Hi! I am a long-time reader of erotica, but have never set virtual pen to paper until now. I just published my first story to Literotica: https://www.literotica.com/s/nick-a-transgender-womans-first
For a lot of reasons, I'd like feedback on both big-picture and little-picture issues.
1. Voice. Does the narrator's voice strike you as masculine or feminine? I have certainly read stories that are very male-focused (with very sex act-driven elements). And perhaps there are stereotypically "erotica for women" elements. Subject-matter aside (to the extent we can set it aside), where does the narrator fall?
2. Protagonist description. I never directly describe the narrator, although there are appearance clues dropped in there. Is this an effective technique (to let the reader fill in the details in their own mind), or does it detract?
3. Vocabulary. Was it too overt, what I was trying to do with vocabulary and sentence structure?
4. Authenticity, "fit" and ratings. I really am a middle-aged transgender woman, and I suppose that makes me a bit of an oddball for the "Transsexuals & Crossdressers" category. (It seems that a lot of the popular stories there deal with forced feminization or transformation erotica.) To the extent this is a popularity contest, I am pretty sure my ratings are suffering because people are reading my story and not encountering what they expected. I briefly toyed with placing the story in a different category (it certainly spans a whole host of 'em) but ultimately decided that at its core, the story was a trans one. I'm not sure I care about pandering for more votes, but... Is there some other reason I might be getting lousy ratings?
I'd love to hear other feedback, positive or negative. Thanks!
For a lot of reasons, I'd like feedback on both big-picture and little-picture issues.
1. Voice. Does the narrator's voice strike you as masculine or feminine? I have certainly read stories that are very male-focused (with very sex act-driven elements). And perhaps there are stereotypically "erotica for women" elements. Subject-matter aside (to the extent we can set it aside), where does the narrator fall?
2. Protagonist description. I never directly describe the narrator, although there are appearance clues dropped in there. Is this an effective technique (to let the reader fill in the details in their own mind), or does it detract?
3. Vocabulary. Was it too overt, what I was trying to do with vocabulary and sentence structure?
4. Authenticity, "fit" and ratings. I really am a middle-aged transgender woman, and I suppose that makes me a bit of an oddball for the "Transsexuals & Crossdressers" category. (It seems that a lot of the popular stories there deal with forced feminization or transformation erotica.) To the extent this is a popularity contest, I am pretty sure my ratings are suffering because people are reading my story and not encountering what they expected. I briefly toyed with placing the story in a different category (it certainly spans a whole host of 'em) but ultimately decided that at its core, the story was a trans one. I'm not sure I care about pandering for more votes, but... Is there some other reason I might be getting lousy ratings?
I'd love to hear other feedback, positive or negative. Thanks!