What kind of girls interest you as a writer?

Why not create your poll here instead of trying to direct people off site?
 
I love open minded women with a warm, out going personality that know what they want and how to go about getting it without demanding it. 🌹Kant👠👠👠
 
Women who do whatever they want, with thoughts in their heads, who behave like men... in that, they don't spend hours in front of the mirror, they don't constantly worry about what men think of them, and they take what they want. I find that incredibly attractive.

With the friends I have, it makes me cringe when I see 'femininity' caricatured as emotional pliability and insecurity (in the same way I cringe seeing masculinity represented as the 'Alpha Male', who 'always gets what he wants' with no weakness at all).

Over the last five years or so, I've come to the conclusion that a lot of us don't see women as fully realised human beings. There's nothing mysterious about women... if anything, it seems to me they're more self-aware of what's happening inside them, rather than they have a lot more going on.

Instead of building fifteen bulkheads and pretending the ship isn't sinking, the first sign of water coming in, they get in there and start bailing.

Either way, the ship's in trouble.

Still learning, though. But for now, I'm done with reading or writing women who I can't imagine as real people.
 
All of them, certainly, but primarily intelligent ones. I do believe that beauty and intelligence are linked.

Putting it another way, the classic Essex Girl/Dumb Blonde is unlikely to have anything more than a bit part in my stories, a foil for the heroine perhaps.

Ditto for men, FWIW.
 
All of them, certainly, but primarily intelligent ones. I do believe that beauty and intelligence are linked.
Yes, the sexiest bits of women are what's behind the eyes and between the ears. Everything else follows (progressively down the body, I find) from there. I don't think I could write a dumb woman - what would be the point?

Men are easier to write - you just have to remember they've got two heads but only enough blood to operate one at a time.
 
Girls? No. Real women and men. Flawed, irrational, unpredictable, emotional. And since this is an erotic site, characters are going to get naked. I'm not interested in reading about "perfect perky 40DD tits sitting high on her chest" or "His raging 10 inch erection" . Boobs sag and are uneven. Hair grows in unusual places. Pubic hair is rarely blonde. Ten-inch cocks are as rare as unicorn sweat. Women that can deepthroat one first try equally so. As the saying goes, the differece between fiction and non-fiction is that fiction has to make sense (was that Tom Wolfe?). I want the reality that comes with making sense.
 
Most of my characters are based on myself or people I think I know. We're all fucked. It's easy.
 
Yes, the sexiest bits of women are what's behind the eyes and between the ears. Everything else follows (progressively down the body, I find) from there. I don't think I could write a dumb woman - what would be the point?

Men are easier to write - you just have to remember they've got two heads but only enough blood to operate one at a time.

... which is why there's such physical variation in the women you write...

*whistles innocently*
 
In my writing, my female leads/protagonists are generally drawn from women I've known. Strong, empowered women that know what they want and how they're going to get it. I resent stories that portray your average woman as "the delicate flower" as that's certainly not been my experience. I'm a man but when I try to write a woman's thoughts, I try to present them the way I've experienced them. For example, when a man and a woman approach a situation, more than likely she's looked at it from every direction twice and he's still looking at the frontal assault. :rolleyes:

Just saying ;)
 
Girls that know how to move naturally, and work with the author, work with the lighting, and the camera. She knows how to avoid cliches, move slowly, one who let's the author get close to her; and love her.
 
My favorite female character is Claudia in A Valentine's Day Mess. I named her after a friend from grad school who was a talented soccer player and went on to become a professor at a major university, a department chairman, and (last I checked) head of a research group at a national laboratory.

Claudia is as feminine as she can be, until you suggest that's all she is. She's a farm girl who as a child trained as a competitive figure skater, who runs to stay in shape, and who rides and trains horses. She's a pre-law student in college. She's strong, and as the oldest of five adopted siblings, she responsible. When she needs to be, she's also an absolutely fearless fighter.

And she really likes sex.
 
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