There are some dick-brained, stupid ass gay guys out there. The villains are traditionally masculine characters. Stereotypically soft, not status driven, not very sexually active, surrounded by supportive and protective women (often self-inserts). Sometimes gay men are written as an expression of how some women wish straight men would act. On the other hand, I think many women write gay men just as poorly as the stereotype of men writing women poorly, and it's frustrating to read. A lot of these works have changed the way I relate to my own sexuality in a very positive way. On the one hand, I'm grateful that many women have written gay fiction that I enjoy.
There was a post about this a month ago, but bringing it up again. I'm a gay guy, just wanted to express frustration with the state of gay fiction, especially romantic gay fiction.
#Cute gay men tubes mod
Example: Hello.Įxplanation of our link flairs Join our /r/bookclub Don't forget /new! Filter by Flair AMA Weekly Thread Mod PostĪma Check out this week's Thread Calendar
#Cute gay men tubes code
#Cute gay men tubes mods
Please report any comment that does not follow the rules and remember that mods have the final say. You can ask in our Weekly Recommendation Thread, consult our Suggested Reading or What to Read page, or post in /r/suggestmeabook. We don't allow personal recommendation posts. We also encourage discussion about developments in the book world and we have a flair system. We love original content and self-posts! Thoughts, discussion questions, epiphanies and interesting links about authors and their work. Please see extended rules for appropriate alternative subreddits, like /r/suggestmeabook, /r/whatsthatbook, etc. ‘Should I read …?’, ‘What’s that book?’ posts, sales links, piracy, plagiarism, low quality book lists, unmarked spoilers (instructions for spoiler tags are in the sidebar), sensationalist headlines, novelty accounts, low effort content. Promotional posts, comments & flairs, media-only posts, personalized recommendation requests incl. Please use a civil tone and assume good faith when entering a conversation. All posts must be directly book related, informative, and discussion focused. If you're looking for help with a personal book recommendation, consult our Suggested Reading page or ask in: /r/suggestmeabook Quick Rules:ĭo not post shallow content. It is our intent and purpose to foster and encourage in-depth discussion about all things related to books, authors, genres or publishing in a safe, supportive environment. Subreddit Rules - Message the mods - Related Subs AMA Info The FAQ The Wiki