H
HandsInTheDark
Guest
I tend to write about everyday people who are wider and thicker than teenagers, hey they get plenty f action too. So describing how a woman has thick thighs or a soft roll of belly, is bigger than the man she's with sets the story apart from either or both of them being straight out of a catalog.
It does set it apart, but it sets it into the category of story I don't want to read.
Plain men and women are assumed to want sex but not get it because, well, they're plain. So once you see them getting some in a story, the instinctive reaction is that they were easy to land, and there is nothing special happening. Who wants to read about that? Brilliant writing can overcome that and you can still pull off a good romance without hot bodies. But short of brilliant writing, you're left with "well, no wonder she's willing - probably the first she's had in ten years." And seeing how women react to dreamboat guys, makes me think that logic is just as applicable on the other side.
The best move in erotica is to describe as little as possible. Readers can and will fill that part in. If they don't want to fill in characters from catalogs - in other words if they want to insert themselves in - they will.
