Monday, March 24, 2014

Guest Blog by Author Sheri Lewis Wohl

A lonely world…or is it?
For so many of us who embrace the writing life, loneliness has been a long-time companion. One we are comfortable with and often embrace. We started as readers, tucked away in the living room, book in hand, tuning out family and friends. Or, under the covers of our beds, flashlight trained on the pages of the book we couldn’t put down until we’d read the very last word. All because we were caught up in worlds that took us away from the life we lived day to day. Stories of adventure and bravery made us believe in things like magic, love, and forgiveness.

For me, that’s exactly the way it was. Through books the world me around blossomed and grew by leaps and bounds. Inside the pages of books like Rebecca, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, and Fahrenheit 451, my world expanded immeasurably. And then somewhere along the line books written by others could no longer tame my growing imagination and I began to put down words of my own. It started slowly. Nothing so grand as a novel. No, it started with poetry that found its way into a magazine. Then short stories. Finally, it was time to make the leap. My first novel was born.

The introvert who preferred solitude to companionship had to get brave. After years of hiding behind books and even behind my own written words, I had to find the strength to let the novel go. So I did. And I failed. Miserably.

It would have been easy to let it go and put forth the sentiment, “at least I tried.” But had I really? The answer, even when hiding in my own lonely world was: NO. Yes, I’d been rejected and yes, the writing left a lot to be desired, but how many of those writers whose works I adored had been through the same experience? Reluctantly I had to admit that the answer was probably most of them. So, I tried again.

I failed again.

And then I tried some more. Along the way I learned and with each successive word, I learned a little more. One day, a letter came. With it came my expectation of yet another rejection. Except, it wasn’t. With that letter, my life changed. I was no longer an aspiring novelist. I was to be a published writer. What I never saw coming was how the shy little girl who read nearly every book in her grade school library was no longer lonely. Writing had given me something more than the joy of creating imaginary worlds and the satisfaction of learning I could succeed. It gave me friends. Many, many friends from other writers to editors to readers. Earnest Hemingway once said “writing, at its best, is a lonely life.” I always thought he was right, but that’s not the way it turned out for me. Writing opened up more than imaginary realms; it opened up my real world and let in friends from around the world. Loneliness might be the hallmark of a writer, but friendship is the reward.

Sheri Lewis Wohl
sherilewiswohl.wordpress.com

 Check out Sheri Lewis Wohl's vampire romances from Bold Strokes Books
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Sunday, March 16, 2014

More CFS from Storm Moon Press

Storm Moon is doing calls for Bisexual and Lesbian erotic romance anthologies with looming deadlines - http://erotica-readers.com/ERA/AR/Storm_Moon_Anthologies.htm

Best Lesbian Erotica 2015 (see previous posts) deadline, also looming.


It's nice to see so many calls for Lesbian and F/F and bi erotic work out there. It was prett dead out there for awhile.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

New CFS - Lesbian Fairytales

New call for Lesbian Fairy Tales antho to be edited by Sacchi Green - http://teresawymore.com/call-for-submissions-lesbian-fairy-tale-erotica/

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Guest Blog - Author Lisabet Sarai







"Tempted"
By Lisabet Sarai

Some of us write for love. Some of us  write for money. Either way, we authors are hungry for reader approval. Perhaps there are some out there who toil away for the pure sake of their art and who honestly don't care whether anyone reads their books or not, but nobody I know personally falls into that category.

As for me, I want to be loved far more than I want to be rich. I want the people who pick up my books to be swept away into the worlds I create – to live, breathe,  suffer and lust right along with my characters and to feel satisfaction, even joy, when my story winds to its close. Positive reviews send me to the stars, not because they'll increase my sales (they probably won't), but because they suggest that I've succeeded in seducing at least one reader.

If you worry about your readers' opinions, though, then you can't help but think about market sentiment, which after all aggregates their views. Then you find yourself making choices based not on what you want to write, not on instinct or on passion, but on your perceptions of what is likely to sell. And that truly is a slippery slope. There's a thin line between adapting to the market and self-censorship.

Much of what I write these days gets labeled as erotic romance. I constantly have to sit on my characters so that they'll behave according the expectations of this genre. In particular, no matter how tempted I am to introduce F/F interaction into my stories, I have to resist. I frequently find my heroines wanting each other, but I don't dare let them consummate their desire because it will alienate my audience. Both my readers and my publishers have told me in no uncertain terms: the majority of people who buy and read romance actively dislike any depiction of Sapphic sexuality.
For example, I just finished the first draft of a novel which includes some fairly wild BDSM ménage scenes (M/F/M). Halfway through the book I came up with a kick-ass secondary character, a female police detective named Toni. It soon became clear that Toni had her eyes on my heroine Emily.  In love with Toni myself, I desperately wanted to see what would happen if I allowed her to express her interest in a physical way. Emily could easily have been open-minded enough to go along. Instead, I ended up including only the faintest hints of mutual attraction – and I wouldn't be surprised if my publisher suggests scrubbing those as well. (They objected to some of the other extracurricular sex.)
Why is there such a bias against F/F relationships in the erotic romance world? Especially when the majority of readers are female? I took a poll once, in the guise of a contest, to find out how my small coterie of fans felt about F/F fiction. The responses ranged from “It just doesn't interest me” to “It's icky.” (I'll admit that one or two replies indicated an enthusiasm for lesbian stories that equals mine. The population for this impromptu survey was after all a self-selected set of people who already like my work!)
I can live with the “doesn't interest me”. After all, my husband has zero inclination toward BDSM, even in fiction, in vivid contrast to my own fascination with power exchange. The “ickiness” factor really bugs me, though.
This isn't sexual conservatism or general homophobia. A big slice of my readership adores gay male erotic romance, especially when the heroes are tall, handsome and intensely masculine. These readers fantasize about such men themselves. It seems only natural they'd expect such men to be drawn to one another.
In contrast, I have the creepy feeling that many women don't find their own bodies attractive enough to be erotically appealing.
That's an ugly, scary thought. I hope it's not true. Given how mercilessly the media beat us over the head with images of impossible beauty, though, I can't rule it out. Most of us don't measure up to the artificial ideal, no matter how much money we spend on cosmetics, clothing and gym memberships. Meanwhile, we're told that anything outside that ideal is unacceptable. Our hairy pussies are disgusting; we'd better go get them waxed. A tummy that's not flat as a board, breasts that are too big or too small, flat feet like mine that can't handle the high heels required to be truly gorgeous – we're conditioned to dislike our physical selves.
How many women do you know who truly love their bodies? And how can you love another, naturally imperfect woman, when your perceptions are colored by these constant messages of female inadequacy?
Of course, there is a market – possibly growing – for F/F erotica and erotic romance among lesbians and bisexuals. In those books, though, market wisdom suggests you should avoid any straight sexual interaction. This literary segregation really annoys me. My characters tend to reflect my own omnisexuality. I want to write about women with men, women with women, men with men, multiples and chains, in the same book (as I did in my first novel fourteen years ago, when I was still a marketing innocent).
Anyway, there's nothing I can do about market pressures, except to resist the urge to self-censor and try to remain honest. When I'm tempted to let my female characters explore one another, I should yield. I'll never be a best seller, so what have I got to lose?
Just for the fun of it, I thought I'd include an excerpt from the very first F/F scene I ever published, in my debut novel Raw Silk. My heroine Kate is in the process of learning about submission from Gregory, who owns a sex bar in the Bangkok red light district. He brings her to the bar, disguises her as Asian, and “forces” her to participate in a live sex show.
****
Gregory handed her a silk kimono. ‘Put this on, and wait behind the curtains until you hear the music. After that - you'll know what to do.’

‘I know that you won't disappoint me, Kate,’ he added. Then he was gone.

Standing in the dim hallway, Kate fought the urge to run. She fantasized about sex in public places, she acknowledged; she had enjoyed the risk of discovery in her recent, outrageous experiences with Somtow. This was different. How could she fuck a stranger, surrounded by strangers, who were watching purely for their own entertainment? Being discovered in the midst of passion was one thing; deliberately exposing the most private of acts to public view was something else altogether.

She had no choice, she told herself. Marshall had required this of her, and she was bound to obey him. She knew she was lying to herself, though. Mixed with her trepidation was a secret, shameful excitement.

The first wails of the saxophone reached her from beyond the curtain. She recognised the tune. Kate pulled the kimono tight around her, swallowed hard, and stepped into the spotlight.

In the brightness, Kate could see nothing. She moved toward the stage, feeling light-headed. It seemed that she floated up the stairs.

Her partner awaited her.

It was the sweet little vamp who had been Uthai's companion in the previous performance. A woman! Gregory was diabolical.

The Thai woman caught her eye. Kate saw kindness in her face, and amusement. Slowly, she began to untie her robe; Kate did the same. The silken fabric slid from their bodies at the same moment. A low murmur rippled through the audience.

The woman held out her hands to Kate, beckoning, inviting. Kate glided across the stage, the music reaching her despite her fear. They clasped hands, standing face to face. We could be sisters, thought Kate. They were exactly matched in height, and like her, the young woman was more generously endowed than was typical for a Thai

Still holding Kate's hands, her partner encircled her and kissed her, open-mouthed. Kate felt a shock at the woman's soft lips and probing tongue. For a moment, she struggled against the invasion. However, her arms were pinned at the small of her back; though seemingly gentle, her partner was remarkably strong.

Perhaps Gregory has instructed her, thought Kate, surrendering to the strange and delicious sensations of the woman's kiss. There was a faint taste of peppermint. The woman drew back and smiled at Kate.

‘Please,’ Kate whispered. ‘You'll have to help me, tell me what to do. This is all new for me.’

Mai khaojai,’ the Thai returned in a whisper. ‘Pood pasa Angkrit mai dai kha. 

Kate knew little Thai, but she understood the gist. Her lovely companion spoke no English. They could communicate only with their bodies. 

The woman's hands were on Kate's breasts now, stroking and fondling. Her touch was unlike anything Kate had known, delicate yet focused, savoring both the smooth skin and the swelling flesh beneath.   Kate's hands hung at her sides, awkward. Her partner's nipples, pert and upturned, seemed to wink at her. Come, don't be shy, they seemed to say, we long for your touch. Hesitant, Kate cupped the twin mounds in her palms, felt the silkiness under her fingers. So strange it was, like caressing herself, but with an extra spark. After a moment, she brushed her thumbs ever so lightly across the woman's nipples. Electricity ran up Kate's spine, as the Thai stiffened and then relaxed, throwing her head back and thrusting her breasts forward.

The music changed, moved into a bridge, and the Thai woman regained control. She half-danced with Kate over to one of the poles, so that Kate was leaning back against it. Then she sank to one knee in front of Kate and used both hands to part the hair hiding Kate's sex.

Panic rose again in Kate's throat. With the spotlight in her eyes, she could not see the audience, but she heard their hot breathing. This passionate dance was too private for their gaze. Yes, she wanted this woman, but she would not, could not, allow herself to be so taken under their crude inspection.

Then thought was erased by sensation, as her partner's tongue swept through her sex in one long, hard stroke that ended with a flick to her clit.

****

About Lisabet
Lisabet Sarai became addicted to words at an early age. She began reading when she was four. She wrote her first story at five years old and her first poem at seven. Since then, she has written plays, tutorials, scholarly articles, marketing brochures, software specifications, self-help books, press releases, a five-hundred page dissertation, and lots of erotica and erotic romance – more than fifty single author titles, plus dozens of short stories in various erotic anthologies, including the Lambda winner Where the Girls Are and the IPPIE Best Erotic Book of 2011, Carnal Machines. Her gay scifi erotic romance Quarantine won a Rainbow Awards 2012 Honorable Mention.

Lisabet has more degrees than anyone would ever need, from prestigious educational institutions who would no doubt be deeply embarrassed by her chosen genre.  She has traveled widely and currently lives in Southeast Asia with her indulgent husband and two exceptional felines, where she pursues an alternative career that is completely unrelated to her creative writing.

For more information about Lisabet and her writing, visit her website (http://www.lisabetsarai.com) or her blog Beyond Romance (http://lisabetsarai.blogspot.com).