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Florida Friends, harem or not?

Eldof 🚫
Updated:

I've recently started reading the Florida Friends series by Dual Writer, and it's a great story so far. I've read Vacation? and am 16 chapters into Vacation - Two. The only thing I dislike so far is that Dual Writer can't seem to decide if the main couple will have a poly relationship or not. First there was the two "lesbians" who fell in love with Steve and Sue, Sue was talking about how she wanted them to move in with them and it seemed like they were going to be a part of them. Then, snap, they instantly fell in love with a couple of random workers from their job. My thoughts right then were that Dual Writer changed his mind about a harem, since it was really getting set up for it and Sandy and Mandy left them so abruptly.

Then in the second story that I'm reading now, there's Mercy who was even more into Steve and Sue than the "Andys" had been. She had decided to be a permanent part of them and had gone as far as to call them her soulmates. And, bam, she falls in love at first sight with someone else, and she to leaves them very abruptly.

I don't mind if the story goes with a harem route, nor do I mind if it doesn't, but I really dislike how DW can't seem to decide if he will or won't. It's like "let's give Steve a harem" and a little while later "on the other hand, I don't really like harems... Now who of these still unattached guys can I hook up this extra girl/s with..?"

"You know what, a harem might fit in really well at this point.."

"Shit.. I've changed my mind, where can I ship off this new girl to now?"

So I'm wondering if Steve and Sue will end up in a poly relationship or not. Just a 'yes' or 'no' will suffice, I don't really want spoilers from events in the stories. I just want to know so this "hot'n'cold poly relations" will stop bothering me. I'm leaning towards 'yes', since Mercy's mother said that Mercy will be back (I hope agaisnt all odds that they don't take her back though, since I think it's kind of shitty to treat her proclaimed soulmates as a backup plan, while she's chasing after an other infatuation. Atleast I would have a hard time to let her back in on a permanent basis, now that he knows that she has no problems leaving her partners in her committed relationship when someone strikes her fancy. Steve seems incapable of being angry or hurt for any longer period of time, so he'll probably just give her a kiss and a hug and all will be well. I think it'd be fine for Steve to be happy for her that she finds her own happiness, but to take back an ex-girlfriend to a long term relationship after she left her beloved soulmates for someone she spent one day with would be a bit much even for Steve, I think).

sunseeker 🚫

yes they all come back. I didn't care for the Mercy character,,, very little regard or consideration for anyone other than herself

Replies:   Eldof
Eldof 🚫
Updated:

@sunseeker

yes they all come back. I didn't care for the Mercy character,,, very little regard or consideration for anyone other than herself

Well I hope that they give Mercy some shit before she comes back, since like you said it was incredibly selfish of her to leave her partners that she recently had assured that she was a long term part of, for someone she just met, even if he struck her fancy.

If I met a girl and really liked her, I wouldn't leave my longterm girlfriend who I love, to explore any possibilities with this new girl. I'd have to be a real asshole to leave my girl who I'm building a future with and I still love and consider my soulmate, for this other girl, even if we hit it off when we met. That's what Mercy is, an asshole. If my girl did that to me and then came crawling back when her new relationship failed, I'd tell her to go to hell, not invite her back into my life. That might just be me though.

Like I said in my original post, Steve goes with the flow and is incapable of being hurt as long as he's got Sue, so I can definitely see them just welcoming her back with open arms. Though they were both saddened enough to cry when Mercy left, so maybe they'll grow a backbone to make sure that it doesn't happen again. Unlikely, but maybe.

Replies:   Reluctant_Sir
Reluctant_Sir 🚫
Updated:

@Eldof

As much as I enjoyed the stories overall, and especially the series with Chuck as the main character, I tended to completely skip over the sex. Way too much swapping and sharing for my taste. So not a harem so much as it was a commune :) If it had been a harem, Steve's (and to a lesser extent, Chuck's) ladies would not have been so hot to fuck every other guy in the trailer park (or outside of the park too for that matter.)

The cool thing was that skipping the hottub scenes et al does not detract from the rest of the stories.

Replies:   sunseeker
sunseeker 🚫

@Reluctant_Sir

I tended to completely skip over the sex

I tend to do that with almost all the stories now...

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@sunseeker

I tend to do that with almost all the stories now...

Which is why many of us now largely forgo extraneous sex scene. While popular with readers, all it seems to do it to give readers yet another another reason to get pissed and badmouth a story, so in the end, you ask yourself whether it's really worth the effort when more people take the story seriously without the sex. It's sad a few bad apples spoil the scene for the vast majority of readers, but with sex scene, you really can't predict who's going to be in the mood to read about sex at any given point. :(

Keet 🚫

Some authors have 2 versions of a story: one on SOL and the same but with the sex scenes edited out on Finestories. If that is the case for a story I almost always choose the FS version.

ChiMi 🚫

@Keet

Is the sex mentioned?
I also get fed up with overly long and repetitive sex scenes, but I still want to know or see, that the characters have sex.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@ChiMi

Is the sex mentioned?
I also get fed up with overly long and repetitive sex scenes, but I still want to know or see, that the characters have sex.

Oh I don't mind a little sex that adds to story, but too much and I skip those passages or the entire story if there is sex just because of the sex.

Replies:   docholladay
docholladay 🚫

@Keet

Oh I don't mind a little sex that adds to story, but too much and I skip those passages or the entire story if there is sex just because of the sex.

My question is does it add to either the story or the characters development. Preferably it adds to both. Otherwise its just filler material. Even when it adds those details if its not my first time reading the story I tend to skip over it.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@docholladay

My question is does it add to either the story or the characters development. Preferably it adds to both. Otherwise its just filler material. Even when it adds those details if its not my first time reading the story I tend to skip over it.

Some authors seem to add lots of sex because they think it is "required" on a site like SOL and is needed for better scores (just guessing here). It also makes the story longer which seems to attract more readers. For me each story is best with minimal or no sex. If I want more sex I go to other sites ;)
I agree with you that what sex is there should support the story and the characters. If I can skip a sex scene and don't mis anything important to the story then that scene was not needed.

Replies:   ChiMi  StarFleet Carl
ChiMi 🚫

@Keet

Then you also have the other side of the coin where Authors put Story-important stuff in the sex scenes, making it impossible to skip the sex. Getting confused reader-e-mails asking about plot points.

(was it Ernest, Crumbly or REP, who talked about it?)

Ernest Bywater 🚫

@ChiMi

(was it Ernest, Crumbly or REP, who talked about it?)

Arrgh, I should stop answering posts as I work my way down, except that causes me to forget what i was going to say.

In Finding Home I use the early sex scenes to show changes in Al's attitude to sex, people, and life. That only shows in how he deals with people during the sex scenes and how he thinks about them during and afterwards. Skipping the sex scenes means you miss a lot of the attitude changes he has. Once the changes occur and are shown the sex scenes vanish from the story as they've done their job.

Having said that, the stories I wrote with Cazna have a bit of the same, but some also have sex scenes, or extended sex scenes, Caz put in that I wanted to cut, but couldn't.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@ChiMi

Then you also have the other side of the coin where Authors put Story-important stuff in the sex scenes, making it impossible to skip the sex. Getting confused reader-e-mails asking about plot points.

(was it Ernest, Crumbly or REP, who talked about it?)

It was probably me, as I used sex to get my characters to 'open up' and expound on the issues they're facing. Thus, whenever someone skipped over it, they'd be hopeless lost by the very next chapter, since the discussion changed the characters' approach going forward.

Replies:   docholladay
docholladay 🚫

@Vincent Berg

In that case the sex scenes were needed for both the character development and the story. So definitely the scene should be read as a part of the story. Those with open minds will understand its inclusion into the story. Those with closed minds however will probably hate it regardless.

Keet 🚫

@ChiMi

Then you also have the other side of the coin where Authors put Story-important stuff in the sex scenes, making it impossible to skip the sex. Getting confused reader-e-mails asking about plot points.

That's a tricky one. I'm not sure what the author tries to achieve by putting story important things in a sex scene if the sex scene itself is totally unnecessary. Why not put the story important stuff in without the sex?

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

That's a tricky one. I'm not sure what the author tries to achieve by putting story important things in a sex scene if the sex scene itself is totally unnecessary. Why not put the story important stuff in without the sex?

Because it fits. I've discovered, though trial and error, that my characters don't always admit what they're actually afraid of, or what deeply troubles them. Putting them in a romantic setting with a loved one, and suddenly they're gushing their deepest darkest secrets.

Sure, I would write those scenes to better understand the characters, and then immediately burn them so no one ever needs to see them, but then what's the point. Do we really need more 'perfect' emotionless characters? Or do we want characters who aren't sure of themselves, who are struggling to succeed to prove to us, the readers, that it's worth fighting for what we believe, despite the many naysayers continually telling us that we'll never amount to anything because we weren't handed everything in life?

A character without doubts is akin the the MC stories with human 'sex robots' who never question anything the MC asks them to do, when the MC himself is nothing more than the same kind of 'sex robot' never feeling remorse, guilt or a single twinge of self-doubt.

Dominions Son 🚫

@Keet

I'm not sure what the author tries to achieve by putting story important things in a sex scene if the sex scene itself is totally unnecessary.

Who are you to decide if a scene in a story that is used to advance the plot is "unnecessary"?

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Dominions Son

Who are you to decide if a scene in a story that is used to advance the plot is "unnecessary"?

That is not up to me but I can decide for me if I think or feel that a scene is just there to add more sex and not to advance the story. It's just my opinion when reading a story, it shouldn't bother other readers.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Keet

I agree with you that what sex is there should support the story and the characters.

I've two books I'm working on now where there will be sex in them, as part of the development of the character. And later on in the stories, there will be additional sex, but it's not going to be of the long, descriptive type that is earlier in them, simply because I don't think it'll be necessary at that point.

I've been reading Three Square Meals and I find myself just sliding through a lot of the story because the descriptive sex just isn't necessary to develop the plot, once it's been established in the first place.

Replies:   Keet  Remus2  Vincent Berg
Keet 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

I've been reading Three Square Meals and I find myself just sliding through a lot of the story because the descriptive sex just isn't necessary to develop the plot, once it's been established in the first place.

Exactly my point. I follow the same story but I skip almost all sex scenes now that I'm further into the story except those with a new character or if it's implied that it is important to the story.

Remus2 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

I've been reading Three Square Meals and I find myself just sliding through a lot of the story because the descriptive sex just isn't necessary to develop the plot, once it's been established in the first place.

That was why I couldn't make it to the latter portions of the story.
That and the excessive "tawny haired" or "beautiful blonde" etc comments. The story has a lot of potential, but is seriously being dragged down by that imo.

Replies:   ChiMi  Vincent Berg
ChiMi 🚫

@Remus2

Both "three square meals" and "Flight of the code monkey" are dragged down by massive sex scenes.

Replies:   Remus2
Remus2 🚫

@ChiMi

Agreed.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Remus2

That and the excessive "tawny haired" or "beautiful blonde" etc comments. The story has a lot of potential, but is seriously being dragged down by that imo.

That's the danger of the 'never-ending' series stories, they never get the necessary final edit to purge the pointless and unnecessary plot lines. While someone may go back and do a revision/rewrite for a ten or twenty chapter story, they're unlikely too if the story is 50+ chapters! That's why it's best to always write with an ending in mind, simply so you don't get so lost along the way, you can't find your way out of the forest of trivial details. At least with a series (multiple books dealing with the same story theme), each book is revised and cleaned-up before they ever appear in print/online.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

I've been reading Three Square Meals and I find myself just sliding through a lot of the story because the descriptive sex just isn't necessary to develop the plot, once it's been established in the first place.

One pitfall to that thinking, is that while a budding relationship develops, the sex is necessary, but then dropping the sex/romantic element entirely leaves you with an 'abandoned spouse' dilemma. Sometimes it's necessary simply to provide continuity in the story.

I've found myself falling into this particular trap often. How much sex is 'necessary to the plot' and what isn't can be tricky, even in the best of times.

Replies:   ChiMi  StarFleet Carl  Keet
ChiMi 🚫

@Vincent Berg

"they had sex for 3 hours" brings over the same information as a 5.000-word repeating sex scene.

Replies:   StarFleet Carl
StarFleet Carl 🚫

@ChiMi

"they had sex for 3 hours" brings over the same information as a 5.000-word repeating sex scene.

Dammit, I agree with you. Albeit I'd probably make it sound a little better than that. Either way, you're right.

StarFleet Carl 🚫

@Vincent Berg

Sometimes it's necessary simply to provide continuity in the story.

While SOME notation of having sex is necessary, is it needed to repeat what effectively is the same description of a blowjob 50 or 60 times?

Or would it suffice to say, "Alyssa and John retired to his cabin. She looked smug when she returned to the bridge 3 hours later, her belly swollen with his cum.", instead of a three page description that virtually reads the same each and every time, only the woman (or women) involved change.

Note that I'm not knocking the story - it's a slam-bang space opera that I'd like to see finished. I just think it could be made tighter is some of the excessive sex descriptions - especially since it's so repetitious in Chapter 104 to read effectively the same thing you did in Chapter 30 ...

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@StarFleet Carl

While SOME notation of having sex is necessary, is it needed to repeat what effectively is the same description of a blowjob 50 or 60 times?

Or would it suffice to say, "Alyssa and John retired to his cabin. She looked smug when she returned to the bridge 3 hours later, her belly swollen with his cum.", instead of a three page description that virtually reads the same each and every time, only the woman (or women) involved change.

No, but just because the sex doesn't rise to the level of furthering the plot, it doesn't mean you can skimp on the ongoing romance which keeps the story afloat.

Keet 🚫

@Vincent Berg

One pitfall to that thinking, is that while a budding relationship develops, the sex is necessary, but then dropping the sex/romantic element entirely leaves you with an 'abandoned spouse' dilemma. Sometimes it's necessary simply to provide continuity in the story.

You've got a point there that I didn't think of. I do read the first encounters with new characters but often skip follow up scenes. Mostly they are predictable thus I will not miss anything important. If only they were more off-screen and shorter, then I would read all through the story without skipping anything. Three Square Meals and Flight of the Code Monkey are great examples where that would work.

Ernest Bywater 🚫

@Keet

Some authors have 2 versions of a story: one on SOL and the same but with the sex scenes edited out on Finestories. If that is the case for a story I almost always choose the FS version.

And some authors have learned to limit sex scenes to those that tell something about the character or the plot, thus making the skipping of the few sex scenes a loss of important data.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Ernest Bywater

And some authors have learned to limit sex scenes to those that tell something about the character or the plot, thus making the skipping of the few sex scenes a loss of important data.

If there are just "a few" sex scenes at least *I* assume that they add to the story and are important. So I don't skip them. You learn along the way here on SOL by recognizing which authors use (abuse?) sex scenes in a specific way.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

Some authors have 2 versions of a story: one on SOL and the same but with the sex scenes edited out on Finestories. If that is the case for a story I almost always choose the FS version.

I've actually written a couple of stories that deal with adult themes (ex: brother/sister incest), but I keep the sex off-screen, so everyone can wrestle with the conflict. My current story, I wasn't sure I could keep the sex off-screen without spoiling what was required in interspecies sex and how they finally overcame it, so that book isn't appearing on FS. Unfortunately, the sequel (book #3) doesn't have ANY sex in it, so I'm going to figure out how to include the 2nd book anyway.

As a teen, I always liked Science Fiction stories that treated me as an adult (i.e. that didn't try to hide the 'facts of life' from me). So I like taking that approach myself.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Vincent Berg

I've actually written a couple of stories that deal with adult themes (ex: brother/sister incest), but I keep the sex off-screen, so everyone can wrestle with the conflict.

I think that is one of the things that make a better writer: knowing when off-screen is just as effective (or often better) as having a full-blown sex scene.

If your current book has interspecies sex maybe put them on the other sister-site Scifistories? "Interspecies" sounds like SF to me.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

If your current book has interspecies sex maybe put them on the other sister-site Scifistories? "Interspecies" sounds like SF to me.

My stories, mostly Sci-Fi, consistently scores much better on ScifiStories than they do on SOL, but SciFi is where stories go to die. It doesn't get many views or readers. It also doesn't get the necessary feedback authors like me need to vet their story ideas, so they'll know which techniques work and which flop.

What that suggestion sounds to me like is: sequester your stories behind a wall where i NEVER have to see them, simply because they don't appeal to ME.

You're free to either read the stories or not, but demanding anything WITHOUT abundant sex stay OFF of SOL is a going a little overboard, isn't it?

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Vincent Berg

You're free to either read the stories or not, but demanding anything WITHOUT abundant sex stay OFF of SOL is a going a little overboard, isn't it?

I never demanded anything, I just stated how I approach stories with too much unnecessary sex. And the "unnecessary" part is what *I* think or feel as unnecessary. My suggestion to put some stories on SFS was because you mentioned not being able to post these on FS. I did not mean that you don't post them on SOL.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

My suggestion to put some stories on SFS was because you mentioned not being able to post these on FS. I did not mean that you don't post them on SOL.

Ah, sorry, I didn't understand your thoughts. I normally try to post to each site, staggered to bring a few more readers to the alternative sites, but obviously, not every story fits each site. As I said, the nature of my current story precludes it, as the 'sex parts' are necessary to the development of the plot (i.e. they can't be handled off screen without losing the essential bits).

As for D.S.'s point, if a reader can't identify anything in a particular chapter, then it's likely there isn't anything actually advancing the plot. Now, it's a different story if it's foreshadowing something about to happen at a later point, in which case you're right in urging them to 'wait and see'. But for many, many stories, the sex itself is entirely extraneous to the plot. Romance: not as much.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Vincent Berg

I normally try to post to each site, staggered to bring a few more readers to the alternative sites,

With every story I download I first check if they are available on either of the sister sites. 3 reasons for that: 1) less sex, 2) doesn't count on my SOL limit ( ;) ), and 3) support for those sites. I would really like those sites to flourish like SOL does.
It's a shame that older stories that fit those sites but where the authors are no longer active can not be copied to those sites that fit. It would greatly enhance the attractiveness of the sister sites.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

It's a shame that older stories that fit those sites but where the authors are no longer active can not be copied to those sites that fit. It would greatly enhance the attractiveness of the sister sites.

Now that's a great idea! It's also one which I've used myself, when I 'retired' my Catalyst series. But for far too long, Lazeez has been pumping the sites (at least Sci-Fi) with ancient classics which are no longer protected by copyright protection, making it unattractive new new authors to compete with while not showcasing the local SOL talent that fosters loyal fans. If he started shifting at least some of the more popular archived works to those sites, it would allow those low-income readers to continue enjoying them while breathing new life into them as well, thus making them more attractive to new authors seeking a less-competitive environment (my sci-fi stories get significantly better scores on SciFiStories than they do on SOL, for obvious reasons).

Replies:   Keet  robberhands
Keet 🚫
Updated:

@Vincent Berg

But for far too long, Lazeez has been pumping the sites (at least Sci-Fi) with ancient classics which are no longer protected by copyright protection, making it unattractive new new authors to compete with

I never thought about the classics making the sites unattractive to new authors but you might just have a point there. Maybe Lazeez can investigate if there are copyright problems that prevent older stories on SOL to be showcased on the sister sites. It's a hell of a job though digging through those stories to check which site they fit. If there's no copyright problem maybe authors and readers can nominate stories that either fit SFS or FS.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

Maybe Lazeez can investigate if there are copyright problems that prevent older stories on SOL to be showcased on the sister sites. It's a hell of a job though digging through those stories to check which site they fit.

If they submitted the story to SOL, I'd think the non-verbal consent implied is submitting the work would also apply to other sites controlled by the site. As for identifying the stories which fit, it shouldn't be that hard. Retiring a story behind the paywall, if it's tagged as 'Science Fiction' you can submit it to SciFiStories, whether it contains sex or not. If it's tagged 'no sex', then clearly it'll fit within FineStories. Though you're idea of readers suggesting stories they'd prefer being preserved on those alternate sights has some merit, especially if it means removing popular stories which attract a lot of readers. At this point, the majority of stories on SciFiStories seems to be the older 'Classic stories' by the older best-selling novelists.

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫

@Vincent Berg

If they submitted the story to SOL, I'd think the non-verbal consent implied is submitting the work would also apply to other sites controlled by the site. As for identifying the stories which fit, it shouldn't be that hard. Retiring a story behind the paywall, if it's tagged as 'Science Fiction' you can submit it to SciFiStories, whether it contains sex or not. If it's tagged 'no sex', then clearly it'll fit within FineStories. Though you're idea of readers suggesting stories they'd prefer being preserved on those alternate sights has some merit, especially if it means removing popular stories which attract a lot of readers. At this point, the majority of stories on SciFiStories seems to be the older 'Classic stories' by the older best-selling novelists.

I hope Lazeez picked up on this and does some thinking about the possibilities. It just might be the push SFS and FS need to really get going. Maybe later on even push the classics into a separate section so they don't discourage authors from competing with those.

Lazeez Jiddan (Webmaster)

@Keet

If they submitted the story to SOL, I'd think the non-verbal consent implied is submitting the work would also apply to other sites controlled by the site.


Clause #2 of the authors agreement has had the language to allow posting to other sites since I created the parent company in 2001.

I hope Lazeez picked up on this and does some thinking about the possibilities. It just might be the push SFS and FS need to really get going. Maybe later on even push the classics into a separate section so they don't discourage authors from competing with those.

The classic are needed to give something to readers come to the site. As you all may know, having a site is a catch 22 thing. No readers come if there are no stories and no authors come if there are no readers. A site has to start with something. The classics don't need permission so they're the best option to start with.

Also, I started with the public domain stuff as I would like to make scifistories.com the best place for scifi of every kind, including the classics. Now that we're kind of exhausting the supply on gutenberg, I'll work on getting what's on SOL and FS available on Scifistories.com too. Hopefully, that attracts enough readers to make it worth it to authors to post on Scifistories and have the site to be self sustaining like SOL.

The plan is to have a story server engine that can supply multiple sites according to whatever criteria the site has. So any scifi story posted on SOL becomes automatically available on scifi and if it's no-sex, then it's also automatically available on FS too without the author having to make the effort to post on the other sites, and vice versa for stories posted on scifi and FS.

Replies:   Keet  Vincent Berg
Keet 🚫

@Lazeez Jiddan (Webmaster)

The plan is to have a story server engine that can supply multiple sites according to whatever criteria the site has. So any scifi story posted on SOL becomes automatically available on scifi and if it's no-sex, then it's also automatically available on FS too without the author having to make the effort to post on the other sites, and vice versa for stories posted on scifi and FS.

Great!

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

The plan is to have a story server engine that can supply multiple sites according to whatever criteria the site has. So any scifi story posted on SOL becomes automatically available on scifi and if it's no-sex, then it's also automatically available on FS too without the author having to make the effort to post on the other sites, and vice versa for stories posted on scifi and FS.

Great!

Sorta, but at least for FS, I like to cater my stories to fit the site. But, since the few sex codes would limit that anyway, I can continue doing it as I am.)

I wonder whether a 'Romance' site would attract much attention. Many SOL stories would fit, though they fly in the face of most conventional definitions of romance (i.e. they're written from a man's perspective).

Replies:   Keet
Keet 🚫
Updated:

@Vincent Berg

I wonder whether a 'Romance' site would attract much attention. Many SOL stories would fit, though they fly in the face of most conventional definitions of romance (i.e. they're written from a man's perspective).

I think that, besides SOL, Finestories is the site for romantic stories although some might not qualify because of sex content. Event the slightest bit of sex would prevent them from being available on FS. I don't know what the exact selection criteria are but perhaps the criteria for FS should be what they are for current public publishing. I mean, 50 Shades of Grey is publicly available...

edit: typos

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Lazeez Jiddan (Webmaster)

The classic are needed to give something to readers come to the site. As you all may know, having a site is a catch 22 thing. No readers come if there are no stories and no authors come if there are no readers. A site has to start with something. The classics don't need permission so they're the best option to start with.

Just as an alternative, rather than posting more classic stories, maybe we should run a few contests? Enter the 'Best Sci-Fi and/or non-sexual story contest and see who wins'. If you didn't limit the time for submission or the length, chances are the entries would trickle in for some time, as the longer stories would take longer to write than most SOL stories allow.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

I hope Lazeez picked up on this and does some thinking about the possibilities. It just might be the push SFS and FS need to really get going. Maybe later on even push the classics into a separate section so they don't discourage authors from competing with those.

Since the 'classic authors' don't sign into SOL very frequently, the Classic stories should age out after five years (unless they count as the admin's stories, in which case they'll never age out!).

robberhands 🚫

@Vincent Berg

But for far too long, Lazeez has been pumping the sites (at least Sci-Fi) with ancient classics which are no longer protected by copyright protection, making it unattractive new new authors to compete with while not showcasing the local SOL talent that fosters loyal fans.

You should stop thinking about it as a competition, instead relish the honor of your books being listed next to the works of Asimov, Heinlein, or H. G. Wells.

Replies:   Keet  Vincent Berg
Keet 🚫

@robberhands

You should stop thinking about it as a competition, instead relish the honor of your books being listed next to the works of Asimov, Heinlein, or H. G. Wells.

I'm sure some authors think like that but I'm also sure some other authors feel like they don't belong there.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

I'm sure some authors think like that but I'm also sure some other authors feel like they don't belong there.

I don't think it's a matter of them not belonging, but I question whether 1) the large number of Classic Stories being posting is scaring authors away, and 2) whether the few new stories in the most recent stories is then scaring readers away too.

It's like a one-two punch. It seems like a handy way of boosting stories on the two sites, but the anacdotal evidence is that it's harming the alternate sites (though, to be honest, they might not have had a fair chance in the first place and this is just a natural progression of the sites). :(

Vincent Berg 🚫

@robberhands

You should stop thinking about it as a competition, instead relish the honor of your books being listed next to the works of Asimov, Heinlein, or H. G. Wells.

I don't think of it that way, but I've noticed that, as the number of Classic Stories grows, fewer and fewer new authors seem to be posting to the two sites (though Fine Stories is doing better than ScienceFictionStories). Thus my supposition that the one factor is influencing the other.

When I pointed this out to Lazeez, he informed me that my stories were still at the top of the 'recent stories list' despite those stories, without stopping to consider exactly why that's the case (i.e. fewer new authors posting stories which would bump my stories off.

robberhands 🚫

I wonder why people continuously complain about sex scenes in stories they freely chose to read - all the more on a story site like SOL. Do you skip superfluous gunfight scenes in stories as well or only sex scenes you deem unnecessary? Or maybe something like a superfluous gunfight doesn't even exist because a good fight never loses its appeal.

Replies:   docholladay  Keet
docholladay 🚫

@robberhands

Heck I am not complaining. The only blame as to what I enjoy or hate is mine not anyone else's fault.

Keet 🚫

@robberhands

I wonder why people continuously complain about sex scenes in stories they freely chose to read - all the more on a story site like SOL. Do you skip superfluous gunfight scenes in stories as well or only sex scenes you deem unnecessary? Or maybe something like a superfluous gunfight doesn't even exist because a good fight never loses its appeal.

If a story has superfluous, repeating gunfights the same "rule" goes, at least for me. Actually, I think I would stop reading such a story even faster then one with superfluous sex scenes.

Replies:   ChiMi  Vincent Berg
ChiMi 🚫

@Keet

Same for me.
I read a very good story character- and plot-wise who had overtly long fight scenes. After some time I only read the first words of the Paragraph and move on to the important stuff (which were not the fight scenes for me) The scenes itself weren't bad or badly written, just repetitive.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@Keet

If a story has superfluous, repeating gunfights the same "rule" goes, at least for me. Actually, I think I would stop reading such a story even faster then one with superfluous sex scenes.

This brings up the old 'gun-porn argument'. It isn't the gunfights that bore me to death, it's the heavy military lingo and the characters spend endless hours gathering ungodly amounts of firepower, repeatedly breaking down and rebuilding their weapons, to the point the entire story boils down to endless details of the GUN, rather than the people using the guns.

If I want to read about guns, I'm NOT going to read fiction, I'll sign up with the NRA and get endless gun-porn from the professional gun pimps. I don't mind stories with guns, or with the military, but when the procedures becomes the entire story, it's no longer a story about humans, but entirely about inanimate objects (hence the 'sex-robot' analogies).

That's when you know an author needs a decent editor, one who's not afraid to put a big red X though an entire 5,000 word segment of their story and say "this is completely superfluous and unnecessary, drop it". It may not be what the author wants to hear, but being an editor isn't a popularity contest, it all boils down to what the Story needs to rise to the top.

Replies:   PotomacBob
PotomacBob 🚫

@Vincent Berg

Valid points - but how is an author to know that the editor's opinion is more valid than his own?

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@PotomacBob

Valid points - but how is an author to know that the editor's opinion is more valid than his own?

It comes down to trust: do you trust your editor's opinion, and much of that trust is dependent upon whether the editor in question is willing to fight for those issues he believes in. If they just roll over and 'go along to get along', you'll never learn when something isn't right. A good editor will fight with the author frequently. It's frustrating, but it builds better stories. (That is, assuming the author doesn't end up burning the story in question out of his utter frustration!) 'D

ChiMi 🚫

Also: another thought on "plot-relevant-sex-scenes".

Is the sex, in any way or form, necessary to bring out the plot point you are trying to establish? Is the act of sex, the location, or the participants in that action needed for the plot-point?

If no, then you don't need sex to tell this plot-point.

- Character A and B are caught in the act: necessary
- Character A breaks his penis in the act: necessary
- Character A and B talk about plot-relevant things while having sex: not necessary
- Character A talks about his evil masterplan for taking over the world while having sex: not necessary.

It is mostly fine in shorter stories. But if you try to include plot points in sex acts just to have plot points in sex acts in a 200k+ word epic, then it is not fine and you are just shoving the sex scenes down our throats with the moniker, that it is plot-relevant.

Keet 🚫

@ChiMi

But if you try to include plot points in sex acts just to have plot points in sex acts

Don't you mean: "But if you try to include plot points in sex acts just to have sex acts"?

Replies:   ChiMi
ChiMi 🚫

@Keet

I wanted to say no, but you are right, for the "old-way" purists they can't have ANY scene without furthering the plot. So every sex scenes has to advance the plot for them. Ergo, characters planning a bank heist while having sex.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@ChiMi

Ergo, characters planning a bank heist while having sex.

Not so much 'planning a bank heist', but when the primary characters are facing a mystery they can't figure out, relaxing and letting their guard down accomplishing something that a 'more formal situation' wouldn't. Since most of my stories revolve around teams facing unknown phenomenon, which they only slowly figure out, based on slowly-accumulated evidence, the timing is key to the revelation.

Given the extreme reactions such apres-sex discussions have, I've largely stopped including them, but I'll be the first to admit, that my stories are the poorer for it, since we don't get into the main character's psyche the way I used to. :( Also, those 'talkie sex scenes' always ended up being my most popularβ€”right up there with the big fight scenesβ€”so again, cutting them really curbs the story's overall appeal.

robberhands 🚫

@ChiMi

Is the sex, in any way or form, necessary to bring out the plot point you are trying to establish? Is the act of sex, the location, or the participants in that action needed for the plot-point?

If no, then you don't need sex to tell this plot-point.

True. The plot point could also be framed by a nice G-rated bar brawl, or maybe at a more formal conference setting, or simply at a breakfast table. Just not within a sex scene because ... damn, I think I forgot the reason.

Replies:   ChiMi
ChiMi 🚫

@robberhands

Because you don't need to validate the existence of your hundredth 3-page-blowjob with a stupid plot point that could be talked about in a breakfast scene.

SOME stories could be massively improved if they added a breakfast bonding scene instead of the everyday-morning-sex-routine.

robberhands 🚫

@ChiMi

Repetitive scenes are superfluous and boring. That was established a long time ago; as was established that the same goes for every kind of scene in a story. Never the less, you keep harping on about tedious sex scenes as if there is an extra level of caution to consider when writing a sex scene. There is not unless you think that sex in stories is inherently boring, in which case I'd advise not to read stories clearly marked containing sex.

Replies:   Vincent Berg
Vincent Berg 🚫

@robberhands

Never the less, you keep harping on about tedious sex scenes as if there is an extra level of caution to consider when writing a sex scene. There is not unless you think that sex in stories is inherently boring, in which case I'd advise not to read stories clearly marked containing sex.

Or at least limit yourself to the 'little' or 'some sex' stories rather than those rated 'much sex' or stroke stories.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@ChiMi

SOME stories could be massively improved if they added a breakfast bonding scene instead of the everyday-morning-sex-routine.

I agree with that. New authors throw in the sex scenes because they mistakenly think it's necessary, but intimacy between couples doesn't always include sex. In fact, there's much less sharing between two people during the sex act than there is from their simply being together frequently to share the small moments in life. Focusing on those 'small moments', and learning to identify them, is often a key component is crafting beautiful stories.

By the way, in each of my previous examples, I'm talking about two or three sex scenes in the course of a book, rather than 60+. :(

@awnlee Jawking

I can think of a very highly rated story in which the author embedded lengthy expositional monologues into foreplay and sex scenes.

But was the technique successful or not, in your honest opinion? It's one thing to try a technique, but it's another entirely to execute it properly. I like to think that the more successful authors typically take more chances than those with more demanding fans.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@Vincent Berg

But was the technique successful or not, in your honest opinion?

I think it was a pig's breakfast. The characters were going to great lengths in telling each other things they should already have known, just for the audience's benefit, and as a result the scenes were as erotic as a dish of cold porridge.

But the readers awarded the story a high score. Perhaps they used 'page down' to skip the scenes.

AJ

Replies:   robberhands
robberhands 🚫

@awnlee jawking

... as a result the scenes were as erotic as a dish of cold porridge.

Does porridge (aka oatmeal) lose a lot of its flavor and appeal when it cools? I've got to admit I never tasted it, neither hot nor cold.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@robberhands

Does porridge (aka oatmeal) lose a lot of its flavor and appeal when it cools? I've got to admit I never tasted it, neither hot nor cold.

Oatmeal has minimal flavour to begin with ;)

I tend to eat it for breakfast in winter - with lots of sugar, mainly because I'm too lazy to flavour it with anything more interesting. I eat to live, not vice versa.

AJ

awnlee jawking 🚫

@ChiMi

I can think of a very highly rated story in which the author embedded lengthy expositional monologues into foreplay and sex scenes.

AJ

Replies:   robberhands
robberhands 🚫

@awnlee jawking

I can think of a very highly rated story in which the author embedded lengthy expositional monologues into foreplay and sex scenes.

A sex scene in a story can be highly expositional without anyone saying a single word.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@robberhands

A sex scene in a story can be highly expositional without anyone saying a single word.

If you'd said sexpositional, I would have agreed with you. But how can the author have the characters tell each other the minutiae of their backstories without saying a single word?

AJ

robberhands 🚫

@awnlee jawking

Why do you quote me if you ignore what I wrote? I didn't state anything about 'telling the minutiae of backstories'.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@robberhands

In the story I was referring to, the author used foreplay and sex scenes for the characters to tell their backstories to each other and to the audience.

What sort of exposition did you mean?

AJ

Replies:   robberhands
robberhands 🚫

@awnlee jawking

In the story I was referring to, the author used foreplay and sex scenes for the characters to tell their backstories to each other and to the audience.

What sort of exposition did you mean?

I read that and I understood. But an exposition doesn't need to be verbally. An exposition is "the equivalent of a sign held up for the audience, containing crucial emotional information".
β€”
Mick Lasalle, Houston Chronicle, in the review of: 'Boundaries' a trip to nowhere.

Replies:   awnlee jawking
awnlee jawking 🚫

@robberhands

That's a very unusual definition, to say the least.

Most creative writing authorities define exposition to be the revelation of background information eg
"Exposition is a literary device used to introduce background information about events, settings, characters, or other elements of a work to the audience or readers." - https://literarydevices.net/exposition/

In my google search for 'what is exposition in writing', all the top links explicitly or implicitly referred to 'background'.

We're going to have to agree to disagree on this.

AJ

Replies:   robberhands
robberhands 🚫

@awnlee jawking

We're going to have to agree to disagree on this.

No need. If all you want is to disagree about the definition of 'Exposition' in regards to writing, you and the creative writing authorities may have the term.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@awnlee jawking

But how can the author have the characters tell each other the minutiae of their backstories without saying a single word?

Sometimes, having a character biting their lip and glancing away at a given pointed question speaks much more loudly about what they've suffered than a long bitch session.

Vincent Berg 🚫

@ChiMi

If no, then you don't need sex to tell this plot-point.

- Character A and B are caught in the act: necessary
- Character A breaks his penis in the act: necessary
- Character A and B talk about plot-relevant things while having sex: not necessary
- Character A talks about his evil masterplan for taking over the world while having sex: not necessary.

In my case (in my most recent book * * * Spoiler * * *), the sex act is necessary to demonstrate how different species can create a legitimate romantic marriage (including sex). That might seem like a minor point, but that one simple act, forming a bond between previously bonded individuals, forms a major component in the story, as it's what changes the tide of opposition to the characters.

However, as for you point #3, I don't include the 'sex talk' because it's a necessary plot point, but because my characters seem to reveal more of themselves when I put them into those situations than I can think up on my own. Doing so often reveals important character issues I'd never have known otherwise.

In a perfect world, I could do that as a writing exercise, and then include the character details someone else in the story, but I tend to write sequentially, not a series of individual scenes which I later stitch together, and the things they reveal aren't character histories, they concern what those characters are facing at that moment, so the timing is central to the information's usefulness. Given that the stories are better with the information than without, I maintain that the 'apres sex talk' is a vital story element, even if other authors wouldn't choose to go that route.

Remus2 🚫

Erotic cold porridge... I must have a demented mind.

Goldilocks eating a hairy mamma bears porridge. ... I'll shut up now.

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