Una delle cose che mi piace di più delle scrittrici di romance è che riescono a coniugare la profondità con l'ironia. Traggo qualche altra citazione dal sito www.readaromancemonth.com.
Recently I got one of those emails
filled with wisdom on how to live a good life, and since I’m always looking for
wisdom, no matter how shady the source, I was reading along and nodding at
bromides like, “Don’t let the sun go down on your anger,” and “Your beliefs
don’t make you a better person, your behavior does.” Then I saw one solemnly
given piece of advice that made my hair stand on end. It stated, “Always read
stuff that will make you look good if you die in the middle of it.”
I … what? Was
this a joke? No one could seriously consider picking their books according to
whether some unnamed, unknown person would judge them after death. Could they?
(…)
Early in my career, I realized how silly
the whole romance novel debate was when I was in a bookstore autographing THE
GREATEST LOVER IN ALL ENGLAND. Some guy came up and picked it up, and said,
“I’d buy one for my wife, but she might think that’s what real life is supposed
to be like.”
I was … without words.
As you know, doesn’t often happen.
Can you imagine a woman, any woman,
walking up to Tom Clancy and saying, “I’d buy a copy of HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER
for my husband, but he might imagine he was a submarine captain”?
There is no
way to fight willful ignorance and prejudice, so it’s all going to come down to
… do you care what other people think of your reading choices? (…)
So it’s time for us romance readers and
writers to pull up our big girl panties and stop arguing with the willfully
ignorant, and stop worrying about whether we are respected.
Instead, let’s all kick back and enjoy
our reading. Because remember the studies I quoted at the beginning?
- According to a study cited by Dr. Joyce Brothers, women who
read romance novels make love seventy-four percent more often than women who
don’t read romance novels.
- According to special research from the
British Medical Journal, the more orgasms you have, the longer you’re likely to
live.
Assuming
those studies are true, we don’t need to “read stuff that will make you look
good if you die in the middle of it.” We romance readers are going to outlive
all the critics anyway.
Christina
Dodd
If I have to say out loud that romance
matters, it means that the default supposition is that it doesn’t, and
that’s where I lose my mind. Then I feel defensive, and I have to say why
it matters, I have to explain that there are amazing writers out there telling
meaningful stories about emotion and human nature and the meaning of life, and there
are, but that isn’t why romance matters.
It matters because you like it. It
matters because I like it. And that’s it.
That’s enough.
I just want
it said that romance matters no more or less than any story, and it matters for
the same reason that any story matters; because engaging in story in any form
feeds the soul.
Lani Diane
Rich
I could write a romance. How hard could
it be? I was married, with two kids to prove that I’d figured out the
mechanics. And there was supposed to be a formula, wasn’t there? A magic
pattern that led to two people being together forever, until death. I just had
to follow it and I could be a best seller. And maybe in the process, I could
understand my own life, or at least my parent’s marriage, which continues to
defy all explanation, even now that Dad has gone.
But it turns
out, a love story is less a formula than it is a puzzle. It seems simple at
first. The frame is built: the ending is happy, the goals are clear. But the
box has no picture. If we could see what was coming, in a lifetime with one
person, we might not start, much less finish. And yet, we keep putting the
pieces together, pulling them apart, turning them, trying again, praying for a
miracle.
Christine
Merrill
Anyone who
actually reads romance (as opposed to those who sit back and judge it based on
the fact that physical intimacy makes some people uncomfortable) knows that
there is so much more to it than just physical attraction. Romance teaches us
that love is to be cherished and shared. That it lifts and edifies. That it
never degrades or belittles. It is not jealous or manipulative. And isn’t that
a lesson we WANT our sons and daughters to learn? Don’t we want to give them
the strength to not only become successful and autonomous, but the power to
pass that on to their partners? To their children?
Darynda Jones
I write romance because I love reading
it, because it engages my emotions, leaves me feeling good. And because every
now and then I’m told that something I’ve written made a difference in
someone’s life. Most of the romance writers I know have at one time or another
received a letter, an email or a Facebook message from someone who recently
came through a devastating experience. Maybe they sat by their husband’s
hospital bed as he lay dying. Perhaps they had breast cancer. Whatever the
circumstances, readers have taken the time to tell me that my books helped get
them through it, that reading a story that occasionally made them laugh and had
a positive ending made the pain of their loss or personal ordeal more bearable,
if only for a short while.
And that
matters. To me it matters a whole helluva lot.
Susan
Andersen
Here’s what so many non-romance-readers
don’t get: reality is not the point.
No one ever needs to reads a novel to
learn more about reality; it’s what we live in, and it’s pretty difficult to
avoid. (Believe me, I’ve tried.) If you want factual knowledge about the
fascinating world we live in, read non-fiction or watch the news. But in our
current culture, it seems as if a novel is only good, or good for you, if it
serves some kind of instructive purpose. We’re somewhat embarrassed to admit
that we do anything just for pleasure these days, and even more embarrassed to
admit that we read or watch something in the deliberate pursuit of emotion.
But that’s what novels are for: to
elicit emotion. And the reason we read romance is because we want to experience
the best emotions: tenderness, passion, sacrifice, healing, joy, satisfaction.
Is it bad to want that?
I’ve heard romance novels referred to as
trash even by some of the genre’s most devoted readers. I’m sympathetic rather
than offended because I understand where it’s coming from: we’re all swimming
in the same reality here, and if you want to go against the current, you learn
to poke fun at yourself, and your tastes, before other people inevitably do.
Love is not trash, however, and romance readers are not dumpster-divers but
rather connoisseurs of emotion. They tend to discuss their favorite novels–the
flavors and complexities and textures–as meticulously as sommeliers at an
international wine tasting.
I have also heard romance novels
compared to junk food. If that’s true, I’m here to tell you, my standard diet
of reality occasionally needs a layer of buttercream frosting. The emotions
engendered by a romance novel tend to soften the edges of those days when
reality can get a little brutal. And the glow of happily-ever-after flatters
everyone in its wake, including tired husbands with dark circles under their
eyes and dishpan hands and muddy shoes from having just taken out the garbage.
After I read a romance, I have no illusions that my husband is a rakish duke,
and I don’t fault him for not turning into one. But to me, he is as sexy and
romantic and wonderful as any romance hero could ever be. Because reality is
more than just how things are . . . reality is also how we see them. And the
two are not mutually exclusive.
Is it bad to read a book that was
created to elicit emotion? Only if it’s bad to love music, art, poetry,
dreaming, dancing, and everything about life that isn’t related to survival and
Spartan practicality. Could you live in a world without romance novels, ice
cream, twinkle lights, sandcastles, flower bouquets, hugging, holding hands and
kissing?
Well, sure.
But would you
really want to?
Lisa Kleypas
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