I wrote down everything I read and began writing my own first novel...

This blog aimed to contrast what I was reading in in 1975-79 with the same month, week and day, 30 years later in 2005-2009. I'm leaving the blog up in archive mode, blogging in real time on Live Journal--and still writing novels.

Lynne Murray's Live Journal and Bride of the Dead Blog

Monday, November 24, 2008

Kyptonite and what women want



Porno, romance and loading the dice
.
I just read The Devil's Right Hand, the third in a series I enjoy by Lilith Saintcrow. Am I the only person who thinks the cover looks like the bank camera shot of hostage Patricia Hearst robbing the Hibernia Bank?


Patty Hearst

I did have an insight as I read this book into how paranormal romances target women's greatest wish/fear. To give a little background Dante Valentine is necromance who raises the dead and who has formed a relationship with a capital D Demon--the tragic Byronic figure to the tenth power. I don't want to put in much of a spoiler, but when the demon falls for the human, he literally falls....gives her a portion of his power and is inextricably linked to her.

A great deal of the tension in the series so far is Dante's inability to trust this bond. But what struck me was the tension between the Uber-testosterone-laced demonic hero and the way that the heroine has ensnared him.

This reminded me of a conversation with a gay male friend who had just read some women's erotica written by a friend from high school. He had to shake his head at what different fantasies women have. I can't speak with any authority about gay porn, but what little I've read of it leads me to believe that it's similar to heterosexual male porn--with lots of focus on equipment, anatomy and performance. Wait is that a car commercial?

What I've observed about erotica written by women for women is the degree to which power replaces plumbing as the focus. I'm not saying that porn written by women for women doesn't get into serious anatomical exploration. Please feel free to correct me if my baby boom generational thing makes me miss new developments in feminist sensory adventures, but as a general rule I think women often savor the validation involved in arousing desire as a major component of the erotic experience.


In the paranormal romance I see women protagonists loading the dice so that a little sliver of kryptonite pierces the male and renders flight impossible.




There's a similar dynamic of males who breed well in captivity in both of Laurel K. Hamilton popular paranormals series. In each of these the heroine has all the guys to herself and they cannot roam or stray.

And a "Hey Nonny Nonny" to ya'll.

From October 21 to November 24, 1978 I read:

Scribble Scribble by Nora Ephron

The Empty Copper Sea by John D. MacDonald

Confessions of a Compulsive Eater by Diane Broughton
Note: I read this during my dieting days, surprisingly enough when I stopped dieting I no longer had compulsive overeating problems. My own experience has been that the deprivation caused what I will now call "self-starvation related re-feeding."

Copper Gold by Pauline Glen Winslow

Who Really Wrote the Book of Mormon? by Wayne L. owdrey, Howard A Daws and Donald Scales

Will Shakespeare, the Untold Story by John Mortimer

The Duchess of Jermyn Street, the Life and Good Times of Rosa Lewis of the Cavendish Hotel
by Daphne Fielding

Brat Race, Cartoons by Norman Thelwell


Who's Afraid of Elizabeth Taylor?
by Brenda Maddox

Quiet as a Nun by Antonia Fraser

Tell Me Who I Am Before I Die by Christina Peters and Ted Schwartz
Note: Multiple personality

From October 21 to November 24, 2008 I read:


The Devil's Right Hand
by Lilith Saintcrow

The Tomb by F. Paul Wilson
the Repairman Jack series

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