Challenging the Reader

I confess, I’m curious about such dispersion and projection. I really like cerebral writing, not necessarily in the hardcore mechanical Samuel Beckett/Joseph Conrad sense (though obviously I remembered their work well enough to dredge them up for reference), but most definitely in a Storm Constantine/Neil Gaiman arena. I like to think about what I’m reading, and without question what I’m writing. In erotica particularly there remains the idea that sensuality can’t be smart, it can’t prompt catharsis, and it most certainly can’t be self-aware. How dare the pr0n-minded author understand his/her craft, thus conventions, and intentionally drive the reader through every cringe, gasp, heart thud, and clench of thighs? If anything, for me it takes a delicate balance between intricately crafted prose and the space amongst which I can insert my imagination to really come away from a book feeling that an author is gifted, that a book is mind-blowing. As a result, most of the YA, chicklit cum erotica just doesn’t do it for me.
What does it for you? Where is your balance between intellectual and genital stimulation in literature?
Authors, in your writing process, how aware are you of challenging your readers? Is challenging readers a goal of your writing legacy? Your process?
Readers, do you feel his statement is true for you, for the general population? What do you expect from authors? What challenges you? How challenged do you want to be by what you crave to read?
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Published on April 01, 2013 09:26
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Writing Utopia, One Word at a Time
The life and ramblings of an erotica writer’s curious ventures in the formed Beyond.
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