DiscipleN
Singular Pronoun
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2001
- Posts
- 16
Pardon the long lead into to a specific question. Touchy subject, as you know.
Am expecting the answer will be, No. That won't trouble me. Walking the line between what is acceptable by Lit., re: underage, and what will be rejected is a risk I'm fine with.
Example of what I believe is acceptable:
"June kept to herself while breastfeeding 4 year old Jimmy at the mall."
The only eroticism is what a reader brings to the description. There is no sexual action involved.
Here is a passage from a work I'm crafting. It's the only passage like it in the story. All other action is 18 or older. I hope that it's okay, but I sense it's risky. The characters John and Grady are known to be underage by the time the reader encounters:
"When Grady found John with me, he demanded me the next day."
In commercial fiction, a line like the one above, and in the same context, is under every publisher's radar. I'm not trying to tell Lit. what to allow. I want to be sure about what they don't.
advice appreciated
Am expecting the answer will be, No. That won't trouble me. Walking the line between what is acceptable by Lit., re: underage, and what will be rejected is a risk I'm fine with.
Example of what I believe is acceptable:
"June kept to herself while breastfeeding 4 year old Jimmy at the mall."
The only eroticism is what a reader brings to the description. There is no sexual action involved.
Here is a passage from a work I'm crafting. It's the only passage like it in the story. All other action is 18 or older. I hope that it's okay, but I sense it's risky. The characters John and Grady are known to be underage by the time the reader encounters:
"When Grady found John with me, he demanded me the next day."
In commercial fiction, a line like the one above, and in the same context, is under every publisher's radar. I'm not trying to tell Lit. what to allow. I want to be sure about what they don't.
advice appreciated