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What was your limit?
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Loren (lolace the case)
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May 13, 2010 07:16AM

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In this book (which I won't name, because it's not the author's fault this happened, and I cringe at the idea of her book getting a bad name for it...the NEW publisher has it labeled correctly), the "hero" beats, imprisons, and publicly humiliates the "heroine." Mind you, it wasn't BDSM and it wasn't consensual play of any sort. But...he loves her, so that's okay, and the publisher called it erom? Oy! Your average romance audience is NOT going to accept that as romantic.
There is a minimum I expect in something called "romance." If you tell me it's dark romance, I still expect certain minimums. What she had wasn't even properly dark romance. I've said it before, and I'll say it again. NEVER lie to or mislead the reader. Never hack off the reader, if you can avoid it.
Brenna


Brenna
I'm pretty tough to squick. Heck, I've written things that would probably make most readers uncomfortable, but my line is crossed when whatever I'm reading includes any kind of nonconsensual sex that's NOT presented as rape, or when the hero abuses the heroine. Noncon and abuse just don't fly with me, and I will stop reading a book if either of those things are presented as anything but wrong.

Brenna

Brenna"
Umm who's the author Brenna?

I also hate the sexual dominance thing. To show you how much I love you I am going to F*&k you silly. Wow really that is also a turn off and I typically cannot read those series either.
@Brenna I agree with you about hero raping the heroine that is a no go and there is one author who seems to do it in every book and people love her. Weird

I found one that had it...then two... By the time I hit the third, enough of that crap. I stopped reading her books, cold turkey. I don't like rape, under the best of circumstances, though I have used rape (presented as rape) in a few of my books, because it was necessary to the story. The men were heroic villains at best and villains at worst.
But the whole "she's not willing and he knows it, but he's going to do it anyway, and they'll love each other later" routine? Not romance in my book. I just can't go there. Loving a man that raped you may have been popular for Luke and Laura, but I didn't even buy it then. That's one of my lines.
Brenna

The Marriage Bed
The Holding
I can't remember the third that set me off, but there was a third.
Brenna



In one book, the scene was described in a bit of detail...on screen, if you want to think of it that way, mainly because the set-up was the hero reliving his heroine's experience through sort of a psychic link. It's traumatic for him (not as traumatic as it was for her, of course), especially because he comes from a world without these sorts of abuses. There were portions skipped over, because the focus switches from his thoughts to what he's seeing and back again, during the scene. The rapist in the scene is not the hero, of course. It's a villain...and a second villain tries to rape the heroine in another scene, but he gets stopped before he can. It's part of her backstory. It affects how she reacts to the threat again. And it is something the hero is afraid to see, when the time comes for it, which is a very deep internal conflict.
In another book, the rape is very loosely described from the standpoint of how both the man and the woman remember it (in different scenes and off screen). And neither of them wants to think about it in detail, so it's not a lot of detail. He was insane when it happened (and never really recovered from that...I make it clear that he's insane for the rest of the books about him). He's the one I call a heroic villain. He does some really good things...or does something good in horrific ways, but he also does things that give himself and everyone around him nightmares. He's not a nice guy and doesn't promise to be one. It's a conflict for the hero vs. the rapist, since it's an unforgivable act...and because the heroine loved the rapist and even tried to forgive him what he did, because she knew he was insane and why he was (she was young, confused, and justifying for him), but he just kept betraying her. It's a conflict for the hero and heroine, though it happened in her past, because she finds it hard to anticipate what the hero is going to do and trust him. And it's an internal conflict, because...well, that's a world thing that I would spoil by revealing it.
In the final one I can remember that includes a rape, it was a villain that the heroine killed off within the first few pages of the book. It's not only off screen, it's only described in her words to the hero, when he finally asks if what he suspects is true.
Brenna


Brenna


Crystal, yeah, I wouldn't touch that one with a ten foot or 1 million foot pole! That is just too much to process..

gross, i wouldnt read it but you still have to say its very unique lol





Yes! I quit after about four pages! It ..."
She wrote them under a different pen name, and basically it's like S&M porn. Once I knew what I had (don't remember where I found it), I got rid of it - FAST! I didn't even bother to read any of them. It's a set of 3 books.

I read all three of the Sleeping Beauty books and didn't really have a problem with them. Fairly standard BDSM fantasy, heavy on the dominant/submissive angle. Not really my cup of tea, but they were a gift so of course I read them.
I didn't care for the sleeping beauty books, either, but it was mainly because I didn't think they were well-written. If I'm reading something erotic, then... well, it should be erotic. Those books just bored me. :\ There's a point when heavy BDSM and kink start to squick me, but generally I don't find that too bothersome. I don't necessarily seek it out all the time, but sometimes I'm in the mood for that sort of reading, heh.

OMG that's disgusting. I didn't read it and I think there's scarring on my brain!
I haven't tried to read anything with bestiality, but that would squick me out. I did read a short story, though, by someone named Sunny where they were were-beings... the "heroine" ended up messing around with a guy who was sort of half-transitioned. That was a bit freaky to me.
The other thing is incest. I've read a few erotica books, so my "recommendations" on Amazon sometimes include more erotica. If I go to the synopsis and/or tags and see anything about incest, it's a no-go. I realize some people may find that hot (obviously people write about it), but that's one of my personal black/white issues. One of the books I read included a part where a young man watched his sister having sex and then pleasured himself with her underwear later. That was *really* close to my line. Thankfully, they never actually touched (and sister didn't have a clue about it) or my reading would have ended right there.
Reading about multiple partners doesn't really bother me. I wouldn't choose to read a m/m story line because it's just not my thing. And I don't mind D/s too much as long as it's respectful and consensual. Forcing does not seem sexy to me. So rape would be out of the picture.
In one of the Mercy Thompson books, she's magically coerced into sex with someone, and I actually cried for her. There weren't many details, but you were reading her thoughts while it was going on... after it was over. It was critical to the story and what happened after, but even reading about it that way was disturbing to me. I can't imagine having more details from either point of view, victim or low-life.


Ditto.

Heather wrote: "OMG that's disgusting. I didn't read it and I think there's scarring on my brain!"
Ya! Tell me about it. Yuck!
As for my limits, well everyone has pretty much said it all.
I too can not tolerate any form of incest. Heather, if it was me I would have stopped reading that book. I have two kids and just the thought of one of my boys doing that ... ah, I don't even wanna go there.
I once read a Cassie Edwards book many years ago, Portrait of Desire I believe its called. I think it's the only book she has ever written with a white hero and heroine. Hero and heroine met early and fell madly in love, but for some reason the heroine kept on lusting after and later slept with her uncle. Yes, her uncle. She knew it was her uncle too.
It was sick. This is the book that weaned me off of Edwards' books for life.
I guess I'm lucky as I hardly come across rape and child abuse in my readings. And I'm glad because I'm unable to deal with neither.
I love my erotica, but I don't like reading about multiple partners all in one go. Just give me one hero and one heroine and we're good to go. I can barely read M/F/M menages so gang bangs, orgies, anything of the sort is out of the question.
I have tried reading MM and I'm just not able to getting it. I involuntarily try to replace one of the guys with a woman in my head so one day I said why bother? Obviously this is not something for me if that keeps happening.
I've read The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty. That was some pretty hardcore BDSM, a little more than I'm comfortable with.

I have two boys... as I was reading that book, I was like "No!" and then with the undies, I'm like "Oh, please tell me we're not going there." Shortly after that, he got interested in a different female (unrelated to him, lol) and you didn't hear any more about him really after that. But the fact that it even went that direction was uncomfortable. That book is the reason I read the tags now. Some of the book descriptions are pretty clear that there's incest, but some are a little vague. If the tag says it, though, I'm marking it "not interested" and moving on.
Funny that with m/m you involuntarily picture one of them as a woman. :-) I can't even read that far into it.
I had heard the Anita Blake books were really good to start, but then got progressively "out there". Did I hear correctly that she did the nasty with a werewolf in its wolf form at one point? But she always uses the excuse of the "ardeur" or whatever? (I read one of the short stories and was so completely confused.) Anyhoo... good to know to stay away from the Sleeping Beauty books, too.


Hmmm... interesting. So not really a wolf, but not really a man either. Was he mid-change or something?
I found the name of that short story by Sunny. It was called Mona Lisa {something... I could swear it was Awakening, but lots of reviews say Betwining}, and it was part of the On the Prowl anthology. Like I said... the guy was sort of mid-change, so it was weird, but that wasn't the only weird thing about that story, lol. One of the Amazon reviews said it would make Laurell Hamilton blush, lol.

I have read the Mona Lisa series up until the last one. There are a lot of similarities with LKH, but believe it or not I think she crosses a few lines that even LKH doesn't.

TDF-Pamela, I too was kinda bored by the Sleeping Beauty books.
The one book that I can think of that kinda bothered me was The Story of O and it didn't bother me because of the D/s stuff but more that O was just plain used. She was told that she was loved and appreciated but when her "time was up" she was basically just tossed aside and now she is beyond being able to go back to the way her life was. She completely changed herself - willingly - for the men she loved and thought loved her but in the end she was just alone and damaged. It made me sad to the point of feeling sick to my stomach.


I really don't like BDSM in books. I can never get into it. Although I have only read 2 books that briefly touch on the subject. I really want to read Ann Rice's "Sleeping Beauty".
I know there is a lot of controversy over rape scenes. I certainly feel there is a wrongness about them but there is also something about it that is very appealing. When authors use "rape" in their books I really don't feel like it's rape because after the encounter both parties are happily satisfied. I think authors use it more for symbolism.
I recently read a m/f/m erotica and LOVED IT! (please don't judge me) That is my new genre.
Don't mind m/m either. Never read a full book just got a little taste form JR Ward's books.
I think one has to slowly progress into the kinkiness of romance/erotica. I started reading Daniel Steel and Nora Robert books. The thought of reading one of those books now bores me to tears.


I don't read erotica if I can help it (!). I don't like books that just have sex for sex sake (glad I don't have to say that out loud LOL). I do like 'hot' sex scenes but they have to have meaning. Another reason I don't like reading erotica is because of the language used. I really can't stand the c word as a description term nor do I like the whole I'm gonna f*** your brains out attitude. Not my thing.
As for domestic abuse, child abuse, rape etc. these things definitely have to be portrayed as NOT ok and I can only usually tolerate it when it is vital to the storyline (cases in point: Eve Dallas & Mercedes Thompson)... in fact I am a sucker for this 'getting over trauma' premise.

No don't say that!! I'm just starting the series!! is it really that bad???

My bug-up-the-ass thing is sex for the hell of it at the expense of a plot.I'd rather see good plot/action,well developed characters and maybe a bit of wit or humour than just mindless sex every chapter.
I read Keri Arthur Beneath a Rising Moon and the plot was spoiled for me because the heroine was being bullied into constant sex by the werewolf guy which really grated on my nerves especially when it was making her cry and he didn't care. Then suddenly she loves him? I hate this 'I will bully and humiliate you and you will love me' books.


She doesn't really enjoy having to have a harem and she resists adding to her harem but once you've made it into the harem then everything's good - as long as the action circles around her and the men don't touch each other or any other female! It is Anita's world after all.

If I judged you for that it would be like the throwing stones at glass houses thing. :-) It's not something I'd do IRL, but reading about it is hot. R. G. Alexander includes m/f/m and m/m/f in her stories, and some of her books have a paranormal theme. Regina in the Sun was about vampires/werewolves (it was #1 of a series). Wicked Sexy was about magic practitioners.
Photojim... legs become like the doors to Wal-Mart... too funny! :-)


I don't read erotica ..."
I totally agree with you. Prude here too!

Heather, I totally agree. Wouldn't do it in real life (although my husband jokes about doing a f/m/f..."hahaha in your dreams babe") but it is so hot. I haven't read a m/m/f but I will. Thanks for the suggestions.
What is it about situations in books that are hot and appealing to read but you wouldn't consider doing or finding sexy in real life?
I kind of find m/m a bit sexy but when I watched "Broke Back Mountain" I couldn't stop cringing throughout that movie.
Oh and for all you prudes out there. Never say never. I used to be like you and not like that much sex in my books. After reading a zillion m/f clean romances, you'll want to spice it up too. :-)



What's hot about it I think is how the characters have absolutely no qualms about it and they all want to make sure the others are well taken care of. It's what they want, it's what the other characters want, so everybody's on the same page. In Regina in the Sun, it was more of a voyeur scene that was the menage. The hero and heroine were only with each other, but the heroine watched a scene with different people. And all three who were involved wanted exactly what was happening. The other one, that's just how it was in that society (two men for every female).
I guess I'm not anywhere secure enough to open myself up to a situation like that and actually enjoy it without having some negative feelings during or afterward. Like I said, hot to read about, but we'll just leave it on a page (video doesn't even work the same, oddly). I'll never say never, but knowing myself and my hubby for that matter, it's just not likely to happen. :-)
And Photojim, even though you mentioned them for Lisa, I'll add those to my list, too, so I thank you. I only recently started with the erotica, and it was after reading some of the hotness of the PNR books. Thankfully there are a few lists on Goodreads for guidance, too.

LOL, Lisa, I think I'm the complete opposite. I don't seem to mind watching gay relationships unfold on screen. I've seen Brokeback and I really enjoyed it. And I recently saw Valentine's Day and there's a love story in there between Bradley Cooper and Eric Dane's characters. So well done. When everything was revealed I was so "awwwwwwww!". Loved it. Actually, theirs were the best part of the movie, I think.
When it comes to books, however, gay romance is a no go. My imagination just won't wrap itself around it, but when on film, I have no problem believing what is before my eyes. Dunno if that makes any sense but there you have it! lol
And by the way, I didn't know you were a prude if you only read one male, one female erotica. Good grief, considering the life I've lived I'd've never seen myself as a prude! But I am a romantic, I will say that, and at the end of the day the best romance is always between two people, imho. Even the hot, sweaty stuff! :)
Books mentioned in this topic
The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty (other topics)Voyeur (other topics)
Blush (other topics)
Their One and Only (other topics)
Voyeur (other topics)
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