Arousal and Intellect: My Model Reader

A long time ago, I read a book by Umberto Eco called The Limits of Interpretation. But there is a shorter essay on his site that deals with some of the same issues called “The Author and his Interpreters” online. Eco, like many of his  generation and those immediately preceding it, had given a lot […]

Literature vs Genre: Le Guin’s Hypothesis

I seldom just write a post to point to a blog post, but this is one of those times.  Ursula K. Le Guin has haunted my bookshelf all my life. For one thing, she holds kick-ass opinions on writing sex in fiction. But today, she’s blogged about the Literature / Genre divide: Of course every […]

Girth vs Length: The Novella

In a recent discussion, @AislingWeaver recently brought up the issue of length when it comes to publishing. Not too long ago, Taylor Antrim wrote a very good article on the novella. And just last month, Joe Fassler wrote an article on the novella’s recent resurgence for the Atlantic. There’s a notable literary gulf between the […]

On Fanfic: Do it Baby, One more time

I just had a really compelling conversation on twitter about fanfic. It all started when I found this tumblr post by the lovely Cecilia Ryan. For some reason, this part of the post enraged me: ladylovesgrimm: I do NOT like fanfic. Leave the story writing to the professionals on the shows. As someone who writes […]

Suspense and the Happy Ending

If you’re an Erotic Romance reader, I would really like to talk to you. I’m interested in your experience of happy endings in erotic romance and how, even though you know that the story will end with the lovers getting together, you feel a level of suspense during your reading of the story. If you […]

What’s In A Name?

It has been a long time since I have considered my pen name. I started using it back in 1999 on a newsy sort of blog to keep in touch with family and friends when I moved to Southeast Asia. It started as a joke – a reference to a character in George Orwell’s ‘Burma […]

MR James – One of My Favourite Short Story Writers

Montague Rhodes James (1 August 1862 – 12 June 1936), was a Medieval Scholar and provost at Cambridge. In his spare time, he wrote ghost stories. Although his prose wasn’t terribly poetic, I always thought his sense of place and character was. He was also just a wonderful structural story plotter. All his ghost stories tend […]

Offense – The New Second Hand Smoke

Recently, American Airlines refused to let a woman continue on her journey wearing a t-shirt that says ‘If I wanted the government in my womb, I’d fuck a senator.” You can read more about the incident here. It wasn’t in response to a passenger complaint. One of the flight attendants took offense to it and […]

Points of View: Gaijin and the Silence of Shindo

There is a very good, very fair review of my novella  Gaijin, over on Dear Author. What marks it as a good review is not that it is wholly positive; there are some very pointed and legitimate criticisms of the story, both in the reviewer’s post and in the comments. One question posed in the […]

Gaijin Reviewed

There is a really excellent review of Gaijin up at Dear Author, by Janine Ballard. It isn’t a wholly positive review, as no thorough review should be. But it discusses the themes in the book in a way most reviews of erotica or erotic romance books never bother to do. And, for a writer, that’s […]