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That's because some of us have taken a pledge to draw attention to female authors and shine a light on the bias against them whenever it comes up. This is the only way this will ever change.
According to my research, there are "over 1800 writers" in the Science Fiction/Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA), but there are only 158 listed members of the Science Fiction/Fantasy Female Writers (SF/FFW). By my calculations, that means female writers roughly make up ~9% of the SFWA. The reality is probably slightly higher. My googling revealed estimates in the 10-15% range."
The reality is much higher. As of 2007, SFWA's membership was:
active members = 428 female, 641 male, 60 gender unknown
supporting members = 72 female, 92 male, 22 gender unknown
affiliate members [frequently reviewers] = 63 female, 84 male, 10 gender unknown
senior members = 4 female, 19 male, 3 gender unknown
Total: 1533
A survey of Locus in July-Oct 2007 found that about 40% of SF books published were by women. Still not parity, but it's significantly higher than on the NPR list.

31 books on the group shelf. Marion Zimmer Bradley, Suzanne Collins, and N.K. Jemisin are the only female authors, while Jemisin and Charles Yu are the only non-white authors.
I'll just repeat my standard suggestion -- let's read some Japanese SF. There's lots of good stuff coming from the far side of the Pacific: Harmony by "Project" Itoh, The Lord of the Sands of Time by Issui Ogawa, Kieli by Yukako Kabei, Usurper of the Sun by Housuke Nojiri. Or we could try to drive Veronica crazy and pick Dhalgren by Samuel Delany.

By the way, if anyone is an obsessive list maker, they have this list already up on ListofBests.com. That way you can check them off. It is very satisfying. I have lists for Hugo, Nebula, and Booker Awards over there too.


I appreciate the sentiment, I really do, but I personally don't find it all that constructive when all you are doing is pointing out that 'yes' their is potentially a legacy bias that is likely largely an artefact of historic output differences (this is not to say that there probably aren’t other elements). I appreciate that it is about awareness, but to say that top lists are inherently bias because of gender proportion representation without any real metric for merit is a fool’s logic. From what I've seen it seems every list without some semblance of parity is decried as being bias?
Personally I feel the shining a light on female authors, current or historic, and celebrating their accomplishments is a much more constructive element of the movement. As is ensuring that current and future minority group authors are fairly considered on merit for awards and other acclaim.
Also if I'm reading those statistics correctly most are just snapshots of current gender breakdowns for more recent time slices. Are there any holistic gender breakdown statistics about?
The output proportions appear to be moving towards some parity though it doesn't really need to be 1:1 such that one would expect a more balance representation over time.

I just started reading it the other day and I'm really enjoying it so far.


I don't see why people would give a shit what color, gender, et cetera wrote a book. I just finished Kinshield Legacy by KC May and discovered she's a she in the author's note. That isn't going to stop me from reading her other stuff.
Give me good characters and a good story and I don't really care if you're a Bug Eyed Monster.


@Sean: I'd be interested in reading some Japanese SF. Please do put a suggestion forward for our next book.
@Rasputin: You know back in highschool when I read some Dragonlance novels I thought that Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman were both women. I later found out I was only 1/2 right on that account. So I hear what you are saying.

Pretty sure I was in my thirties. And by thirties I mean about a year or so ago when I heard Tracy on a podcast.
Ooops.

Because he's already married right ;)

Well if you want to sample something, there's a great fan translation of Utsuro no Hako to Zero no Maria, which is sort of like if Philip K. Dick had written Groundhog's Day as a YA novel. It should give you an idea of the flavoring of Japanese SF.

Well if you want to sample something, there's a great fan translation of..."
Is the Volume 1 PDF where I want to start?



Yes. If you convert it to epub or mobi with Calibre, it should come out all right.

didn't know? :)
Sean wrote: "Andrew wrote: "Is the Volume 1 PDF where I want to start?"
Yes. If you convert it to epub or mobi with Calibre, it should come out all right."
Cheers. Shame they chose .PDF. Such a bad ebook format.

Haha! Yeah, I didn't know that for the longest time either.

Ooo! I just started reading her series and I really like them. Good choice.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Fire Upon the Deep (other topics)The Left Hand of Darkness (other topics)
Usurper of the Sun (other topics)
The Lord of the Sands of Time (other topics)
Dhalgren (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Tracy Hickman (other topics)Margaret Weis (other topics)
C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
C.J. Cherryh (other topics)
Not to mention that Atwood is probably furious to be on this list, despite making #22, because she self-affiliates as a writer of "literature," not of science fiction.