Let’s Talk Bookish: Women Who’ve Shaped My Reading Life.

Happy Friday! This post is pre-written, so apologies if you leave a comment and it takes me a couple of days to respond.

I have been very lucky to have a handful of women in my life who have encouraged my love of books. The main one is, of course, my mum. Books have always been in my life, my dad used to read to me every single night when I was very small, but it was my mum who would take me out to the library and the bookshop when I could read by myself.
Even now I’m in my 30’s she’s still my number one reading champion, always interested to see what I’m reading, asking what’s being sent to me and of course liking all my bookstagram posts haha. She’s started reading a bit more herself over the last year or so too, and while we have different tastes, she’ll occasionally read one of my books and it’s always so nice to chat with her about them. We even did a couple of buddy reads of some mystery books and it was just the best.

So I was a Jaqueline Wilson kid growing up, like I am sure most girls living in the UK in the 90’s was. I read all of her books as they were published, and I suspect many of us enjoyed them because her characters were so real and relatable to a teen girl.

The first female author I would say that I genuinely loved, though, would be Kristen Britain. Yes, yes, broken record over here. I had never reread a book before I read Green Rider. I actually finished it the first time, and immediately went back to page one without putting it down. This is still a series I reread regularly, 20 years after that first time.

I do! In 2025, over 70% of my reads were by women authors. I don’t intentionally choose to prioritise women authors a lot of the time (sometimes I do), but I find that they write the books I am the most interested in reading. This has definitely shifted in recent years. When I first started reading fantasy books, my choices were heavily male-author-dominated. I think that is quite a normal thing, as male authors do tend to get put on the pedestal of ‘great fantasy writer’, so a lot of new readers to the genre will pick them up first. Now that it’s been a while, I seek out books on my own, and I generally gravitate to titles written by women.

My reading has veered more into the literary and contemporary side of things of late, though still often within the fantasy sphere, and I’ve found that these sorts of books seem to be written more by women. I enjoy the layered character work and introspection that they seem to capture so well in words. Now, I’m not saying that men can’t write that sort of thing (I have certainly enjoyed such works by men), only that I have personally found more women-authored books that have these traits.

I am also influenced by the readers I surround myself with. Most of them are women, and a lot of them also tend towards books written by women, so I am just generally exposed to more of those books.

8 responses to “Let’s Talk Bookish: Women Who’ve Shaped My Reading Life.”

  1. […] @ Past MidnightElle @ Unwrapping WordsEmma @ Pages of EmmaRaji @ Worlds Unlike Our OwnKenn @ Novelistic PagesAbyssal LibrarianRachael @ The Green Tea […]

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  2. […] @ Past MidnightElle @ Unwrapping WordsEmma @ Pages of EmmaRaji @ Worlds Unlike Our OwnKenn @ Novelistic PagesAbyssal LibrarianRachael @ The Green Tea […]

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  3. I think interestingly most of the newer books I read are by women and many of the older ones I read are by men. I do read a lot of YA still and that’s certainly dominated by women authors.

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    1. Yes, this was similar to what I found when looking at my stats, minus the ya!

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  4. Aww, that’s so cute that your mum is liking all your instagram posts and still your biggest reading champion! How sweet 😊 Your page always reminds me that I need to dive into the Kristan Britain books! I can’t believe I haven’t heard of this series until last year (as first seen on your page) but now I see a lot of others have read it and kept up with the series over the years.

    Interesting that you noted you first started reading more books by men because the more I thought about it, the more I realised it was the same for me! That has completely reversed over the years and now my read list is predominantly women authors. I wouldn’t say it’s intentional either, just what’s shown to me and what I see others reading and so they’re naturally what I add to my lists too.

    Great post, Emma! Thanks for joining LTB this week 🙂

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    1. She’s my biggest fan haha!
      I just love Karigan as a character, but I also really enjoy the world of Green Rider. It’s very classical fantasy, but not dated.

      I think it’s actually quite a normal progression for people when they start to read, especially in the fantasy space. It’s hugely male dominated so that is what is immediately pushed to us!

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  5. I also find myself gravitating towards female authors more frequently, although I find my top books of the year to be more mixed.

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  6. […] Let’s Talk Bookish: Women Who’ve Shaped My Reading Life […]

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Hi friends!

Welcome to my little corner of the internet!
I’m Emma (she/her), a 30-something living in the UK. I love to read fantasy, science fiction and non-fiction books, though I do dip into many other genres. Enjoy your reading!

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