海角大神

Romance at the Ivy League

I've never known if it's really true but I've often heard it bandied about that most of the "Simpsons" writers are young Harvard grads. If so, then I guess nobody should be surprised to learn that some heavy-hitting Ivy Leaguers are now churning out romance novels.

In fact, it seems, Ivy Leaguers are studying them as well as writing them. Last April Princeton University hosted a scholarly conference titled "."

The conference organizer, , who teaches at DePaul University聽 and holds a Ph.D from UCLA, says he discovered romance fiction after reading his wife's copy of "Bridget Jones's Diary." "I read it and I loved it," Selinger told USA Today. That one book led him to others and eventually he began teaching a course on the romance genre.

But Selinger is hardly alone. Romance writer (author of "Desperate Dutchesses" and "Potent Pleasures") is really Mary Bly, a tenured professor聽 at Fordham University. ("The Viscount Who Loved Me" and "How to Marry a Marquis") is really Julie Pottinger, a Harvard grad who dropped out of Yale Medical School to pursue a career as a romance writer.

In , some of these brainy writers confess that (despite that Princeton conference) they still face scorn from much of the rest of the world.

Selinger says that he finds that it's actually easier for him, as a man, to champion this form of writing. "Nobody thinks I'm a spinster or trapped in a bad marriage, or I'm betraying feminism," he says. "People don't judge me as much."

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Romance at the Ivy League
Read this article in
/Books/chapter-and-verse/2009/0707/romance-at-the-ivy-league
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe