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Gifts for Writers

by Ashley Lister


  It’s that time of year when, to celebrate the birth of someone who died a couple of millennia back, we honour the occasion with a mercantile demonstration of the constructs of capitalism and conspicuous consumption.

  Some people say this is the season to be jolly. Others say it’s the most wonderful time of the year. And there are people who insist the spirit of the season is all about hope, goodwill to others and love. However, we all know that this is the season of presents. And we all know, the worst people in the world to buy for are writers.
 

  So, as a handy help to all of those who know a writer, or want to treat a writer to a seasonal gift, this is a list of five things to give festive cheer to the most curmudgeonly wordsmith in your life.

  1. If you’re buying for a professional writer, then this means the scope is pretty broad. Given the amount of money earned by professional writers, second-hand clothing, food stamps, tinned food or a contribution toward their household bills will always be appreciated. It might save them from having to spend a weekend sitting in a shopping mall with a sign that says ‘Homeless and Hungry’ or ‘Will Trade Vital Organs for Food’.

  2. Alcohol is always a good choice. Some occupations are known by the predominant body parts of those individuals involved. Consequently, we know about the magnificent muscles of a bodybuilder, the huge, compassionate heart of a care worker, and the fine, distinguishing palate of a restaurant critic. Alongside these consider the industrial-sized liver of a writer and you’ll understand why alcohol is always an appropriate gift for the wordsmith in your life.

  3. DON’T BUY BOOKS. This is just rubbing the writer’s nose in it. A writer will look at the book you purchased for them, look at the mediocrity of their own sales figures for the month, and maybe weep a little. Trust me: don’t buy books.

  4. For writers you don’t know well, reviews are a genuinely beautiful gift. Amazon does funky things with its algorithms and, the more reviews and ratings on a writer’s books, the more often Amazon shoves those books in the face of potential readers. If you have a favourite writer and you’ve never managed to leave a review for them before, make this Christmas a five-star season for them.

  5. Support. This has not been an easy year for any of us. Between the uncertainty of physical health threats from that damned virus, and concerns about economic security because of the problems the virus has caused, we’ve all struggled in some way this year and many of us continue to struggle. This year has been described as unprecedented, tough, challenging and (my favourite) ‘the worst’. If there’s a writer in your life, and you want to give them a truly special gift, one of the kindest things you can do is give them your support and make sure they know you’ve got their back.

If you can think of anything else that might work as a gift for a writer, there’s the comments box below. And, I genuinely hope this holiday season brings you everything you desire for yourself and your loved ones.

Ash

Giving Thanks

We are in the midst of the holiday season. COVID put a monkey wrench into my live book promotion plans, but I was able to do quite a bit online. I participated in two blog tours for two of my books. I took out ads in online romance web sites. I did a newsletter booster, and I did some live chats on Facebook.

I’m grateful for what I’ve been able to accomplish this year despite the pandemic ruining in person appearances. I published nine short stories, a collection of erotic fairy tales (Happily Ever After: Twisted Versions of Your Favorite Fairy Tales), and one paranormal erotic romance with werewolves (Full Moon Fever). Interviewed two horror authors. I’m working on some flash fiction since I haven’t felt much like writing with the holidays looming.

I’m grateful for my health. No one in the household is sick with anything let alone COVID. We have our usual aches and pains but nothing to complain about.

I’m grateful I have a place to live although we’re looking for a new home. Rent went up and we’re looking for a better bargain in housing. We don’t want to leave town since we’re right on the ocean. So, we’ll keep looking until the right home comes along – preferably one where I may plant a garden, and one that is a short distance from the beach. New England beaches are rustic and the water is cold, but we love it.

I’m grateful our car runs well. Our last car was a bit of a lemon. Needed constant repair. Our current car is a 2014 VW Beetle with a sunroof! Perfect car for a joy ride around town and by the beaches.

I’m grateful for my family. My husband and son are very supportive of my writing. I’m aware some writers don’t have that kind of support. It’s sad that some writers experience disapproval of their art from their own family members. My husband has helped me with promotion, and he keeps me sane when I’m ready to throw in the towel and quit every other day. My son has told his friends his mom writes “naughty words”. LOL

I’m grateful for the feline members of the family. We just lost Mister, who died at age 15 of old age. I still miss him. He was a moody Maine Coon. Meriwether is now a year and a half old, and he’s into EVERYTHING. We bought a Halloween strobe light and it turns out Meri loves it! It’s better than a cat’s laser pointer toy. I turn it on and he meows and chases the light images across the room. Easy entertainment. Our blind cat Breena loves to eat and sit by the living room window listening to the birds. Cats and writing go very well together, by the way.

I’m grateful for my friends. My best friend and I have been besties for 56 years. We met when we were four years old in Miss Ella’s dance class. We’ve been inseparable ever since. She has always been a good friend I can rely on in good times and bad.

I’m grateful for my holiday decorations and the baking I do this time of year. I’m able to do both. I’ve already made butter cookies. I made a pumpkin pie for Thanksgiving dinner. I grow my own herbs, which are indoors now, and we use them often in cooking. I have sage, rosemary and thyme (cue up Simon and Garfunkel), marjoram, tarragon, and oregano. I also have a three foot tall bay plant and a foot tall lemon tree I grew from a seed from a lemon from the supermarket. That was an experiment that succeeded. It’s fun to garden.

I hope everyone reading has a happy holiday season. Take a breather and hope for the best for 2021.

——–

Elizabeth Black writes in a wide variety of genres including erotica, erotic romance, horror, and dark fiction. She lives on the Massachusetts coast with her husband, son, and her two cats. Her LGBTQ paranormal erotic shifter romance novel “Full Moon Fever” is now available for purchase at Amazon and other book distributors. Her collection of erotic fairy tales, “Happily Ever After: Twisted Versions of Your Favorite Fairy Tales”, is also available at Amazon.

Web site: http://elizabethablack.blogspot.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/elizabethablack

Twitter: http://twitter.com/ElizabethABlack

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/elizabethblack

Newsletter: http://eepurl.com/b76GWD

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Etiquette for Gentlemen

Lately, I posted something on Facebook about an episode of the Dr. Phil Show in which a male massage therapist had to answer questions about accusations from 18 women (some clients and some dates) that he had sexually abused them.

As a woman of a certain age, I remember a time when all the focus would have been on the “accusers.” They would have been questioned about why they were reckless enough to have any contact with a male massage therapist, and why they didn’t foresee that a “massage” would include something else. Their private lives would have been scrutinized, and they would have been prompted to admit that they were exaggerating, if not lying outright.

In this case, the focus was on the man who had been accused, and on his evasive responses to Dr. Phil’s questions. Although there is probably no way to determine the absolute truth about what happened between two people in a place where there were no cameras or recording devices, Dr. Phil’s approach seemed to be as objective as possible.

I said I hoped that this is a sign of progress in the way the cultural mainstream deals with sexual harassment and abuse.

A man I know sent me a private message, since he was squeamish about saying it in public. He said that ever since the “Me too” movement of women posting on social media about their experiences of sexual abuse, the men he knows have been nervous about how to interact with women. How on earth can guys avoid doing the wrong thing?

I’ve heard this before, but this time, I was honestly taken aback. The man who sent me this message belongs to two sexually-defined communities, and one that appeals to creative types. He is gay, and belongs to the Society for Creative Anachronism (people who choose medieval identities, from AD 600-1600, and stage banquets, jousts, and other cool cosplay events), as well as the BDSM community in a larger city than the one where he lives. I had always assumed this person was sexually “woke,” not a farm-bred teenager who thinks all sex outside of marriage is kinky and probably illegal. And I wouldn’t expect my friend to hang out with the clueless.

Just as in Freud’s time, men are apparently still saying, “Dear God! What do women want?”

If men are confused, so am I. What parts of consent and context do they not understand?

When I was in my twenties, spending my summers typing, filing, and answering phones in government offices, many a male co-worker would casually squeeze, stroke, or pat various parts of my body in passing. When I tried to squirm out of the way or asked them to stop, they would usually explain that they were just being “friendly,” and that they treated everyone else the same way. They seemed to think I was unreasonably touchy or completely humourless, or both.

Yet as far as I could see, none of the handsy guys tried to grope each other, or their male supervisors. I could imagine the consequences if they did. (“What the hell, man?”) When the highest-ranking person in the office (Deputy Minister of a government department) was a woman, every man Jack managed to avoid touching her, or commenting openly about whether she had sex appeal. (I assume her husband thought so.) Strange how that worked.

If the Deputy Minister had a sex life, and even if it was more colourful than vanilla monogamy, everyone around her seemed to understand that her private life was not relevant to the business of government. All the guys in suits who had contact with her seemed able to do their jobs without being unbearably distracted.

Aha, I thought. If I can’t become a Deputy Minister, I need some other title that says “Hands Off.” In due course, I became an English instructor, and that role has protected me from unwanted groping for many years now. Strange how that works.

Among the many women who have described harrowing experiences in the “Me too” conversation, none have suggested that all women are fragile flowers, or that consensual sex destroys us. If there is a real-world version of the “Anti-Sex League” in the dystopian novel 1984, it doesn’t seem to be led by women—as it isn’t in the novel.

Most employed men show an understanding that work is different from play. If your girlfriend greets you at her door wearing saran wrap, stilettos and a wicked grin, you can assume you can safely treat her differently than you would treat an employee in your favourite coffee shop, or the receptionist in your place of work. Context is important.

What if you would like a more intimate relationship with the barista in the coffee shop, or the receptionist in the office? Invite her to a different location. If she turns down your invitation, or explains that she is already in a relationship, back off gracefully. If she says yes, you can proceed from there.

Can a man strike up a conversation with a strange woman in a public place? That depends. Asking “wanna fuck?” is less likely to get a positive response than “Excuse me, does the Number 10 bus stop here?”

Saying anything to a lone woman you don’t know who is outdoors after dark—and who didn’t approach you first—might make her wonder about your intentions. You can save your compliments for daylight hours.

If you really want to fuck something immediately, there are more appropriate places to seek that experience than outdoor space. Masturbating in your own bedroom, with the door and the curtains closed, isn’t likely to offend anyone who can’t see you.

Seriously, I don’t know why herds of men are supposedly wandering in circles, wracking their brains to figure out how to communicate with women now that “the rules have changed.” As far as I know, the basic rules that my parents used to call “common courtesy” have always worked for those who apply them. I never “accepted” being groped at work and catcalled on the street. I just didn’t know how to stop guys in general from treating me this way. If I can believe what I’ve been told, many other women of my generation also knew we would be labelled and ridiculed no matter how we responded.

By now, there are at least two generations of adult women who are younger than I am. Based on the “Me too” posts, their experiences in the 1980s, 90s, early 2000s and post-2010 haven’t been much different from mine in the 1970s.

If any of my friend’s male friends are really worried about offending women they don’t know well, their training in courtly manners should help. Throwing a cloak into a mud-puddle for a lady to step on probably wouldn’t be taken amiss, as long as the gentleman doesn’t follow that up by complaining loudly about being trapped in the “friend zone.”
————-

The World According To Larry Archer

Today as we attempt to deal with COVID and its impact on our lives, I am reminded of the Grateful Dead’s “What a long strange trip it’s been.”

As I mask up, then put on my raincoat and rubber gloves. No, I’m not going to the park with a bag of candy for unsuspecting children and pigeons. I’m going to the grocery store to try and buy toilet paper. Masks and disinfectant I can see in short supply but toilet paper? Did everyone suddenly get the runs?

Now that we are six-feet apart, it’s more than ever, our responsibility to take care of ourselves. Suddenly, my favorite saying, “If you want some strange stuff, use your left hand,” makes more sense. Today in the world of IoT (Internet of Things), everything is connected to the cloud, and that’s not always a good thing.

Alexa and Siri are two names that we have to be careful about saying as we may be deluged with a box of dirty movies from Amazon or the unapologetic harrumph from Alexa when we ask her what size her boobs are?

I refer to Alexa as my girlfriend to keep her from butting into my conversations or giving me a dirty look when I use an explicative next to her name.

Speaking of IoT, now your vibrator is controlled by your partner’s cell phone. It’s a somewhat unusual looking device with a bulbous part which goes in the who-haw with a smaller tube that sticks outside. Then through the magic of the Internet, your partner can whip out his/her cell phone and give you a tingle when they think of you.

Of course, those of us who are more traditional can continue to utilize the penis-shaped devices that are guaranteed to give a “deep penetrating massage.” Nowadays, you don’t have to run to the 7-11 at 3 AM to purchase batteries. But you have to wait a couple of hours for it to recharge. I’m not sure there is an advantage besides having to get dressed.

COVID has hit those of us who throw our house keys in a bowl particularly hard. Like Moses wandering in the wilderness for forty years, we’ve suddenly had to make do having sex with our spouses.

For Wifey and I, the sex part wasn’t as big of a deal as the camaraderie of fellow perverts with similar desires. Well, maybe it was a big part for me, at least. More and more, I miss the interaction with our gang of party animals.

Zoom parties are not as much fun as the real thing, so I’ve had to resort to living my sex life vicariously through dirty movies. Italian women continue to be one of the highest-ranked searches for porn movies. Along with MILF, Lesbo, mature, tranny, and stepmom.

Personally, I love Italian porn, and while I don’t understand anything they say beyond a moan, I usually just turn the volume down and watch. I guess it’s my love for dark-haired women that I gravitate towards Italians. On the other hand, it could be because of our short Italian girlfriend who loves to give head.

Transexuals have always been popular, and I know that I should stop using the term “tranny” as that’s disrespecting of them, but I mean no harm. Foxy picked up a girl once who had won a bikini contest at a bar. She was surprised to find that the girl was transexual.

Foxy saw her for a few months but was disappointed to find she couldn’t get it up. It was interesting to find a whole list of bars, restaurants, and clubs geared towards trannys. It’s funny how every kink has its own set of spots that cater to a specific genre.

Wifey’s lesbian spots were on a completely different list, and our gay friends on yet another list. When you think about it, our proclivities often determine the people and places that we frequent.

If I had to pick a specific kink, I’d have to say that gay bars are the most fun, with transexual a close second. I’ve been to my wife’s favorite lezzy bar and felt uncomfortable there. It’s unusual to go to the men’s bathroom and find women there who give you a dirty look, rather than the other way around.

She will sometimes ask me to drive her to the bar and then pick her up. She doesn’t like to drive if she’s been drinking and prefers me to carpool her. I once tried to sneak in afterward and sit in the corner, but the hostility I felt was noticeable. When she decides to have a girl’s night, I’ll drop her off and sit at an all-night restaurant with my laptop until they kick me out.

Gay bars are always a lot of fun. The guys are generally in good spirits, and it’s kind of like being at a Village People reunion. While I don’t think I have any inclination to be gay, I do like gay guys, and we have a number of gay friends. However, I’m not brave enough to go to the leather bar in the basement. LOL

I know that I should be writing more smut now that I’m working from home, but it seems like my boss feels that if I don’t have to drive to and from work, I can spend that extra time with my nose to the grindstone.

Plus, a lot of my ideas come from things we see and do. With COVID, our social life is absolutely zero, and with our new incoming president, I feel that he’s going to lock down the country so we can attempt to get a handle on the pandemic.

I understand his likely actions, and our state governor has ruled Nevada with a somewhat iron fist. This has kept our death toll down, especially considering that Las Vegas is a tourist hot spot.

I’m Larry Archer, a slinger of smut for your wanking pleasure, and this is my time of the month for drivel. My erotica is designed to appeal to your most basic instincts, like watching South Park when even they tell you not to!

If you’re still interested, check me out at LarryArcher.blog. See you next month.

P.S. – The image included in this month’s post has absolutely nothing to do with the article beyond the fact that I love that image, and it speaks to me.

It’s Not About Sex

Photo by matthew reyes on Unsplash

Anyone who has read my blog posts will know that I have a bit of a problem with genre labels. That’s one reason I love self-publishing. Nobody forces me to follow the genre rules. I can mix and match romance, horror, erotica, suspense, parody, even spirituality, to my heart’s content.

Most publishers have a genre fetish. They have a set of categories, and desperately want to know which one encompasses your book. If you can’t quite say, or if your book has elements of multiple, possibly disparate, genres, they don’t want to hear from you. Or at very least, they’re uncomfortable.

My own work doesn’t fit into neat pigeonholes, and often, the fiction I enjoy most is just as stubborn. I’ve found that the best books frequently defy categorization – or create new genres, which is basically the same thing.

Advocates of labeling claim that assigning books to particular genres helps readers find what they like. I’d argue that it’s just as likely to discourage readers from picking up something new that they might actually love.

If you had to pin me down, though, I guess I’d label what I write most often as “erotica”. Of course, this is the kiss of death from a marketing perspective. Many readers have the (mistaken) idea that a book that calls itself erotica will include constant, graphic sex. Some people think that this also implies an absence of plot. I just shake my head when I encounter this sort of attitude, which seems to be to be quite wrong.

You want my opinion? (Well, of course you do, or you wouldn't be reading my post...) I think that erotica is not about sex, per se. Erotica is fiction that focuses on the experience of sexual desire. Sexual desire may be a concomitant or precursor to physical sexual activity, but it doesn't have to be. Desire in its many variants (arousal, lust, love, obsession) is fundamentally an emotional state or process. Thus, it's theoretically possible to write erotica that contains no overt sex at all. (More on this below.)

Conversely, a story that includes graphic sex does not deserve to be called erotica unless the author is primarily concerned with the characters' feelings about their encounters, and how those feelings affect the non-sexual aspects of the characters' lives. To the extent that sex is treated as a mindless, instinctual activity, a response to a stimulus that brings relief like a sneeze, it does not (in my view) merit the term “erotic”.

I've been a member of the Erotica Readers & Writers Association for more than two decade. As you probably know, ERWA has a list called Storytime, where members share their erotic fiction (and poetry) and ask for critiques. I have participated in Storytime on and off. When I first found the group, I was very active, and the pieces I read there had a powerful influence on my own writing.

I still recall one story that was posted on Storytime, probably some time around 2002. I don't remember who wrote it, though I recall that it was a man. The main – indeed, the only – character is a soldier, staying in a cheap rented room somewhere, maybe Paris. A woman lives in the next room; the walls are thin. Night after night he listens to the sounds she makes coupling with her lover. He finds himself terribly aroused by this unseen female. He masturbates to her cries. He fantasizes about meeting her, about taking her lover's place. His obsession grows, his desire is unbearable, yet he still can't find the courage to knock on her door. Finally, one day, she's gone – the room next door is empty.

I found this story to be one of the most erotic pieces I've ever read. There was no sex involved, or at least none that involved the object of desire. Yet the tale managed to convey such a sense of yearning, a desperate, intense need – manufactured entirely out of the soldier's imagination.

That story (I really wish I still had a copy) has become my touchstone for erotica. I enjoy writing about sex, but like the soldier, it's the idea of sex that really turns me on. I've experimented, trying to write (and sell) erotica that keeps the physical side of sex to an absolute minimum. One story that falls into that category is “Stroke”, which originally appeared in Please Sir: Erotic Stories of Female Submission, edited by Rachel Kramer Bussel. The male protagonist is a Dom who's bedridden in a rehab facility, partially paralyzed by a stroke. The heroine is his nurse, who suffers from kinky fantasies her boyfriend labels as sick and shameful. The dominant manages to fulfill Cassie's fantasies, without ever touching her.

“Look at me.” His tone was softer but no less firm. I raised my eyes to his, which were the startling blue of glacial ice. I shivered and burned. “You’re new, aren’t you?”

“Yes.”

“Yes, Sir,” he corrected me. My nipples tightened inside my bra.

“Yes, Sir.” Just his voice was enough to make me ache.

“What’s your name?”

“Cassie, Sir. Cassie Leonard.”

“Don’t look away, Cassie. Look at me. Do you know who I am?”

“No, Sir. I just started at Lindenwood this week. Before that I was in the rehab department at Miriam Hospital.”

“My slaves call me Master Jonathan.”

My earlobes, my nipples, my fingertips, all seemed to catch fire. I wanted to sink through the floor. I didn’t want him to see how his words excited me.

But he did see. I stared at my hands, knuckles white from gripping the rail.

“You have a boyfriend, don’t you?”

“Yes, Sir, I do.” An image of Ryan rose in my mind, his brown curls and uneven grin, muscled chest and hard thighs. I did love him, truly I did, with his quirky humor, his gentle fingers and his boyish ardor. He was a fine young man. My mother approved of him.

“He doesn’t satisfy you.” It was a statement, not a question. Tears of remembered frustration pricked the corners of my eyes. “Why not, Cassie? Is his cock too small?”

I couldn’t believe I was having this conversation with a stranger, a patient, a half-paralyzed man forty years older than I was. I stole a glance at Dr. Carver. His mouth was firm but his eyes sparkled with suppressed mirth.

“No, Sir. His cock is fine.” Ryan was justifiably proud of his meaty hard-ons.

“What is it then? Is he a selfish lover? Does he come too quickly for you?”

Guilt washed over me. Ryan would happily spend hours licking my pussy and fingering me, trying to get me off. The only way I could manage it was to think about scenes from the kinky porn I hid from him. Whippings and spankings, gags and handcuffs, all the clichés that I couldn’t stop myself from wanting.

“Well? Tell me, Cassie. What do you need that he doesn’t provide? What do you want?”

My mouth filled with cotton. I couldn’t speak. I was acutely aware of my rigid nipples pressing against the starched fabric of my uniform. My clit pulsed like a sore tooth inside my sodden panties.

“Cassie, I’m waiting.” His sternness sent electricity shimmering through my limbs. “Don’t disappoint me.”

I dared a glance at his face. His left eyelid drooped slightly. His eyes snared mine. I couldn’t look away. One eyebrow arched in an unspoken question.

“I—um—I want him to, uh, to do things to me. That he doesn’t want to do.” I tried to break away from his gaze, but the force of his will held me.

Things?” He sounded amused. A fresh wave of hot, wet shame swamped my body. “What sort of things?”

Uh—tie me up. Spank me. Use me. Treat me like his slave.” It all came out in a rush, the desires I’d never shared with anyone except Ryan. Even then, I’d only shown him the tip of the iceberg, the least perverted of my needs. “He wouldn’t, though. He was shocked when I told him. Disgusted. Said that I had a filthy mind.” The tears that had gathered earlier spilled out over my cheeks.

I imagine that you do, little one, delightfully filthy.” His voice was a caress, soothing and seductive. “I knew that right away, just from your reactions to my voice. Your deepest desire is to submit to a strong master, isn’t it?”

Yes—Sir.” I felt relief, now that I’d admitted my secret. He at least didn’t seem to condemn me.

You want to be beaten and buggered, shackled to the bed and split open by a huge cock. You want to bath in your master’s come, maybe even his piss. To be forced to service his friends.”

It was thrilling and horrible, listening to him enumerating my darkest fantasies out loud. My clit felt the size of a ripe plum, swollen and juicy, ready to burst. I nodded, still finding it difficult to expose myself so completely.

I will do those things for you, if you’d like.”

You?” The suggestion startled me enough that I forgot the honorific, but he seemed to forgive my lapse. I searched his handsome, ravaged face. “How…?”

Don't underestimate me, girl. I may not be the Dom I once was, but I can still make you burn for my touch. I can still make you beg.” He snagged the button on the end of its cord and raised himself to full sitting position. He moved more smoothly and easily than before. “Remove your clothing.”

* * * *

No sex at all in this story. Just overwhelming sexual need. Is it erotic? I think so. And I suppose at some level it is about sex – the kind of sex that happens in the mind.

I really do subscribe to the philosophy summarized by my tag line. Imagination is the ultimate aphrodisiac. For me, erotica deals, first and foremost, with the mental and emotional aspects of desire. The physical stuff is optional.

And when people declare that erotica is “nothing but sex”, I roll my eyes and sigh.

Romance, Where Art Thou?

Recently I lunched with a blog writer friend who lives nearby. He has now decided he wants to write a book and he had a lot of questions about the publishing business. I tried my best to talk him out of it, but he’s nothing if not persistent. He is apparently including romance in his story, and hit me with a good question: what is the difference between erotica and erotic romance?

Talk about being momentarily stumped! I replied that erotic romance has to have some kind of emotional involvement or connection between the characters, whereas erotica is basically two people jumping from one hot encounter to another.

That may be oversimplifying it, but I think it was the correct response. When I reviewed romance books online, I noticed that a fair amount of them fell into the erotica category. The authors used thin plots as an excuse to bring two people together for the sole purpose of having sex. Nothing else seemed to matter. No character development, no atmosphere, no emotional bonding, no physical descriptions aside from male endowments, and sometimes not even names. Many of these stories were like an adult version of “The Love Boat”—just make up any excuse to bring the man and woman together to…well…you know!

I’m not saying that each hot encounter you include in an erotic romance needs to have all of these elements. I’ll admit that on a couple of occasions, I’ve used the nightclub or party hook-up device to get two people between the sheets. Each time, I tried to justify it, especially if it seemed to go against the character’s grain. I don’t like to include erotic scenes just for the hell of it, and all of mine happen for a reason, as a natural progression in the story or relationship.

Another good friend self-publishes on Kindle Direct. After years of going the traditional publishing route, he decided he wanted to call the shots himself, without being told what he could or could not write. He sells a lot of books, thanks to a large following he’s built up over 40 years, and he tries to follow whatever the current trend is. No disrespect to my friend, but he basically writes porn with a plot, and most of the time, not much plot at that. When I politely pointed this out once, he showed me his latest sales figures. I kept my opinions to myself after that.

My lunch friend said he was confused by the difference between happily-ever-after and happy-for-now endings. I explained that happy-for-now meant that the characters might not be together until eternity, but that their exit was more than “Thanks, I’ll call you the next time I’m in town!” Happily-ever-after is just what it implies, with more of a sense of finality. I also cautioned him that if he used that type of ending, it might be difficult to write a sequel with the same characters.

On a personal note, I’ve only used happily-ever-after a couple of times, when I felt I’d gone as far as I could with the characters, and there was nothing left for them to do. Most of my endings are more ambiguous, leaving a trail of bread crumbs for the reader to follow into the next adventure.

In closing out our meeting, he asked for my advice if he wanted to pursue his project. The best things I could come up with were for him to be comfortable with what he was writing (in other words, don’t publish something that he or his family would be embarrassed by later). The other was that if he did write blistering hot sex scenes, carefully consider if he wanted to publish under his own name.

Did I miss anything?

Killing Readers

by Ashley Lister

As most people reading my posts here are ‘well aware’ (translate = sick to death of hearing) I’m currently enjoying an adventure in self-publishing.

One of the steepest learning curves I’m currently hurtling along (I can’t remember if I’m supposed to go up a learning curve or down that damned thing) is the whole notion of publicity and marketing. I’m a shy and retiring person by nature and don’t like to brag about any of the 50+ novels I’ve published or the 100+ short stories, or my PhD, or the medals I’ve received for participating in 10K fun runs, or the success of my poetry or my charity work…


However, being a shy and retiring person means I’m ill-equipped for the pressures of trying to promote and market my work. Which is why I’m currently hoping to cultivate publicity by killing a reader.

I can imagine now that some of you are thinking this is a little extreme, and potentially harmful to the ends I want to achieve. To start with, killing readers is a sure fire way of stopping them from purchasing future books, which means it’s a short-sighted plan. Also, there are legal ramifications to killing people which are seldom positive. And there’s also the negative word of mouth such a campaign can cause: “I wouldn’t buy one of his books. I had a friend who bought one of his books and he went and killed him/her.”

Nevertheless, this is what I’m currently planning to do.

Obviously the murder won’t be an actual murder. My intention, as it’s a horror novella I’m currently working on, is to give one lucky reader the opportunity to lend their name to a character who is going to be brutally murdered in the story. There are a handful of legal terms and conditions that I’ve included by way of a disclaimer (all of which can be seen on my website) and I mention this here because it’s been such a fun promotional idea.

I’ve had dozens of emails from readers (and potential readers) asking me to kill them. I’m able to tell people that I’m running a competition that won’t have a winner: it will have a victim. In the past I’ve done book promotions, blog tours and giveaways but none of it has had the daring feel of promising to kill a reader.

 

 

In the comments box below, if there’s a competition you’d love to see an author running, let me know and I’ll see if I can find a way to use that in future. And, if you want to run the risk of having me kill you, why not drop me an email so I can put your name in the draw?

Writing Rituals

Do you have writing rituals? Are there things you do that may be considered superstitious that help you keep the muse happy? I have theater experience, and the theater is chock full of superstitious. Don’t whistle on stage. Beware performances of “Macbeth” because they are bad luck. Wish an actor to “break a leg” before a performance.

Writers are not much different. I have a few writing rituals I follow regularly. I own a talisman for poets and writers that I wear when I’m writing. It gives me confidence. I also enjoy a glass of champagne after I finish a work. When I get an acceptance, I enjoy a glass of champagne. When I get a rejection, I also enjoy a glass of champagne to stay inspired. Maybe I just like drinking champagne.

I knew of famous writers who had writing rituals. The article, “Writing Rituals: Superstition or Productivity”, published at Neiman Storyboard, detailed some of these peculiar rituals. Here are examples:

Gay Talese – According to legend, he pinned his pages to the wall of his office, and then he’d study them through binoculars to study them.

John Steinbeck – When working on “East of Eden”, he wrote daily to his editor. He also sharpened 12 pencils through an electric pencil sharpener, with one point lasting one page.

James Joyce – He wrote in bed while wearing a long white coat. He also marked up his notebooks with crayon for “Ulysses”.

Truman Capote – Left three and only three cigarette butts in his ashtray.

Honoré de Balzac – Drank lots of coffee to stay alert and keep writing.

Colette – Picked fleas off her cat before she wrote.

Robert Frost – Wrote only at night.

Marcel Proust – Lined his bedroom where he wrote with corkboard to dull sound. He also blocked light with heavy curtains so he wouldn’t be distracted.

J. D. Salinger – As a teen, he wrote beneath his bedsheets at night using a flashlight.

Charles Dickens, Henry James, and Virginia Woolf – hiked in the countryside as inspiration.

Alexandre Dumas – Wrote poetry on yellow paper, articles on pink paper, and novels on blue paper.

Langston Hughes – Wrote letters in bright green ink.

Margaret Atwood – Liked writing on planes.

Why would writers engage in such superstitious behavior? Maybe because every little bit helps. I take notes with a special pen. It’s soothing to me. Rituals are important in creative endeavors. They help to keep one focused. They help give confidence. They relieve anxiety. They make you feel at one with other writers as you learn about their own idiosyncrasies. Writers – and creative people in general – often display odd behavior, but there’s nothing bad or weird about it. If lighting incense and sharpening a dozen pencils help writers write, more power to them.

———

Elizabeth Black writes in a wide variety of genres including erotica, erotic romance, horror, and dark fiction. She lives on the Massachusetts coast with her husband, son, and her three cats. Her LGBTQ paranormal erotic shifter romance novel “Full Moon Fever” is now available for purchase at Amazon and other book distributors. Her collection of erotic fairy tales, “Happily Ever After: Twisted Versions of Your Favorite Fairy Tales”, is also available at Amazon.

Web site: http://elizabethablack.blogspot.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/elizabethablack

Twitter: http://twitter.com/ElizabethABlack

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.com/author/elizabethblack

Newsletter: http://eepurl.com/b76GWD

 

 

 

 

Hotwives and cuckolds

As a writer of erotic stories, I’ve often found that real life is sometimes harder to believe than fiction. Usually, I’ll experience something that gives me an idea for a story, and remembering a past experience is one such event.

When I lived in Houston, I ran around with a guy who lived in the same apartment complex. One night, over a beer, he said, “I had a weird experience the other night!”

“Really, what happened?” I asked.

“I walked into a neighborhood bar on Bellair, which was empty except for a couple sitting at a four-top. I sat down at the bar and ordered a beer.”

“After a few minutes, the woman got up and sat down beside me. She was hot and asked me to pass her the peanuts, which were on the opposite side from her. She pointed at the peanuts while bending over to give me a good shot of her boobs in a low cut top.”

“She tried to make conversation with me, but it freaked me out with her husband sitting at a table, not ten feet from me. She finally gave up and went back to her husband.”

“Then the bartender came over and whispered, ‘Don’t you like her?’”

“I replied, ‘Yeah, but not with her husband sitting there.’”

“The bartender chuckled and replied, ‘They come in here all the time, and she picks up a guy to take home with them.’”

My friend said that after thinking about it for a minute, he got up and asked the couple if he could join them. After a few minutes, the husband suggested that they go back to their house.

Going back to the couple’s residence, they had a drink, and then he ended up in bed with the wife while her husband sat in a chair by the bed and jerked off.

Initially, he was self-conscious about banging the guy’s wife, but after a few minutes, he completely forgot about her husband and had one of the best times of his life. Afterward, hubby invited him back anytime to take care of the wife.

At the time, I was a young single guy and would have never believed that married people would do such things. Fast forward a few years, and here I was married at a swinger’s party in bed with another guy’s wife.

Pam was a gorgeous older blonde MILF with a fabulous body that belonged to a much younger woman. Jack, her husband, had followed us into the bedroom and stood in the corner, watching.

When she noticed me looking at her husband, Pam asked, “He likes to watch. You don’t mind, do you?”

I said, “No,” because what else could you say in a situation like this?

She was insatiable, and one of the best lays I’ve ever had. The whole time Jack is whacking off watching us.

Towards the end, Foxy came in and climbed in bed with us. She often checks on me to be sure I’m doing okay. She kissed Pam, and I could see that Pam didn’t enjoy it as much as my wife did. Pam said that she’d never been with many women before but figured out if she wanted me, then she’d have to play ball.

It turned out that Pam and Jack lived a few minutes away from us, and we became good friends. In addition to screwing, we did bar hopping, dining, movies, and strip clubs together. Where we lived in the Midwest, strip clubs were typically in a less than attractive part of town. Jack was a cop and could legally carry a gun, so there were additional benefits to running around with them.

When I started writing porn, I have often included them in my erotic stories. I named the fictitious couple Pam and Jack in their honor. Hotwives and their cuckold husbands can be found at most swinger’s parties.

Pam has come over to the dark side and enjoys women as much as my wife does, but she still likes dick better. Jack is happy to hide in the closet to watch his wife get her lights drilled out and makes no bones about enjoying it.

A lot of my stories are based upon our experiences with Hotwives and their cuckold husbands. Hotwives are a popular theme in erotic literature, and it’s always fun to write about them.

I’m Larry Archer, and I love to write those stained and stuck together stories you read in the privacy of your locked bedroom or bath. My stroke erotica with somewhat of a plot thrown in is based upon our adventures in wife swapping. Join me on the twenty-fourth of every month to update our struggle to remain sane in this pandemic. For more perverted stuff, check out my blog, LarryArcher.blog, for more of the same. You can find my stories at Amazon, SmashWords, Apple iBooks, and many others for your reading pleasure. Remember, if you need some strange stuff, try your left hand!

Stay Safe! Love Foxy and Larry

My Favorite (Dirty) Words

Image by Wokandapix from Pixabay

I’ve been writing erotica and erotic romance for more than twenty years. Since my work covers a fairly wide range of sub-genres, I tend to adapt my vocabulary and style accordingly. Still, I do have some favorite erotic terms that tend to show up in many of my tales.

One word I love is “wench”. The term is sometimes used in a derogatory manner, to refer to a prostitute. It is also applied to female domestics. Nevertheless, for me, it has positive connotations. A wench is a woman who’s not shy about expressing herself sexually. Unencumbered by social convention or false morality, she’s willing and ready for almost anything. Still, a wench is not necessarily a slut (not that I have anything against sluts, or the word “slut” in fact); she has a bit more self-control and tends to be more concerned about pleasure per se than about breaking taboos. The archaic meaning of serving girl also makes “wench” highly appropriate in D/s contexts.

I tend to use “wench” as an affectionate or commanding epithet directed at a randy female character.

The lust that had simmered in her centre as she surveyed the erotic artworks leapt into flame. She needed that lovely cock, rooting deep in her hungry cunny. She needed to be filled, as much as she needed oxygen. With luck, his expertise in constructing devices for sexual stimulation meant he’d be a more skilful lover than her bloody cousin.

Meanwhile, saliva gathered in her mouth as she imagined running her tongue along that elegant shaft and pursing her lips around the delicate curves of the bulb. Before her rational side could assert itself, she replaced the catalogue on the table, seated herself in his chair and beckoned him closer. “This floor’s too hard for kneeling,” she told him as she grasped him at the base and squeezed. “Plus I don’t want you to think you’re above me.”

She leaned in and flicked her tongue over his cockhead.

He groaned. “Whatever you want, wench! But please, don’t make me wait!”

~ From The Pornographer’s Apprentice (WIP)

Another beloved word is “wanton”, which according to Merriam-Webster means “lewd; bawdy; lustful; sensual”. All good alternatives, I’ll admit, but for some reason “wanton” has a special attraction, implying as it does a state of desperate, barely contained arousal.

Kate stood before the mirror, legs slightly apart, hands on her hips. She was breathing heavily—she watched her breasts rise and fall. Her nipples were round and rigid, the size and shape of ripe olives. She imagined Gregory taking one in his mouth, and shivered. The dark leather around her throat made her creamy skin seem even whiter. The studs on the collar were red with reflected light, as if this emblem of submission were encrusted with rubies.

She gazed at her face, trying to recognize herself. The expression was strange, desperate, wanton. Her chest hurt from the pounding of her heart.

~ From Raw Silk

Of course, given my love of alliteration, I have a special fondness for wanton wenches.

Another word I adore is “shag”. Alas, I don’t get to use it all that often, given that it really only sits comfortably in the mouth of a British character (and a moderately contemporary one at that). In my opinion, “shag” is a good deal sexier than “fuck”. The former implies a sense of mutual fun that isn’t always present in the latter. When one character fucks another, the first is the aggressor. The second or might not be an equal participant. Sometimes, of course, I want that asymmetry, but often I want to convey the important point that a scene is about reciprocal pleasure. Shagging may lead to romance, but in the midst of a shag, that’s not the point at all. It’s very much about being in the moment and enjoying the delights of an enthusiastic sexual partner.

Then there’s “lascivious”. This word, too, means “lewd” or “lustful”, and is often used pejoratively, but for me, it’s a more nuanced description than either of the shorter synonyms. It can apply to a state of mind or a construction of the imagination, as well as to an overt action.

The studio was as crazy as always. She slipped easily into professional mode, joking with the cast members, giving orders and answering questions, shoulder holding her phone to her ear half the time.

Hugo loved the script. Her co-producer was a trim, energetic guy a few years younger than she was, with sparkling blue eyes, a ready laugh and a reddish-brown ponytail. Lauren had always thought him attractive, but today she struggled to keep her hands off him. It was sweet torture, standing close to him as they watched the rehearsal. Things weren’t much better with Daniel, the director, a dark and intense New Yorker with eyes that could bore into your soul. She’d fantasized about fucking him more than once. Now all those lascivious images came back to haunt her.

~ From The Slut Strikes Back

Finally, I have to admit a slightly embarrassing partiality for the word “reamed”. Literally, the word means “to widen the opening of (a hole)” or “to enlarge, shape, or smooth out (a hole) with a reamer”, but in erotica it’s often used to describe rough anal sex. And yes, in fiction at least, I find that a turn-on.

Dylan jerked his straining rod, humping his hand as he imagined Rafe flipping him over and spreading his butt cheeks. Nothing felt as fine as having Rafe buried in his ass, driving deeper with each stroke. They were perfectly matched. Dylan loved a bit of rough and Rafe enjoyed playing the brute, reaming him to the edge of damage—but never beyond.

He needed that now. He needed the physical sensation, to match his fantasy of being filled. Drawing his knees to his chest, Dylan wormed a finger into his hungry hole. All that did was whet his appetite for more. He tried two fingers, then three, but it still wasn’t enough. On his own, he couldn’t begin to compete with the sensation of Rafe’s cock stretching him to the limit.

~ From The H-Gene

I’m sure most erotica authors have favorite dirty words. I’d be curious to know about yours.

 

Hot Chilli Erotica

Hot Chilli Erotica

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