'07 Authors Insider Tips
FictionCraft
by Louisa Burton
Formatting Your Manuscript
Scams / Choosing an Agent
Pitching Your Novel...
From The Call to Published...
Hard Business
From Greg Herren
Who Is Telling This Story?
It’s Work, Not A Hobby
Where Ideas Come From
Sexy on the Page
With Shanna Germain
Plotting Erotic Fiction
Seducing Your Muse
Creating Characters...
Description, Action & Dialogue
Fucking on Paper
Ten No-Nos of Erotic Fiction
Climactic Moments: First Draft
Critique Groups
Revising Your Erotic Story
Finding the Perfect Markets...
Just Submit Already
Rejections and Acceptances
Two Girls Kissing
With Amie M. Evans
Verb Tense Confusion
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Attend a Writers’ Conference
The Fundamentals of POV
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No Body Writes for Free...
Shameless Self Promotions
The Myth of Writer's Block
The Write Stuff
From Ashley Lister
The Time is Write
The Beautiful People
A Book by Any Other...
Synopsis: the Necessary Evil
Erotica or Porn?
Feedback Whine
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Ashley Lister Submits
by Ashley Lister
What's it like being a writer?
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An Apology to Salespeople
Get All Worked Up
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About Secrets
The Perfect Fuck
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The Price of Beauty
The G.O.P.
All Worked Up About Hate
Real Men
Pondering Porn
With Ann Regentin
Good Sex: A Physics Lesson
Meet Frankenstein
Thoughts on the Orgasm Gap
The Very Bloody Marys
The Doomsday Erection
Online Threesome Porn
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Amorous Woman
by Donna George Storey
Book Review by Lisabet Sarai
I was musing about erotica recently and realized that all my own novels, as well as most of my favorite work by other authors, could be viewed as stories about journeys. I'm not talking about travel in space. I am referring to an intellectual and emotional exploration, a progression in which characters begin in one psychological place and end up somewhere quite different, changed, more perceptive, perhaps more accepting of themselves, with an improved understanding of their needs and desires. Of course, many mainstream novels can be seen in this light. In erotica, however, the characters' sexual activities and discoveries are the agents of change.
Donna George Storey's wonderful first novel AMOROUS WOMAN is an exceptional example. In the case of Lydia, Ms. Storey's heroine, there is a physical voyage as well, to the fascinating and frustrating culture of contemporary Japan. However, Lydia's real journey is internal, as she strives to balance her sometimes reckless hunger for new sensations with her need for human connection.
Lydia flies to Kyoto eager to taste all the cultural and sensual delicacies that Japan has to offer. Fluent in Japanese, she finds the country more accessible than it would be to most, but in her relationships with its people, and especially its men, she is repeatedly disappointed. She becomes an English teacher bedding college boys, a dutiful wife to a handsome but overworked salaryman, mistress and companion to a powerful tycoon, an exclusive female escort, a sex performer. The delicate perversity of Japanese sexuality continually attracts her. She aches to be included, but no matter how correct her grammar and how outrageous her sexual behavior, ultimately, she remains the gaijin, the stranger.
Ms. Storey takes us back to meet Lydia in her teens, when she first discovers the power of her sexual imagination. From her worldly older cousin she learns the difference between "good" and "bad" girls; it is abundantly clear which category she belongs to. Her imaginary lover encourages her to be audacious:
"You have become a bad girl since you started listening to your cousin. But of course I'm very glad that you're taking her advice. The world would be a happier place with more women like her."
"I'm not sure I have the nerve to do what she said," I confessed.
"Of course you do. I want you to do it and you don't want to disappoint me. Why don't you pick up that brush and press it against your virgin hole?"
With a quivering hand, I reached for the brush and held the rounded end of the handle against my secret lips.
...
"Very good. I knew you could do it. Now move it in and out slowly. I know you want to open yourself for your lover. And for me."
This is indeed exactly what I wanted to do. Somehow he always knew just what to make me do, as if he could see desires inside me I didn't myself understand.
Lydia brings this openness to experience, this willingness to take risks, with her to Japan, where it carries her into adventures and even dangers. What she really craves, though, is to belong.
"What brings you to Japan, Lydia-san?" Dr. Shinohara asked.
...
The honest answer was that I came because I craved adventure, a life of surprises, a non-stop feast of exotic sensual pleasure, anything but a job in investment banking like most of my college friends. But at this point it was probably better to give the doctor my safe, standard line.
"I came to Kyoto to learn traditional Japanese dance."
"I see. Do you enjoy wearing kimono?"
Should I tell him the truth now—that it feels unspeakably sexy to wear one and I loved being bound by the column of cloth hobbling my legs and the obi's snug embrace of my breasts? It probably meant I was a sexual masochist, but I didn't really want to admit it. More exciting was the promise of transformation through that bondage, the chance to shed my foreign awkwardness for the Japanese dancer's gliding grace.
"Yes, I do like wearing kimono, but it's a challenge, too. I have to move my body in a different way, so maybe I can understand, just a little, what it's like to be Japanese. I think it is the Japanese way, in dance and in life, to transform …" I pulled my English-Japanese dictionary from my book bag and quickly leafed through it for the right word.
"Constriction," Dr. Matsumoto read out for me.
"To transform constriction into art."
"Lydia-san understands Japan very well," Dr. Shinohara said to his friend.
...
I bowed my head, my cheeks burning with pleasure. I'd not only been seen, but embraced. How could he have known that was my secret fantasy—the fantasy of all true Kyoto gaijin—that our wandering spirits had reconnected us with us with our lost host?
Lydia's journey takes years. As she delves deeper into Japanese culture as well as her own sexual complexities, she feels more rather than less alien. She begins to take greater risks, flaunting her extravagant sexuality because she can, rather than because she really wants to. Finally, confronted with a man who desires and understands her, whom she probably could love if he weren't married, she has the courage to stop and examine her behavior and desires, and to choose a new path.
I enjoyed AMOROUS WOMAN more than any erotic novel I've read in a long while. Ms. Storey writes with insight and humor. She vividly conveys the sensual experiences of living in a new land.
Each day of my first year in Kyoto brought some wonderful new discovery—a mysterious fox shrine tucked away in a winding alley, the beguiling sweetness of bean jam wrapped in soft rice pastry, a lovely boy bowing nervously as I ushered him into my apartment. Even in the recollection there is magic. The whole year seems to fold in on itself like a dancer's fan, leaving one perfect day in high summer.
As someone who has made her own voyages of discovery into strange cultures, I strongly identified with Lydia and her lust for new experience, as well as her desire to be a part of the wonders around her.
However, Ms. Storey understands more than just foreign cultures. She is an expert at expressing the complexities of sexual relationships. AMOROUS WOMAN includes both real encounters and some deliciously extreme fantasies that Lydia entertains. I found the real-world scenarios more exciting. Ms. Storey manages to show us Lydia's doubts, fears and confusion while still keeping the sexual temperature turned up to the maximum.
AMOROUS WOMAN is definitely arousing but it is much more than a light-hearted bedroom romp through Japan. It is a believable and moving tale of one woman's journey of sexual self-discovery. If you don't mind some serious content mixed with your sex, I recommend it highly.
Lisabet Sarai
December 2007
Amorous Woman by Donna George Storey
(Orion; August 30, 2007; ISBN-10: 1905619170)
available at Amazon.com / Amazon UK.
_____
© 2007 Lisabet Sarai. All rights reserved. Content may not be copied or used in whole or part without written permission from the author.
About the Author:
Lisabet Sarai has been writing ever since she learned how to hold a pencil. She is the author of three erotic novels, Raw Silk, Incognito, and Ruby's Rules; co-editor, with S.F. Mayfair, of the anthology Sacred Exchange (Blue
Moon); and editor of Cream, the Best of the Erotica Readers &
Writers Association.
Visit her website, Lisabet Sarai's
Fantasy Factory for more information and samples of her writing.
Join Lisabet's List on Yahoo for exciting chat, contests, and up-to-date information on publications and events: lisabets_list-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
E-mail this page
Copyright © 1996 and on, Erotica Readers Association, Inc.
All Rights Reserved World Wide. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or
medium without express written permission is prohibited.
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'07 Book Reviews
Anthologies
A for Amour / B for Bondage Review by Ashley Lister
Best Women's Erotica '07 Review by Ashley Lister
The Butcher, The Baker... Review by Ashley Lister
C is for Coeds Review by Ashley Lister
Cream: The Best of ERWA Review by Ashley Lister
Cream: The Best of ERWA
Perceptions by Cervo
Coming Together for the Cure Review by Lisabet
Cross-Dressing Review by Ashley Lister
F is for Fetish Review by Ashley Lister
Got a Minute? Review by Ashley Lister
He's on Top Review by Ashley Lister
Love on the Dark Side Review by Angelika Devlyn
Lust: ...Fantasies for Women Review by Ashley Lister
The Mammoth Book Vol 6 Review by Lisabet Sarai
Naughty Spanking Stories Review by Ashley Lister
Quickies 1 Review by Angelika Devlyn
She's on Top Review by Ashley Lister
Sixteen of the Best Review by Ashley Lister
Novels
Amorous Woman Review by Lisabet Sarai
The Boss Review by Angelika Devlyn
Burning Bright Review by Lisabet Sarai
Call Me By Your Name Review by Lisabet Sarai
Cockhold Review by Lisabet Sarai
Continuum Review by Ashley Lister
Dark Designs Review by Ashley Lister
Equal Opportunities Review by Lisabet Sarai
Enthralled Review by Angelika Devlyn
Flood Review by Angelika Devlyn
Gothic Blue Review by Ashley Lister
Hotbed Review by Ashley Liste
The Lords of Satyr: Nicholas Review by Helen E. H. Madden
Love Song of the Dominatrix Review by Angelika Devlyn
Ménage Review by Angelika Devlyn
Riding the Storm Review by Lisabet Sarai
The Silver Collar Review by Ashley Lister
Split Review by Ashley Lister
Suite Seventeen Review by Ashley Lister
Sweet as Sin Review by Angelika Devlyn
Tiffany Twisted Review by Lisabet Sarai
Top of Her Game Review by Angelika Devlyn
Whalebone Strict Review by Ashley Lister
Wife Swap Review by Gary Russell
Wings of Madness Review by Angelika Devlyn
Gay Erotica
Historical Obsessions Review by Erastes
Homosex: 60 Years of Gay... Review by Erastes
Mammoth Book of New Gay... Review by Erastes
Standish Review by Lisabet Sarai
Lesbian Erotica
Iridescence:...Lesbian Erotica Review by Lisabet Sarai
Sex Guides
The Path of Service Review by Ashley Lister
Secrets of Porn Star Sex Review by Ashley Lister
Touch Me There Review by Ashley Lister
Non-Fiction
Concertina: An Erotic Memoir... Review by Rob Hardy
Daddy's Girl Review by Ashley Lister
Dirt for Art's Sake Review by Rob Hardy
Entangled Lives Review by Lisabet Sarai
Impotence: A Cultural History Review by Rob Hardy
I, Goldstein: My Screwed... Review by Rob Hardy
In Praise of the Whip Review by Rob Hardy
Insatiable: ...Porn Star Review by William S. Dean
Letters of a Portuguese Nun Review by Rob Hardy
Mississippi Sissy Review by Rob Hardy
Ron Jeremy Review by Rob Hardy
Virgin: The Untouched... Review by Rob Hardy
The Year of Yes Review by Rob Hardy
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