someone is buying one of these books every five seconds.

ABSTRUSE

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Mills & Boon: 30,000 kisses and steamier than ever

LONDON (Reuters) - Girls: you may have one tucked secretly in your handbag. Boys: you may have stumbled on a stack of them in your girlfriend's closet. Go ahead. Don't be shy.

How about this one? "Loving Evangeline" by Linda Howard: "She could feel the heavy arousal and hunger that tightened his lean, powerful frame. He was going to take her."

Now, pretend you don't want to read on! After all, someone is buying one of these books every five seconds.

A lot has changed for women in the last hundred years. But for romance publisher Mills & Boon, founded a century ago in London, it still takes precisely the same qualities to sweep them off their feet.

"The locations are irresistible, the heroes are exciting," said Clare Sommerfield, the publisher's marketing manager. "It's got to be from the heart and you've got to feel it. Otherwise the readers can spot it."

Founded at a time when women in Britain could not vote and few could work outside the home, Mills & Boon now publishes 60 romance novels a month by a stable of 1,300 writers, nearly all women. It has more than a million readers in Britain alone.

Since it merged with the North American romance publisher Harlequin in the 1970s, its books are published in 94 countries, translated into more than two dozen languages, including Japanese manga comic strip versions with drawings in pink ink.

The publishers estimate they have printed more than 30,000 kisses. And every story -- whether the hero is a Greek billionaire, a surgeon single father of three or an incorrigible 19th century English rake -- has a happy ending.

RAPE FANTASIES OR FAIRYTALES

Not everyone is a fan. Feminist writer Julie Birchel wrote in the Guardian newspaper last year that the books perpetuate stereotypes based on "rape fantasies": "Man chases woman, woman resists, and finally, woman submits in a blaze of passion."

"There's no doubt such novels feed directly into some women's sense of themselves as lesser beings," she wrote. "I would go so far as to say it is misogynistic hate speech."

But readers keep coming back. The firm says its typical readers buy three times as many books as the average reader, and 72 percent of their book purchases are from Mills & Boon.

"They are basically fairytales for women," said Margaret O'Brien, co-curator of an exhibition appearing in Manchester later this year, entitled "And then he kissed her: 100 years of Mills & Boon."

"It has a certain innocence, a certain old-fashioned quality about it," she said. "The structure is still similar to 'Wuthering Heights' or 'Jane Eyre'."

If there's one thing that certainly has changed, it's the sex. There's a whole lot more of it. There used to be none.

"I don't agree that women like dirty books. I think that when it comes to fiction women are like men with their shirts: they like them crisp and comfortable at the same time," wrote Violet Winspear, one of Mills and Boon's most successful writers of the 1960s.

A self-taught writer who left school at 14 to work in a factory and lived as a spinster with her mother, Winspear never traveled yet she thrilled readers with exotic locations and exotic heros -- Arab sheikhs, Brazilian playboys.

"She's got a very strong erotic undertone to what she's writing although there's no explicit sex," said O'Brien.

It was a time when mores were changing. Other shelves in the book shop first began groaning with newly published sex. Mills & Boon caught up, but slowly.

By the mid-1960s, its books had sex scenes between married couples, and by the 1970s unmarried couples got their chance too. But the scenes remained tame and couched in euphemism.

"It tended to be rather breast focused," said Sommerville. "Since then we've expanded our repertoire."

The first oral sex took place in 1982, in a book called "Antigua Kiss." (It was the hero's idea. The heroine was "shocked" but "surrendered to waves of ecstasy.")

In the 1980s, younger writers experimented with more overtly erotic styles, and readers responded by snapping them up.

Today, nearly all Mills and Boon books have explicit sex scenes. In some, such as the "Blaze" series, they can run to six or seven pages, complete with whipped cream, handcuffs and robust, four-letter Anglo-Saxon words.

Even the 19th century period romances have bits Jane Austen or Charlotte Bronte would have left out.

Asked if Mills & Boon would accept Austen's "Emma" or "Pride and Prejudice" if they were submitted today, Sommerville confessed: "You'd have to ramp up the sex a bit."

Still, there's a lot more to a Mills and Boon romance than hanky panky, she insisted.

"You can't just say bung lots of sex in it and that will sell. That's not going to be the winning formula. The winning formula is everything else that goes with it."
 
"someone is buying one of these books every five seconds."

Someone is very busy! And very rich! I suspect that he/she works for Harlequin.
 
"robust, four-letter Anglo-Saxon words"

That's a novel way to put it.
 
In view of that article and those statistics... do you think there is a niche market for such books? I couldn't say, because I am an "idiot". It might be best to consult someone who "know what they are talking about" (when they are ina "good modd").:D
 
Not everyone is a fan. Feminist writer Julie Birchel wrote in the Guardian newspaper last year that the books perpetuate stereotypes based on "rape fantasies": "Man chases woman, woman resists, and finally, woman submits in a blaze of passion."

"There's no doubt such novels feed directly into some women's sense of themselves as lesser beings," she wrote. "I would go so far as to say it is misogynistic hate speech."

I wonder what Ms. Birchel would have to say about Colleen's stuff?

Maybe we should send her a copy of Football Widow.

;)
 
The book that was mentioned as having the first oral scene, Antigua Kiss, can be found on my bookshelf. No idea where it came from (I sure as hell didn't buy it!), but I did read it once upon a time. I vaguely remember it had a totally daft plot, but the sex scenes weren't bad - if you like the idea of the woman lying there like a dead fish while being effectively raped. It wasn't until the last scene that she actually, apparently enjoyed it. :rolleyes:

I wonder how much Mills & Boon authors earn? I bet I could churn out some of those easily enough.
 
you may have stumbled on a stack of them in your girlfriend's closet.

Yea, right underneath the boxful of sex toys.


"The beautiful beaches of San Luis Aspibous were secluded areas of tranquility, the sunshine shone down warming everything with its basking glow on one deserted strip of beach.

No one could hear lil Abs screams.

She was tied to a toppled tree, her milky white heaving breasts betrayed her passion as Lisa approached, the huge strap-on Lisa was wearing glistened and shone in the sunshine.

Lil abs was a virgin, inexperienced and scared, but her diamond hard nipples gave away her excitement.

Lisa rammed her psuedo throbbing manhood into Abs quivering and pulsating vaginal regions, bringing Abs to heights of lust she would never forget, unless she got knocked unconscious and suffered amnesia.

Just then a coconut fell from a tree and hit lil Abs in the head, knocking her out."

Continued in "The Beach Exploded" coming soon from Harlequin Romances.

:D
 
In view of that article and those statistics... do you think there is a niche market for such books? I couldn't say, because I am an "idiot". It might be best to consult someone who "know what they are talking about" (when they are ina "good modd").:D
Hardly a niche-- more like a bottomless chasm!

And the appetite for this stuff is so huge that the worst writers can be successful.
 
I remember back in college me and a mate reckoned we were gonna write one. We never got around to it.
 
You needlessly put yourself down. Even I can draw 'insert A in B' :D
Well..I did get help (putting myself down) on another thread.

Graphic novels are TOUGH..to do..and tougher to do WELL.

Like movies without the musical score!
 
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