Abstract: Coiling Dragon (by I eat Tomatoes) has an almost "unreadable" side for female readers. There are a lot of nameless female characters in the book. A lot of supporting characters, including the woman the main character falls in love with, their romantic relationship, and the woman he marries. Yet, all of them either stand out thanks to their connection with the main character or they don't come out at all. There is almost no part for these female characters, no specific story, or a deep background. Even the love of the main character (Linley) and Dalia (His wife) was written on the male side, while the difficulties and love of the other side are very short and uncomfortably shallow. So, this makes the love story parts boring and meaningless. You might think that in Asian Culture, males are more dominant in the books of genres such as Wuxia and Fantasy and this strangeness is normal. Yet this book isn't like the other similar books in the same genre. It is worse. This issue is the effect of a pen that cares only about the main character of the book and tries to make him a hero and the most important center of everything. While the book, its story, and the whole-world shape the main character so naturally, there is almost no time left for female characters. I can't decide whether that is because the deep-down author sees women below or just the effect of the main character-centered plot. But comparing female characters and male characters in Coiling Dragon highlights this case in this twenty-five-thousand-page book. Inside the book (Coiling Dragon) female characters are only as deep as a household item and almost invisible. I will explain the results of my research about the I Eat Tomatoes and his possible reasons for ignoring female characters in Coiling Dragon.