Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Romance books for old chickens

You might have heard of chick-lit. This is the book publishing worlds equivalent of the chick-flick. Well, now the older baby boomer women have grabbed hold of it with both hands to bring us...

Hen-lit. You see, a hen is a grown chicken. So these are stories about old chicks.

Shaw is one of a growing number of writers of romance novels that feature characters in their 40s, 50s, or even 60s. As baby boomers age and their market power grows, more books for and about them are appearing. Boomer women want to read romantic stories about older women who are finding love -- and sex -- later in life. And boomer authors seem willing to oblige by writing what they know.

This quote is kind of telling too:
"When I read a contemporary romance, I always think, 'Who's doing the laundry?'" said Connie Brockway, who describes her novel Skinny Dipping, which is published by Penguin imprint Onyx, as a coming-of-age story for a woman in her 40s. In hen lit, romance cannot be the No. 1 character, she said.

A baby boomer comes of age in their 40's? Let that one sink in for a moment. X-ers when did you come of age? When did the true reality of life really start sinking in for you?

Maybe because I'm not in my 40's yet and haven't, "come of age" I don't realize the true meaning of the word. I'll tell you what, my mid-twenties were a hell I would never repeat. It seems to me you come of age when you cross that line out of childhood and look back and say, "I would never, ever, ever what to be like that again." If that's the yardstick then my mid-teens were another cross over point.

I'm sure there will be more points like that in my life. I just don't see myself, "coming of age" any more. I hope I get more experienced and a little wiser (maybe I'll start to hate a little less). Mellow with time (or not).

Just that fact that boomer women are reading this stuff would lead us to believe they haven't come of age yet. Just the fact that a boomer women in her 50's or early 60's thinks she didn't come of age until she was in her 40's shows that this is a generation that can't grow up..

I guess since the boomers are the most likely to get divorced, make up the largest segment of online dating and get plastic surgery to make themselves younger we can only expect more romance stories that have 'older' people as the main cast.

The question is, when will Hollywood pick up on this and subject us to even more hell?

Monday, April 14, 2008

Some great quotes

The publishing world spin machine is in full wash cycle for Jeff Gordinier book about Gen-x. I posted briefly about it before over here.

For a free copy I'll review it it, but I won't buy a new book. From the sound of this story neither does Mr. Gordinier. I won't even buy used books any more. I've taken cheap to the level of, "If I can't find it at the library or online I don't need it."

Anyway, the LA Times has a piece about the book and it has some fun little quotes. I pulled them out to share them with you here.

Enjoy:

But what happens when you grow up with nothing but malls and franchises? "It's a completely different mind-set," he said. "There are kids growing up now who've never known anything besides chain stores."

According to Neil Howe, a demographer and historian, generations typically define themselves against the one that came before, "trying to solve the problems of the previous generation." As for Gen-X, he has called it "the most under-parented generation in history."

...

"If you want to have Xers get their hackles up," Howe said, "force them to watch 'High School Musical.' It's so happy, so team-oriented, so achieving, their parents care so much about them. . . ."

As Gordinier sees it, everything changed -- as abruptly as the appearance of Hooters on a street of used bookstores -- with the arrival of Britney Spears in 1999: The Xers' groovy, college-radio-and-thrift-store heyday was out; consumer hell was in.


As a side note to the consumer hell. I just recently made a trip away from home. It wasn't far. About a three hour drive away to another city.

When I got there, I found a town that looked exactly like the one I just left. The same Walgreens, CVS and Chili's. It was scary. The streets looked the same. If I had not driven the car I would not have thought I had gone anywhere.

We are no longer suburbia, we are no clone-burbia.