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love this kinda stuff.. ive inserted myself as the assaulted wife in my recent story, Tess Takes the Train where she’s assaulted on a train and it turns into a gangbang and its sequel Tess Takes to the Streets is basically her regressing after lots of therapy and it destroying her marriage as she falls in love with her attacker. The final chapter (for now) I’m finishing off and very much an erotic tragedy steeped in depravity.I've done this twice.
My Aftermath story is about the marriage breaking apart, when the husband couldn't deal with the changed wife after her abduction and assault. And at the end of the story, it implies they died longing for each other.
@Lifestyle66,I've done this twice.
My Aftermath story is about the marriage breaking apart, when the husband couldn't deal with the changed wife after her abduction and assault. And at the end of the story, it implies they died longing for each other.
In my latest "A Band of Sisters and Brothers", I could have ended the story with a "happily ever after" with the non-monogamous couple enjoying their group of "swinger" friends. I even considered embedding a statement before the Epilogue saying: "End here for the Happily Ever After".
But it seemed incomplete, and I knew it would draw out the trolls explaining how the couple will eventually get divorced or that the husband should burn the cheating slut. So, I wrote the epilogue and showed how the couple's marriage finally ends.
I've found I don't get as many hater comments on these stories, except for the ones who apparently don't bother to READ the story.
Just "food for thought" as these stories have rated just over 3, at 3.08 and 3.11 (lower than my usual crap average at 3.6.)
Do you ever deliberately write tragedies (other than a Burn the Bitch), something where the MC has a bad ending?
I started writing my last story before Memorial Day, for that same reason.My tragedies generally revolve around what I personally find tragic - the horrible treatment our injured and homeless veterans are subject to. How veteran suicide is a plague on those that served our country and the plague goes ignored, the suffering that brings to their families.
A few of my stories have tragedy elements in them. If I'm doing that, it's because that specific situation could, in my mind, end in no other way. There's always a reason. But I don't always write downers--readers must be kept on their toes, otherwise they'd think, "Ah, I see where this is going. Not today, Areala-chan!" and click away before I got the chance to break them into a million pieces. Sometimes a few cracks in the façade are just as good as a complete shattering.
My goal is always: if you start it, you will want to finish it. And even if you think you know where it's going, you'll have to check to make sure. This is an idiotic goal, because nothing can ever appeal to everybody. But hey, I'm a fantasist, and this is my fantasy.
I only think you might owe readers a warning if there are sudden, out-of-left-field incidents that the story can't telegraph. If you're 7 Lit pages into your story and suddenly a truck blows through a red light and kills one of your characters, that's quite different from how, say @Bramblethorn handles the inevitable in AI Era: Loss Function.So I've been wondering for a while: if you're writing a story with a tragic ending, do you owe your readers a warning? "Owe" isn't the right word, because clearly that's a "no," but would you do it to avoid pissing your readers off? You handle this by warning your "Dead Space: Kendra" readers that "There are no happy endings in the Dead Space universe" and @THBGato by stating that "The Parting Glass" is about heroism, and the tag line "Not all heroines get happy endings."
I'm sure that anyone who's familiar with my stories is looking for a HEA (perhaps straying into "frenemies forever" with "They Were Roommates"), but there's a story I want to write that has a downer ending that I'd really prefer not to telegraph, though there may be hints in the story. I'm thinking about a noncommittal warning like "This story isn't in the same universe, don't expect it to follow the same rules."
So I've been wondering for a while: if you're writing a story with a tragic ending, do you owe your readers a warning?
I only think you would owe readers a warning if there are sudden, out-of-left-field incidents that the story can't telegraph. If you're 7 Lit pages into your story and suddenly a truck blows through a red light and kills one of your characters, that's quite different from how, say @Bramblethorn handles the inevitable in AI Era: Loss Function.
The most tragic of my stories has a clear warning: Life and Death of the She-Wolf. It even begins with the She-Wolf's ghost in her burial mound. She dies.So I've been wondering for a while: if you're writing a story with a tragic ending, do you owe your readers a warning? "Owe" isn't the right word, because clearly that's a "no," but would you do it to avoid pissing your readers off?
Y-you monster...I did Wuthering Heights with a farmer's gangbang on the windy moors in the old pub that was haunted by horny ghosts, but they all had to leave early to get the cows in for milking.
Thanks, saved me reading it.The most tragic of my stories has a clear warning: Life and Death of the She-Wolf. It even begins with the She-Wolf's ghost in her burial mound. She dies.