Rules Question

They have/had a legal US requirement.
WRONG! No laws in USA ban writing about underage sex. The LIT rule is because that's how LIT's owner wants it.

Sigh, once again: Underage age sex can be reported but not depicted. You can say it happened, but not how. Say, "She was knocked up at fourteen," but no more. Underage sex includes thoughts; don't fantasize about those kiddies.

More specifically: no sex with anyone who APPEARS to be an underage human. No millennia-old immortals who never reach puberty. No cheating.
 
...

More specifically: no sex with anyone who APPEARS to be an underage human. No millennia-old immortals who never reach puberty. No cheating.

In my 2004 story Christmas Fairy Ch. 01 I created a 12 inch high woman without breaching the guidelines:

There, standing on his pillow, was the woman/fairy of his dreams. She had shed her top to reveal a silver bikini that strained to cover her breasts. Her silver skirt spread over her hips. She had a beautiful golden skin contrasting with her long blonde hair. Her figure... she was obviously very adult with a flawless face that looked as if it had seen too much and yet could still understand.

Paul just stared. This vision was perfect. She was better than any dream he had ever had. This woman was an exact evocation of every physical attribute he found desirable. Her maturity was just right. He didn't feel comfortable with younger women. This one was old enough without appearing to be older than Paul.


In my recently submitted but not yet approved final chapter 03:

Sarah was desperate. She had spent thirty years of her life animating and adapting Minnie to be Paul’s ideal woman...

So the alien is thirty years old at least, and appears mature from first sight.
 
There, standing on his pillow, was the woman/fairy of his dreams. She had shed her top to reveal a silver bikini that strained to cover her breasts. Her silver skirt spread over her hips. She had a beautiful golden skin contrasting with her long blonde hair. Her figure... she was obviously very adult with a flawless face that looked as if it had seen too much and yet could still understand.

Yes, you've clearly written a woman, not a child.

So far as I know, Lit doesn't have a "12 inch rule."

You've got an ergonomic problem, not an age problem...
 
Back
Top