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Defining Erotic Romance, Romance, and Erotica.
Erotica author, aka Elspeth Potter, on Writing from the Inside
I've published three novels with Harlequin Spice: The Duke & The Pirate Queen; The Duchess, Her Maid, the Groom and Their Lover; and The Moonlight Mistress.
Find out more at victoriajanssen.com.
Contact me at victoriajanssen [at] yahoo [dot] com.
Victoria Janssen ne pourrait pas vivre sans livres, qu'elle dévore avec un insatiable appétit quand elle n'est pas elle-même en train d'en écrire: romances historiques, science-fiction et nouvelles érotiques, elle s'est essayée à tous les genres avec succès. Avec Leçons de plaisir, Victoria nous offre un superbe roman historique qui n'hésite à repousser les limites de l'érotisme.
Victoria Janssen hat bereits mehr als dreißig erotische Kurzgeschichten unter ihrem Pseudonym Elspeth Potter veröffentlicht. Soweit sie weiß, ist sie die einzige Autorin, die jemals eine Geschichte geschrieben hat, in der menschenfressende Schildkröten vorkommen. Die Herzogin, Ihre Zofe, Der Stallbursche Und Ihr Liebhaber, ist Victoria Janssens erster Roman. Wenn sie nicht schreibt oder liest, gibt sie Workshops über das Schreiben und Verkaufen von erotischer Literatur.
Victoria Janssen ci regala un esplosivo romanzo erotico che infrange ogni barriera della trasgressione. Sesso, intrigo e mistero sono i principali ingredienti di questa audace e insuperabile storia, che ci sfiora come la carezza sensuale di un amante e ci cattura come gli artigli di una lupa feroce.
Mmmm. This could be except that I can think of many exceptions.
ReplyDeleteI love this idea, but I need examples. got any?
ReplyDeleteI edited to include some possible examples:
ReplyDeleteExamples, maybe some Emma Holly or Kate Pearce for plot-driven and Kate Douglas and P.F. Kozak other Emma Holly for episodic.
Jennifer, I figure a lot of things won't fit exactly; I think most of the episodic stories do have an overarching plot, for example.
ReplyDeleteIt's helping me to think about my own writing, though.
It's interesting that you picked me and Emma Holly for the plot-driven scenario. It was reading Emma Holly that made a light bulb come on in my head about how I wanted to write and structure my own erotic romances.
ReplyDeleteFor me the sexual development of the characters is 'the' major plot point. The more books I write, the less big outside plot I find I need and the more it becomes about each individual characters drive toward a happy relationship.
I also have to say that I like to read all types of erotic romance and I've never thought of characterizing them this way. I'd also add that there are differences between sex-driven plots and character-driven plots, which .ios kind of what you are saying, I think LOL
Kate, reading Emma Holly is what did it for me too. :)
ReplyDeleteVictoria, I understand what you're saying, I've never thought of categorizing them this way. I think even the first type you were talking about should have some sort of unifying storyline if we're talking about a novel.
Interesting discussion.
Oooh, interesting. This is especially interesting because now I've written one of each of these types as a romance novel (MIND GAMES is the plotty one, THE HOT STREAK built more on the rising action of the sex between the characters... both from Ravenous Romance).
ReplyDeleteIt occurs to me I've done it in erotic sf/f also and that the series-of-scenes kind of plots are a challenge to invent and write. You need a plausible plot reason why the characters have to have sex every chapter, or it will be dull to read even if the sex is hot. This form may have its roots in serial novels, where one chapter was published at a time, so each one had to have a hot scene in it! (That's how my book The Velderet was written and published initially, too, before it appeared in book form.)
Some of the serial novels I've read get repetitive if you try to read more than a chapter a night (I'm thinking of the Beauty books by Anne Rice), but if done well, they shouldn't feel repetitive. Each sex scene should be advancing somehow, either deepening our knowledge of the characters, getting kinkier as they go, raising the emotional stakes, etc...
Cecilia, that's an excellent point about novels intended for serial form. *ponders what Dickens erotica would be like*
ReplyDeleteEach form has its own challenges. I think The Duchess is more episodic (the plot is an escape and return plot, fairly perfunctory) and Moonlight Mistress a bit more plotty--the sex scenes aren't incidental, but they fit into the plot in a different way. I'm still parsing what I did in that one, actually. I need some distance before I can try to analyze what I did.
Kate, I used one of the more episodic Emma Holly novels as the basis for my duchess novel proposal...and I think it's more episodic as a result. I also think it was harder to write than a "plotty" book (even though both forms have plots, of course).
ReplyDelete