Are we discussing the gender of the author, or the gender of the authors creations? In books written in first person it's a real talent to avoid a gender Bias and write more than so many pages, eventually standard grammar or social practices will reveal it.
I was discussing author gender. Despite offending a few people (and finding novium's reply damn offensive), I stick to what I said.
Female authors, male or female lead characters, tend to emphasise romantic relationships and such, in their stories. That's fine. I LIKE The Otherworld series, I'm not so keen on Weather Warden, but that's me. I LOVED the first 9 LKH books, and I quite enjoy the Rachel Morgan books by Kim Harrison.
But I can look at all 4 of those series's, and find similarities in the content.
DOes this mean that female authors are WORSE?? Of course not. DOes it mean their work is different to male authors? Yes.
DOes it happen every time? no.
But look at Nightlife by Rob Thurman. I was confused when I read that, because it read, to me, like a female author, but I just assumed Rob was short for Robert. When I found out Rob Thurman was a woman, it made a lot more sense.
Does it mean it was an inferior book? no way in hell.
I honestly can't think of the last book I've read where the characters gender became a non-point in light of the greater story, I don't think I ever consider the characters' gender to be an issue unless it's brought up within the book (IE the "tough female" character being picked on by a bunch of big macho-male types because they think of her as weak).
Character gender is irrelevant to a good plot, vital to good characterisation.
The only thing I'm sick of is there seems to always be the obligatory 'your a woman, you can't do what us men do'.....woman proves she can, scene.
It's really boring.
As for the authors gender... If I like the story they could be a eunich from Saturn for all I care.
I was never commenting men wrote BETTER books. I was telling Lizard king my opinion on what he was talking about.