Friday, August 7, 2015

* What We’re Rollin’ Around in Lesfic with: Let’s Talk About Sex in Our Books

By Cindy Rizzo (Guest Blogger)

True or False?

  • Sex sells

  • When writing literary fiction, it’s safest to just fade to black

  • Lesbian readers want sweet mutuality in their sex scenes

  • Strap-ons and dominance-submission are no-nos in lesfic romance

  • Sex in non-romance genres—like mysteries, thrillers, and sci fi—should be limited or better yet, fade to black

  • A main character who’s a “player” must always find love so she can settle down and have sex with only one partner

  • If you want to write edgy sex, then write erotica

As you’ve probably guessed, none of these statements can be easily reduced to true or false. That’s why I wanted to talk about sex scenes in lesbian fiction with other authors and with readers. So I proposed a session at this year’s Golden Crown Literary Society Conference called “Fade to Black or Go There.” 

 

I wasn’t very surprised when over 20 conference attendees applied to be panelists. Clearly, sex is, well, a hot topic. In order to give as many people the opportunity to participate, we ended up splitting the session in two, focusing in the first part on an author’s decision about whether to include sex in a book or simply fade to black. In the second part, we focused on the sex itself and how authors think about the kind of sex they include in lesbian fiction.

Part I: No Sex, Were Lesbians?

Five wonderful and thoughtful authors (Jeanine Hoffman, Linda North, Erin O'Reilly, Rebecca Swartz, and Sandra Moran) whose work spans many genres responded to two sets of questions I posed. First, I asked them to talk about how they decide about whether to include explicit sex or write a scene that fades to black. Does genre influence these choices? Then I asked them how much reader expectations influenced them.

Here’s some of what they said:

  • On interspecies sex in sci fi – sometimes anatomy is destiny and the sex might not really work or readers might be weirded out by descriptions of connecting alien body parts. Our panel’s sci fi author read a quick snippet from one of her books that described in detail the prelude to what she called “lovemaking.” In this very short reading, she upped the temperature in the room by describing the strong connection between her two characters and the merging or melding of their hands and lips as they touched and kissed.

  • Be aware of historical realities - of course, people had sex decades and centuries ago, but in order to preserve the tone of sexual mores and character modesty in the time period of a story, it can make sense to leave the scene at fade to black.

  • It might be best for the book to resist the impulse to omit sex – if the story and the characters need sex, then an author’s preconceived notion that the book should be sex-free needs to be re-thought. Some think there’s way too much sex in lesfic, especially in romance. There can, therefore, be the impulse to conflate sex with poor quality fiction. But these kinds of biases need to take a back seat to the needs of the book.

Part II: The Sex

Four authors who write great sex (Chris Paynter, MJ Williamz, Taylor James, and Karin Kallmaker) led the discussion in this second panel.

I began by reading a short piece from my second book, Love Is Enough, that takes place just before the two main characters—who met on a sailing date—are about to have sex for the first time. Here it is:

Angie,” Jan continued, trying to find the right words to explain what she wanted, what she needed. “I want to…I like to be…to be the one who, uh, holds the tiller, you know.”

She moved her hands down Angie’s back and rested them in the curve above her ass and hoped that Angie hadn’t forgotten the parts of a sailboat.

Angie pulled back a little and looked into Jan’s eyes with that cute little pursed-lip smile and tilted head. “Works for me, skipper,” she said. And then into Jan’s ear whispered, “First mate reporting for duty. Do I get a turn on the tiller at some point?”

Jan nodded and breathed out “yeah”

And here’s the same scene without the coded language:

Angie,” Jan continued, “I want to…I like to be.. The thing is, I’m a top.”

She moved her hands down Angie’s back and rested them in the curve above her ass.

Angie pulled back a little and looked into Jan’s eyes with that cute little pursed-lip smile and tilted head. “Works for me,” she said. And then into Jan’s ear whispered, “Are you a stone butch? That is, can I touch you?”

Jan nodded and breathed out “I’m not stone, so yeah.”

While it’s true that the sailing metaphor worked for the characters and the story, there were other considerations as to why I thought I’d be better off with the first version. It was less direct and because of that, it might work better with lesfic romance readers. Was I unnecessarily cautious? One reason why I proposed this panel for the GCLS Con was to help me answer that question.

Again, genre figures into the picture. There’s quite a bit more room to include the second version of that conversation in erotic romance than in regular romance. Erotic romance allows not just for more than the usual three sex scenes in traditional romance, but for more edgy sex.

But then again, romance is romance. Readers are looking for their happily ever after, which means that the main character who starts out as a player, sleeping her way through a community, will reform her wanton ways when she meets that special someone.

What does that say about women and sex? Are we slut-shaming our characters? Or are we just structuring the story to fit what readers expect from a romance?

It was clear from this discussion that there’s no right or wrong way to describe sex between two people. The panelists gave specific examples of characters who needed sweet mutuality (including those with abuse histories, those recovering from the death of a partner, and those living with an illness) and those who needed to claim a kind of raw sexuality in order to feel alive.

I came away from both panels acknowledging that while the questions I have about writing sex scenes in lesfic cannot be fully answered, it’s the discussion that really matters. Like sex in general, it’s important to be candid and clear about needs and expectations so that everyone can then relax and have a good time. And I have to say, we did.

My thanks to the nine panelists and to everyone who attended both discussions. Not all of us want or need the same things from our books, which is one reason why it’s so good that we have access to such a wide variety of stories across genres. The same thing can be said about the sex in our books. Some of us prefer less of it, some of us more. Some want tender sweetness while others need the intensity that comes with edgier, rougher activities. Fortunately, none of it is in short supply.

About Cindy

Cindy Rizzo has published two lesbian romance novels: Exception to the Rule, which won the 2014 award for Best Debut Author from Golden Crown Literary Society and was a finalist for the Rainbow Book Awards, and Love Is Enough. Ylva Publishing will release her third book, Getting Back, in October 2015. Cindys short fiction, The Miracle of the Lights, and V-Day 1978, was also published by Ylva.

Cindy lives in New York City with her wife, Jennifer. You can contact Cindy by email at cindyt.rizzo [at] gmail [dot] com, via Facebook www.facebook.com/ctrizzo, through her blog, www.cindyrizzo.wordpress.com, or on Twitter @cindyrizzo.

* The above title is an homage to the groundbreaking essayWhat Were Rollin Around in Bed With: Sexual Silences in Feminism-A Conversation Toward Ending Themby Amber Hollibaugh and Cherie Moraga (1981), one of the most influential discussions of lesbian sexual politics. The essay can be found at http://www.freedomarchives.org/Documents/Finder/DOC46_scans/46.WhatwereRollinAroundinBedWith.pdf.


5 comments:

Lisabet Sarai said...

Hello, Cindy,

Thanks so much for a great post! You've touched on some of my personal worries. I tend to write on the hotter and more explicit end of the scale (though it does depend on the stories and characters), and I'm sometimes concerned that my work is too raw for the typical lesbian reader. (Actually I worry about that with regard to my het stories as well, especially when the market is romance.)

Ultimately, though, I have to let my stories tell themselves in the way that feels natural. If I alienate some readers, there's nothing much I can do about it.

Margaret Fieland said...

Great discussion. Thanks for posting it. Lisabet, I'm off to Amazon to check out your books.

Anonymous said...

Cindy - you rocked as a moderator on those panels. Thank you again!

Karin Kallmaker said...

This was a thoughtful and well-organized panel - great discussions.

Unknown said...

If you want a guy to read it, keep the sex in. We, okay me, is interested in what lesbians really do when they are in love. I know it's not the stuff of male directed F/F porn where two smoking hot babes are ramming everything possible into every possible orifice screaming like banshees. I haven't read your stuff but I've read plenty of Lisabet's and find it erotic as well as enlightening. How can you be wrong with that?

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