] thegreylioness.livejournal.com 2013-02-12 06:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Do you think it's because of the resurgence and Girl Power type feminism? I mentioned Robin McKinley because along with Tamora Pierce, I love those two books of Robin McKinley, and up until I tried reading RM's Sunshine I had loved all of her books but I just can't get into Sunshine for the life of me.

[identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com 2013-02-13 02:48 am (UTC)(link)
Yes, Girl Power feminism probably is at the root of it - though now that Girl with Weapon books have proven so popular, with Pierce and McKinley and the Hunger Games and Graceling, I think there's a feedback cycle that keeps them going.

I've had the opposite experience with McKinley's books: Sunshine is the only one of her books I really adored. A dessert called Death of Marat!

Also, Fluttershy icon for the win!