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Mary Catelli's avatar

And people go gaga over Kate Crackernuts on the grounds she is not a typical fairytale princess. And I sigh and think, you people really need to read more fairy tales. There are heroines who have to wear out six pairs of iron shoes and three iron staves while searching for their lost husbands. There are heroines who have to chase after their brothers and stay silent under great provocation -- which their brothers failed, and got turned into stone. There are heroines who have to lure the Queen of the Snakes to home and then get in her way and implore her to give back the husband.

Codex redux's avatar

Kristine Kathryn Rusch had to create an anthology in the Before Times just to prove that mainstream SF was loaded with fascinating, complex, powerful female action heroes for half a century.

The which were being actively erased by these dewberries just so they could play the "omergerd! I'm soooo offended" card on behalf of womankind to excuse their nasty-minded envy of men.

Cordelia Vorkosigan - Hugo winner

Andre Norton's Witches et al. - 2 awards named after her

Telzy Amberdon, Niles Etland, an every James H. Smith heroine *ever*. See the Kagen essay. This is how you do it, gentlemen.

Engdahl's Elanna - Newbery winner.

I could go on. Easily. In copious detail.

And yet in every, every book club, mini-con, or library gathering, at least one millennial or gen-Z girl would gush " Such and so [like Harimad Sol] is the First Evah! Female action hero!" So embarrassing for Robin McKinley.

It's not just garden variety retardery, it's an op.

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