Or it's a legitimate difference of opinion, and anybody making value judgments on either side should probably cool off. I can watch fight scenes and be impressed by their choreography, whereas my wife can't get over the fact that it's two people trying to hurt each other, and can't enjoy them at all. Neither one of us is wrong.
My personal feelings about rape, based on experiences with women close to me in my life, would prevent me from reading such a book. That doesn't mean that it's a bad book. It just wouldn't do it for me. I'm not even sure that it would break the implied contract, since it seems that the character is pretty awful for most of the book, yes? Breaking the contract would be having a good, nice hero who suddenly and for no reason rapes somebody in chapter nine.
Only for those viewing it from a different perspective. Do you watch "Monk"? People get murdered just aboute very episode, but it's a mystery show, so that's expected, and the murders are a matter of intellectual curiosity, bereft of any of the real-world emotion of having somebody suddenly and violently killed. But if somebody got raped in an episode of Monk, I'd be shocked, and I'd probably have to turn it off. It's a different kind of crime.
I don't root for murderers, either, though, at least, not as far as I recall. Fitz in the Assassin trilogy is the closest I come, I think, and he's killing for a political cause -- and most of the people he kills in his assassin role are Forged, which mostly qualifies as putting them out of their misery and protecting the innocent.
My personal feelings about rape, based on experiences with women close to me in my life, would prevent me from reading such a book. That doesn't mean that it's a bad book. It just wouldn't do it for me. I'm not even sure that it would break the implied contract, since it seems that the character is pretty awful for most of the book, yes? Breaking the contract would be having a good, nice hero who suddenly and for no reason rapes somebody in chapter nine.
And yet murder is so much more final for the victim. Awful as it is, rape is survivable; murder, in contrast, by definition, is not. Yet many seem much more willing to root for characters portrayed as murderers, which to my mind is an odd position to take.
Only for those viewing it from a different perspective. Do you watch "Monk"? People get murdered just aboute very episode, but it's a mystery show, so that's expected, and the murders are a matter of intellectual curiosity, bereft of any of the real-world emotion of having somebody suddenly and violently killed. But if somebody got raped in an episode of Monk, I'd be shocked, and I'd probably have to turn it off. It's a different kind of crime.
I don't root for murderers, either, though, at least, not as far as I recall. Fitz in the Assassin trilogy is the closest I come, I think, and he's killing for a political cause -- and most of the people he kills in his assassin role are Forged, which mostly qualifies as putting them out of their misery and protecting the innocent.