Norajane
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2006
- Posts
- 898
malachiteink said:Ok, then here's a question.
In a situation where a particular condition is more of an exception thana rule (like anal self-lubrication), should an author err on the side of more common experience, or provide a line or phrase expressing that the situation is rare but possible? I can picture a number of ways to do this while still keeping the story going -- someone can just remark on it in a lustful voice, for that matter.
Or are the rules of fantasy -- the willing suspension of disbelief by the reader -- the real rule here? If you have the reader firmly believing in your story, won't they just skip over those details (I'm thinking of Stephen Spielberg and the exploding shark in Jaws -- the physics aren't real but the scene is effective and many people believed it). So, if a reader balks at a detail, does that mean the author really didn't have them firmly in hand and believing in the story enough to maintain their suspension of disbelief?
Good gracious, it takes me a long time to ask a simple question!
The pet peeve I mentioned, two cocks fitting into a woman's mouth at the same time, is often found in stories that are otherwise unbelievable as a whole. I can suspend disbelief to a point, but the double-cock always jars me out of it.


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