KikiSaysRAWR! wrote:Naturally, I think woman are better 'story tellers,' not nessisarily writers. If you were to ask a woman how her day was, she would reply in a similar way to this:
"I went to the store to go buy a new pair a shoes after my old ones got shredded after I fell down a concrete staircase, met up with my friend Jenny, who I haven't seen in over three months. Did you hear she's broken up with Jared Mosley now? Afterwards I came back home to catch up on my favorite show, True Blood." See? Full of details.
Normally, if asked the same question a man would simply answer: "I went to the store, met up with a friend, and then came back home to watch tv." Though, if a man were to set his mind on writing something good, the differences between his work and of a woman's wouldn't be much different.
Well Kiki, based on your assumptions, it would appear that women also have an affinity for telling boring stories. No, I think that men and women merely share different interests, and a man will describe a ride in a car in far greater detail than a woman would. Under such circumstances would you say that makes man a greater story teller?
I think what it boils down to is what the interest and background of the story teller is that defines how he or she will tell a story.
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