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Monday, August 7, 2017

Hello to the Willamette Writers who came to my workshop.

On Saturday, August 4th, we all met in Portland and shared an amazing forty-five minutes together. I am so bummed we ran out of time.

As promised, here are my notes from the craft section of From Arousal to Zipper. Let's begin!



Now, how do we take your observations, your ideas, and your passion and put it into clear, gorgeous language?  Through craft.  In fact, I would say that craft matters the most in a sensual scene because the stakes are so high. Everything is heightened when arousal is on the line.



III.            Craft, craft, craft. Sexy writing doesn’t mean lazy writing. You still have to pay attention.
a.      Spelling, punctuation, verb tense.  This part kind of goes without saying, but I’m saying it anyway. Like an accidental knee to a tender part, messing up here can really spoil the mood. Just saying.
b.     Point of View (POV)
                                                    i.     Quick recap: First person (I), Second Person (You), Third Person (He/She/They)/ Omniscient and Limited. The POV character is the one whose eyes the audience sees through. Make this person the one with the most to lose.
Valerie pinched the bridge of her nose. “You shouldn’t trust me.”
“I do lots of things I shouldn’t, darling. Do not fear.” He held up the forgotten bag of croissants. “If you put out, I’ll give you your sugar.”
Valerie snorted laughter against her sleeve. Clever man. 
“We can try, at least,” John continued. “Do you feel nothing for me?” 
She knew herself to be brave. What price would this choice demand? Did she have the courage to embrace everything this love had to offer as well?
She sucked in air, giving herself a rush from the oxygen.
Screw fear.
“I feel much for you,” Valerie answered and held out her hand.

                                                  ii.     Head hopping Going from one person’s POV to another back and forth can be really confusing. Don’t use it to avoid going into a character’s heart. Try to do it as little as possible. Use an extra return to mark different POVs.
                                                iii.     Using POV: The POV leads to how you use dialogue and monologue. Characters are rarely silent. What do their inner and outer conversations reveal during sex? Love scenes are about being cut open and vulnerable emotionally. The through line of confession emotions pushes and draws the plot along. This is how you integrate the emotions into sex.
c.      Emotions: Emotions lead to the body language and blocking. Action will logically follow how they feel. If she is feeling shy, she will look away and blush. If he is uncertain, he will rub the back of his neck. The blocking carries you to who will take the lead and what the subtext is to the scene.
                                                    i.      Feelings are more important than the action. When you write, ask the important questions: Did he make her feel good? Does she like him? Why did he lick his partner – because he wanted to? Or because of some internal quid pro quo?
                                                  ii.     Emotions lead to body language. Excite your readers’ emotions with details on how someone loosens their tie, licks their lips, or how they draw attention to their bodies. This is really makes your writing pop. For example: Bryan was turned on. Versus: Bryan’s cock pressed against his trousers. Desperate for relief, he faced the wall and shoved his hand under his waistband.

Extra note: Check out The Emotion Thesaurus by Ackerman and Puglisi 

                                                iii.     Double check your blocking. Use a pillow or a big stuffed animal and act it out to get all the limbs, tentacles, or fins in place. Make sure your positions are compatible with your characters’ physiology.

d.     Embody the sensations as much as possible – tight lungs, heat between the legs. WHERE do you feel arousal, where do your characters feel arousal? Ignore sexual stereotypes of “Men” and “Women” and figure out this individual character.
e.      Language: Also, the emotions will lead to variation in your writing – not just sexual variations like in a chair or on a horse (!) – but how long your sentences will be and how the language gets used (will he start off prim and then get more raunchy?). You have to know your characters and what language they would use for intimacy. Some people are demure. Would they use penis or thingy? Some people are blunter. Would your character be very clinical and use words like pudenda or phallus? Are they dirty and nasty to say cock and cunt? Perhaps they are more playful, like va-jay-jay and peen. Think about your character’s age, where they were raised, their family, the geography of their life. What brings them to this point in time where they want to have sex with the other characters?  For example, Julia Child, a chef, said, on taking something from the oven, “That’s as hot as a hard cock!”
f.      Geography. What happens at a rubber event in London is going to be very different than a young, inexperienced couple in rural Iran.
g.     Read it out loud.
h.     “Chekov’s Underpants”. "If you say in the first chapter that there is a rifle hanging on the wall, in the second or third chapter it absolutely must go off. If it's not going to be fired, it shouldn't be hanging there."  Anton Chekov stated the importance of not wasting your time on inessentials. If you mention the color or state of someone’s underpants in one section, you’d better be sure to mention them coming off. If one character admires another’s lips, those lips better show up somewhere doing something hot.


I really hope this helps. If you have any questions, please leave a message or email me at LindaMercuryRomance @ gmail.com (no spaces, natch).

Monday, April 10, 2017

Literary Life: Re-releasing Dracula's Desires

Back in 2012, Kensington Publishing and I released the second book in the Blood Wings series, Dracula's Desires. This book continued the adventures of the real Vlad Dracula in present day.

I got my rights back for all three books and now I am re-releasing all of them! I've already put out Book One: Dracula's Secret (oh, and what a secret it is!).

And now, it is time to reveal the new cover for Dracula's Desires!

Isn't it gorgeous! I plan to release this book in June (just in time for sexy and brave summer reading).

And just for a tease, here are the first few paragraphs of Dracula's Desires:


Dracula's Desires by Linda Mercury




John Janté’s life hung by a thread.
Valerie Tate smelled his blood hanging in the air. If those idiot Fallen Angels let him die, she’d empty Hell itself in vengeance.
She gunned her black 1966 Shelby Mustang to the limit, burying the tachometer in the red. The tires howled as the car fishtailed against the gravel-laden highway cutting through the Swiss Alps. Cursing, she spun the steering wheel against the skid and roared between two honking tourist buses.
“Lucifer’s wormy teeth, I spit at thee ,” she damned the slow-moving vehicles.
The heavily forested mountains and charming villages blurred until the view out her window seemed an unending wall of green and stone. Lake Geneva was nothing but a long blue line below her. The powerful engine propelled her through the hairpin turns faster than a vampire could run. Her smaller weapons duffel sat on the passenger seat, an innocent black bag filled with high-powered destruction.


Monday, April 3, 2017

Keeping It Up!

Have you read Keeping It Up, the sequel to Vamping It Up? And did you know I have Pinterest boards dedicated to all things Holly and Celeste?

https://www.pinterest.com/babsdallen/live-like-celeste/
and
https://www.pinterest.com/lindamercury/keeping-it-up/

And buy the book here: Amazon.com 

 Revisit Holly and Celeste Barros and their erotic adventures in this new book! Here's a section of Chapter One.

Keeping It Up by Linda Mercury 


“It has been said that politics is the art of the possible. In reality, it is the art of service to many and the survival of that service.”
The Letters of Henry de Seville y Barros, 1850-1916.

Chapter One
Valentine’s Day
Holly Barros loved Valentine’s Day. The hearts. The flowers.
The emphasis on oral sex.
“Get on my face.” Lincoln S. Jones, her head of security, clasped her thighs and rolled the two of them over, settling her pussy right on his face. The sturdy oak table in the Vilnius University Library in Lithuania creaked underneath them, but held firm.
Holly giggled, actually giggled, until his smart mouth latched onto her clitoris. She gasped. Linc dug his fingers into her butt cheeks, guiding her where he wanted her to be.
“Delicious,” he moaned around her hood.
The vibrations sizzled her overwhelmed nerve endings. “Harder.” She pushed down on him, forcing his mouth deeper into her wet folds.
Like a good former Marine, he obeyed her order with enthusiasm and determination. His tongue flicked over her flesh faster than a vibrator. She had no idea how he could move so fast, but she loved it. Holly rode the crest, nearing her orgasm. He snaked a hand between them and shoved two fingers into her sheath. She needed it. She needed it so bad she could barely breathe. She just couldn’t. Quite. Get there.
Her brain wouldn’t let go of the rapid-fire questions the Paranormal Council had thrown at her all week.
“Ms. Barros, in North America, paranormals and humans have a much more contentious relationship than in the rest of the world. What are you going to do to increase peaceable relations between the supernatural minority and the mortal majority?”
Holly bit her lip. Perhaps she should have put more emphasis on the already- increasing numbers of co-operative ventures in primary and secondary schools, the rise of mixed species pre-schools, and how she opened talks between the paranormal and the human sports leagues. Truly integrated professional sports were a ways in the future, but….
Sensing her distraction, Linc slapped her ass with his big hand. The crack of skin on skin shoved her back into her body. She gasped. The erotic smell of paper and ink brought her over.
She came hard, her vagina wrenching on his fingers as if she wanted to rip them off and keep them inside of her. The scream poured out of her throat and echoed off the domed blue ceiling.
Panting, she bent over, resting her weight on her hands and knees. Linc kissed the sides of her thighs, tickling and teasing her through the aftershocks. His six-foot, five inches long body rested on the table beneath her.
“Oh, sweetie,” Holly sighed. “Thank you so much.”
“Trust me. My pleasure.” He wiggled his way between her legs until he could grind his half-hard cock on her. He’d already removed the used condom. “Feel better?”
Tremors zinged through her shoulders, making her arms wobble. “Yeah. I can do this now.”
“Cool.” Linc kissed her with moist lips. She sucked on his lower lip, catching a taste of her own musk. “Recess is over. Back to the meat grinder, babe.”
 



Monday, March 27, 2017

The most important books for writing romance.

My favorite titles.


I wanted to talk about my favorite books on writing. Every author has her go-to's for inspiration and help, and here are mine.


How can one live without Joanna Russ's How to Suppress Women's Writing?

People love to denigrate our genre. This book gives an insightful and quirky look at how much and how little attitudes towards women's words have changed. It taught me just what kinds of horrible internalized sexism colored what I wrote, how I viewed other women, and worst of all, what I did to myself.

Find it here: https://utpress.utexas.edu/books/rushow



Making a Literary Life by Elizabeth See.
A far greater writer than I'll ever be says this:
If everyone who wants to be a writer would read this book there would be many more good writers, many more happy writers, and editors would be so overwhelmed by sweetness they would accept many more good books. So what are you waiting for? Read it! Ursula K. Le Guin
Find it here: http://www.carolynsee.com/Books/literarylife.html



Write Away by Elizabeth George.
From Publisher's Weekly:
Here's a useful book for the novice writer battling the fears and insecurities that attend when she contemplates her first novel....George illustrates her points with passages from both her ownworks and those of numerous writers she admires (Martin Cruz Smith,Barbara Kingsolver, Louise Erdrich, Michael Dorris), this remains more of a how-I-do-it book than a how-to-do-it book. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Unlike PW, I'll say that this book is good even for experienced writers. I love her examples - they illustrate her points brilliantly.

Find it here:http://www.elizabethgeorgeonline.com/books/write_away.htm

The most important romance specific book on my shelf is Dangerous Men and Adventurous Women by Jayne Ann Krentz.

"In Dangerous Men and Adventurous Women, Jayne Ann Krentz and the contributors to this volume—all best-selling romance writers—explode myths and biases that haunt both the writers and readers of romances.

In this seamless, ultimately fascinating, and controversial book, the authors dispute some of the notions that plague their profession, including the time-worn theory that the romance genre contains only one single, monolithic story, which is cranked out over and over again. The authors discuss positive life-affirming values inherent in all romances: the celebration of female power, courage, intelligence, and gentleness; the inversion of the power structure of a patriarchal society; and the integration of male and female. Several of the essays also discuss the issue of reader identification with the characters, a relationship that is far more complex than most critics realize."

Find it here: http://jayneannkrentz.com/dangerous-men-and-adventurous-women/




I feel that the most important book on my shelf remains Against Our Will by Susan Brownmiller. I'm not going to kid you - this is a painful and devastating book, whether you have been a victim of sexual assault or not. But it endlessly reminds me of what I feel is the great gift that romance gives every reader: That her pleasure is central to life, that her consent should never dismissed or belittled, and that each of us deserves to be heard.

Find it here: http://www.susanbrownmiller.com/susanbrownmiller/html/against_our_will.html


Monday, March 6, 2017

Curious: Auguste Rodin Exhibit

Curiosity is a huge part of caring for your emotional well-being. Cultivating an interest in the world keeps depression and anxiety at bay and gives you tools for dealing with stress.

Obviously, I need to walk my walk as well as talk my talk! So I went to the Auguste Rodin exhibit at the Portland Art Museum.

Detail of one of the Burghers of Calais
 Looking at the visual arts doesn't usually translate well into words, especially for an artist as physical as Rodin. Much of his work revolves around motion, turbulence, and character. 

The exhibit demonstrated his fascination with hands, balance,  pressure, and the human body. I'll step back and let the images speak for themselves!
Hand of God


Fallen Caryatid Carrying an Urn

Aphrodite

Angels