NeuralTease
Virgin
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2025
- Posts
- 2
Minors are never exposed to nudity or sex.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Is it? In my experience, that situation is anti-erotic.My sense is, it probably would not meet the guidelines, since the presence of children is part of the erotic thrill of the story.
Is it? In my experience, that situation is anti-erotic.
As with all things at Lit, it depends on how it's written. It could be written as character-building without erotic implications. It could be written as a barrier that turns sex into an awkward quickie. It probably could not get by if it caught Laurel's attention and was part of the erotic thrill.
The test is whether it will add an erotic charge for some significant number of readers, not for all readers, or not for you or for me. And I think it clearly passes that test. The presence of other people, children or not, adds a sense of danger and taboo to the sex -- that adds to eroticism, for at least many people. Otherwise, why have that in the story at all? The kids could be out of the picture entirely. If the author wants kids nearby to be an element, it suggests that the element of danger and risk of exposure adds to the erotic impact of the story. You may not see it that way, but I think many readers will, and I think it's likely Laurel and Manu would think so too, which is why I think there's a good chance it would be rejected.
Maybe I'm answering a rhetorical question, but the situation could arise when building a character or as part of the story. It's a common situation, and it isn't erotic unless you make it so.Otherwise, why have that in the story at all? The kids could be out of the picture entirely.
Maybe I'm answering a rhetorical question, but the situation could arise when building a character or as part of the story. It's a common situation, and it isn't erotic unless you make it so.
Same here - I can't tell you how many times that sexy-time has gotten interrupted by a sound from the other room that sounded like the kids. Nothing fun about worrying about getting caught.Is it? In my experience, that situation is anti-erotic.
I'm guessing the police found a little more in her files. Her apology is curious, "in my replies I wasn't entirely truthful." The kiddies blocks though, there's a clue for even the most jaded cynic. Really? Either that, or the people around her were completely clueless.As much as this isn't my thing, I don't really get any of this.
I understand the book being pulled from Amazon and all, but the arrest? I mean, if they arrested her for this, then the whole ASSTR crew and literally thousands of authors on AO3 are going straight to the guillotine. Is it because the book was published on Amazon? This makes no sense to me.
As much as this isn't my thing, I don't really get any of this.
I understand the book being pulled from Amazon and all, but the arrest? I mean, if they arrested her for this, then the whole ASSTR crew and literally thousands of authors on AO3 are going straight to the guillotine. Is it because the book was published on Amazon? This makes no sense to me.
Well, unless they found something in her files that isn't fiction, like photos of real children or something equally creepy, my question still stands.I'm guessing the police found a little more in her files. Her apology is curious, "in my replies I wasn't entirely truthful." The kiddies blocks though, there's a clue for even the most jaded cynic. Really? Either that, or the people around her were completely clueless.
That's how I understood your post. But if that's the reason for the arrest, the fact that she hinted at something that wasn't intercourse with a child but still some creepy sexual looks or something, my question stands. It's still fiction, and to my pain, I have seen worse, much worse on AO3.Nope. It's the male character's desire for the female character "since she was a three year old."
And, folks, things like THIS are why you have to be careful when you write in under-age characters, even if there is no sex, and why Laurel is so hard-nosed with the under-18 rule.
It's the bit about the "three year old." There's no sex, it's a throwaway piece of background / scene setting for the (legally of age) characters - and this was seen as pedophilia by the Australian authorities and the author was arrested. Seems like overreach to me, but that still didn't stop the author being arrested. Ms Tesolin-Mastrosa was charged with possessing child abuse material, disseminating child abuse material, and producing child abuse material. Ms Tesolin-Mastrosa has since pulled down her social media accounts. The book has also been removed from Amazon and GoodReads.
View attachment 2518413View attachment 2518418View attachment 2518419
The general public doesn't read AO3. Trad published books are in book stores/Amazon.What's the difference in this case?
All right, so it is because it was published on a mainstream place like Amazon. I can't seem to navigate the intricacies of these laws and the way they are applied, but for me, public is public, Amazon or AO3.The general public doesn't read AO3. Trad published books are in book stores/Amazon.
In this case, it looks like an ARC reviewer raised the flag about the content, which was not listed with the other trigger warnings.
I found a screen cap of one of the pages, and it's pretty explicitly pedo.
Additionally, it looks like she also published under the pen name Lauren Ashley and got caught in 2024 for plagiarizing another author's work.
Seems like the outrage is actually called for in this case.
Not necessarily because it was on Amazon, but there are a lot more eyeballs there than on AO3. And the story has been burning up booktok and threads for at least a week now, so the story spreads about it. Someone posting CSA to AO3 probably wouldn't ever make waves outside that site.All right, so it is because it was published on a mainstream place like Amazon. I can't seem to navigate the intricacies of these laws and the way they are applied, but for me, public is public, Amazon or AO3.
We'll find out when she goes to court. She's getting the publicity she'd rather not get - the same press story has gone around the world like wildfire. It's got added fuel because her daytime job was with one of Australia's largest care providers, affiliated with the Baptist Church.I don't know the particulars about how the police in Australia became involved, probably someone called in a tip about it.
From what I've read, Australia has laws that depicting CSA in fiction with minors is a crime. Other places vary.