AdultCartoons
Virgin
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2019
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- 25
what would you say your best advice is?
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Don't concentrate on the mechanics of sex at the cost of the emotions.
There are some good "how to" articles that have been published here in the "how to" section. I think you will get a more thorough, detailed answer reading them than in responses here. But, that said, here are some of my thoughts:
1. Avoid anatomical measurements and ridiculously exaggerated dimensions. E.g., "He slammed his foot-long meat rod into her waiting honey hole, making her 44E breasts shake and shimmy."
2. Avoid cutesy or ridiculous euphemisms for body parts . E.g., "Meat rod" and "honey hole."
3. Alternative physical description with mental/emotional description. Don't just describe the physical act; let the reader know how the act makes the character or characters feel. Internal dialogue is good, or simply narration of how a character is feeling.
4. Mix in dialogue, too, to reveal how the characters in the sex scene are interacting and how they feel about what's going on.
5. Build up to the sex scene just like you would the climactic scene in any story. Add suspense, tension, anticipation, reluctance, taboo, surprise, or some combination of these things. You want the reader to be desperate for the sex to happen by the time it happens. You also want the reader to have a feel for the characters involved before those characters have sex. Sex is sexier when you feel like you are reading about a real character rather than a cardboard character that has been insufficiently described.
6. Don't change tenses and keep the POV clear. Authors screw these two things up all the time in sex scenes and it's distracting.
7. If realism is important to you, then imagine real people that you know, or at least somewhat like people you know, having the sex in your scene. Ask yourself, would a real person do this?
8. What Vanmyers said, 100% -- throw in descriptions of all the senses.
Don't concentrate on the mechanics of sex at the cost of the emotions.
This, times a thousand.
This is wonderful stuff. Let me add to it:There are some good "how to" articles that have been published here in the "how to" section. I think you will get a more thorough, detailed answer reading them than in responses here. But, that said, here are some of my thoughts:
1. Avoid anatomical measurements and ridiculously exaggerated dimensions. E.g., "He slammed his foot-long meat rod into her waiting honey hole, making her 44E breasts shake and shimmy."
2. Avoid cutesy or ridiculous euphemisms for body parts . E.g., "Meat rod" and "honey hole."
3. Alternative physical description with mental/emotional description. Don't just describe the physical act; let the reader know how the act makes the character or characters feel. Internal dialogue is good, or simply narration of how a character is feeling.
4. Mix in dialogue, too, to reveal how the characters in the sex scene are interacting and how they feel about what's going on.
5. Build up to the sex scene just like you would the climactic scene in any story. Add suspense, tension, anticipation, reluctance, taboo, surprise, or some combination of these things. You want the reader to be desperate for the sex to happen by the time it happens. You also want the reader to have a feel for the characters involved before those characters have sex. Sex is sexier when you feel like you are reading about a real character rather than a cardboard character that has been insufficiently described.
6. Don't change tenses and keep the POV clear. Authors screw these two things up all the time in sex scenes and it's distracting.
7. If realism is important to you, then imagine real people that you know, or at least somewhat like people you know, having the sex in your scene. Ask yourself, would a real person do this?
8. What Vanmyers said, 100% -- throw in descriptions of all the senses.
Ditto. An effective and easy to remember rule of thumb.
There are some good "how to" articles that have been published here in the "how to" section. I think you will get a more thorough, detailed answer reading them than in responses here. But, that said, here are some of my thoughts:
1. Avoid anatomical measurements and ridiculously exaggerated dimensions. E.g., "He slammed his foot-long meat rod into her waiting honey hole, making her 44E breasts shake and shimmy."
2. Avoid cutesy or ridiculous euphemisms for body parts . E.g., "Meat rod" and "honey hole."
3. Alternative physical description with mental/emotional description. Don't just describe the physical act; let the reader know how the act makes the character or characters feel. Internal dialogue is good, or simply narration of how a character is feeling.
4. Mix in dialogue, too, to reveal how the characters in the sex scene are interacting and how they feel about what's going on.
5. Build up to the sex scene just like you would the climactic scene in any story. Add suspense, tension, anticipation, reluctance, taboo, surprise, or some combination of these things. You want the reader to be desperate for the sex to happen by the time it happens. You also want the reader to have a feel for the characters involved before those characters have sex. Sex is sexier when you feel like you are reading about a real character rather than a cardboard character that has been insufficiently described.
6. Don't change tenses and keep the POV clear. Authors screw these two things up all the time in sex scenes and it's distracting.
7. If realism is important to you, then imagine real people that you know, or at least somewhat like people you know, having the sex in your scene. Ask yourself, would a real person do this?
8. What Vanmyers said, 100% -- throw in descriptions of all the senses.
what would you say your best advice is?
What’s your best advice for writing good, realistic sex scenes?
Don't go mad with the dimensions
She only needs an adequate handful or he a sufficient length.
I'd suggest your story contain a relatively realistic plot, interesting characters, believable dialogue, and descriptive narration.
When it comes to sex scenes, think of your description as foreplay through the end of the act. It starts off slow, builds up over several paragraphs, reaches a climax, and then the characters bask in the afterglow.
When I edit, I tell authors for whom I'm editing, they are painting with words. That is, they have images in their heads which they want the reader to "see." So I tell them to use descriptive words and to include small details (she's biting her lower lip as he rubs her clit, his face is contorts as he cums, a long string of sperm drips from her vagina when she stands up, the aroma of sex fills the room, etc.). In summary, you as an author want the reader to "see" the same image you have in your mind.
Read one or more stories by DreamCloud to understand what I've mentioned above.
Or start your story off with wild sex. Once again, fiction doesn't reduce to just a few formulaic arcs. It would be very dull if it did.
The thread is getting into advising limitations fiction doesn't have again.
-snip- ask yourself which words these particular characters would use, and use those in their dialogue.
Alternative physical description with mental/emotional description. Don't just describe the physical act; let the reader know how the act makes the character or characters feel. Internal dialogue is good, or simply narration of how a character is feeling.
4. Mix in dialogue, too, to reveal how the characters in the sex scene are interacting and how they feel about what's going on.
Everything Simon said, and I'd add: think of sex itself as a form of conversation. It's more interesting when there's something going on beyond just "I would like an orgasm".
Unless you have a character who thinks and is turned on in terms of measurements (not necessarily accurate). There are people (both writers and readers) who do, and I don't think writers should toss out that type of character for use in erotic simply because other writers specify limiting "rules" of what to write in fiction--and what "all" readers want--or should want.