Join the best erotica focused adult social network now
Login

You are going to Writer's Hell!! Bring wine.

last reply
69 replies
6.7k views
0 watchers
0 likes
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by gilrenard
Somebody say wine and naked twister? I'm in!
Now, left foot on red.


Oh, we are going to have a good time. Naked twister it is, see you in hell! Don't think that
relieves you from bringing something.

? A True Story ?
I'm not for everyone
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl


Oh, we are going to have a good time. Naked twister it is, see you in hell! Don't think that
relieves you from bringing something.



Hope you like a dry red, Barolo.
Left hand green, don't mind my face so close to your...
Advanced Wordsmith
0 likes
Quote by Coco
I'll see you in hell, is naked Twister played there? I mean I like to drink too, but I'd like to play that with you.

I don't recall any character or parts of a setting that I didn't glean from something or someone real. There are just too many opportunities to do so: the sexy hunk that's in line staring at me while his girlfriend or wife pays for their merchandise, the seemingly shy librarian that has an undercurrent of sexual heat just barely contained under the surface, and the powerful businessman texting in the elevator--too many things that my mind takes a note or an image of; how are we to pass those things up?

Let's face it, and I'm not saying about the numerous talented authors here, but often we need that little bit of reality to set the right tone in a story. It's foolish to think that artistry isn't shared.


This is a close description of how I write, too. I pull from my surroundings everyday. Some of my best characters are based on people I know, then I put them into situations that they would never do without the help of my imagination.

Seems like Hell is going to be crowded, I'll bring more wine!

Check out my newest story, Penalty of Love

Penalty of Love



Bonnet Flaunter
0 likes
I'm all for the nakedness and wine, but Twister sounds too much like purgatory!! ;)

This is a fascinating discussion, and I would agree with a lot of the posters here that even if my writing is not based on my own direct experiences or a particular person like any writer I am a magpie. I pick up those things that shine at me and tuck them away. Nothing totally imaginary, just re-invented.
'tis himself!
0 likes
Quote by curvygalore
I'm all for the nakedness and wine, but Twister sounds too much like purgatory!! ;)


Naked Twister is overrated. I know another game that's better than Twister if you play it naked.

Start with at least six people in a circle, more if possible. Each person reaches out and takes the hands of two people not adjacent to her/him. Now, without letting go, although you can rotate your hand within the grip if necessary, untangle the circle. Involves lots of climbing over, under, and around other naked people.

Yes, you may use this idea, but I want to hear about it
The Right Rev of Lush
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl


You have your hell and I have mine. It's relative and my Karma must be a little better than yours Reverend.

My karma is road-kill on the rocky road to the afterlife.

Any wine left? If not, I have some three-week old sacramental wine that needs drinking up. ;)

RUMPLATIONS: AwesomeHonky Tonk and Cyber Bar
Home of the Lush "IN" crowd: indecent, intoxicated, and insolvent
a place to gossip, share news, talk sports, pimp a story, piss & moan, or just grab a drink. Check it out.

Writing is not necessarily something to be ashamed of, but do it in private and wash your hands afterwords. -- ROBERT HEINLEIN
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by TheUprightMan


...Involves lots of climbing over, under, and around other naked people.

Yes, you may use this idea, but I want to hear about it


It sounds like one of those "let me see if these fools actually do it" things
I'm for keeping Naked Twister! It requires less directions and thinking.
I have better things to do in hell.

And yes, I will be seeing all of you there.qoysNjYDRGCgOV8I
? A True Story ?
'tis himself!
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl


It sounds like one of those "let me see if these fools actually do it" things
I'm for keeping Naked Twister! It requires less directions and thinking.
I have better things to do in hell.

And yes, I will be seeing all of you there.ieTPa44FodaxWtyO


I swear it's more fun than naked Twister (I've done both), but that's fine.

Actually, tell you what. Let's get a group together and play both, and see which we prefer biggrin
living dead girl
0 likes
Oh shit ..guess I am going most my writing is about someone at least loosely inspired by..its hard not to be inspired by certain events or people
besides some people are so interesting you just have to write about them...

So I'll meet you hell..but I am hoping for more than just wine like I don't know maybe some creme de menthe smile
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by vanessa26
Oh shit ..guess I am going most my writing is about someone at least loosely inspired by..its hard not to be inspired by certain events or people
besides some people are so interesting you just have to write about them...

So I'll meet you hell..but I am hoping for more than just wine like I don't know maybe some creme de menthe smile


I'm with you. I surround myself with interesting people. Often times, reality is much more interesting then what I could imagine. So, I mix a little imagination with reality. Sometimes it's pure reality when it comes to erotica. But I'm not one to kiss and tell.

Yep, all y'all are going to hell. I'm for cocktails too.
Please, can someone bring snacks? ?
? A True Story ?
Unicorn Wrangler
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl
Yep, all y'all are going to hell. I'm for cocktails too.
Please, can someone bring snacks? ?


Will these do?



Or maybe these?



If not... I'll find something else.
Rainbow Warrior
0 likes
Whoever is condemner-in-chief, I'll be rebelling against their authority in hell, like I do here. If it's a crime to scavenge, then I'm a criminal writer. Karma can do with me what it will. I've never let consequences stifle my quest for truth. I don't think most people are aware of how interesting they are in their everyday lives and habits. If they are unable to be that self-aware, I'll always try to be aware enough for both of us, and capture indelible moments from their lives as character elements in my stories. By writing them down, I choose to believe I am making them even more indelible. You can call me a succubus, or you can call it tribute. I prefer to think I'm immortalizing them, for good or ill. I'm most acutely aware of my own foibles, so I'm the most-oft recurring character in my writings.

I'm pretty sure I will find a far more interesting population in hell than I will in heaven, and if that's where I'll find the naked twister games, judge me hellbound!
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by BethanyFrasier
Whoever is condemner-in-chief, I'll be rebelling against their authority in hell, like I do here. If it's a crime to scavenge, then I'm a criminal writer. Karma can do with me what it will. I've never let consequences stifle my quest for truth. I don't think most people are aware of how interesting they are in their everyday lives and habits. If they are unable to be that self-aware, I'll always try to be aware enough for both of us, and capture indelible moments from their lives as character elements in my stories. By writing them down, I choose to believe I am making them even more indelible. You can call me a succubus, or you can call it tribute. I prefer to think I'm immortalizing them, for good or ill. I'm most acutely aware of my own foibles, so I'm the most-oft recurring character in my writings.

I'm pretty sure I will find a far more interesting population in hell than I will in heaven, and if that's where I'll find the naked twister games, judge me hellbound!


Mmm... Hell's just getting better and better. I can't wait to taste your wine.
? A True Story ?
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Bump


? A True Story ?
Lurker
0 likes
The only thing that I scavenge is names. The characters to whom I give those names bear no resemblance to the real bearers of said names, and I'm sure that my friends would be stunned to find out what they do in my stories
Wouldn't you rather have a nice cup of tea?
0 likes
Quote by Samuel Beckett
All I know is what the words know, and the dead things, and that makes a handsome little sum, with a beginning, a middle and an end as in the well-built phrase and the long sonata of the dead. And truly it little matters what I say, this or that or any other thing. Saying is inventing. Wrong, very rightly wrong. You invent nothing, you think you are inventing, you think you are escaping, and all you do is stammer out your lesson, the remnants of a pensum one day got by heart and long forgotten


Quote by John Lennon
There's nothing you can make that can't me made
No one you can save that can't be saved
Nothing you can do but you can learn how to be you in time
It's easy


I respect Toni Morrison's writing, but I think she's wrong on this. We are collectors, compilers, rearrangers, embellishers, connectors, and collagers of our experience. We do not invent except to take what existed and present it in some new way. Every word and gesture and plot and character was ripped off from somewhere. The best of us disguise our sources well, but we're all a bunch of thieving magpies building our nests with the details stolen from our lives.

Don't believe everything that you read.

In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by Just_A_Guy_You_Know


I respect Toni Morrison's writing, but I think she's wrong on this. We are collectors, compilers, rearrangers, embellishers, connectors, and collagers of our experience. We do not invent except to take what existed and present it in some new way. Every word and gesture and plot and character was ripped off from somewhere. The best of us disguise our sources well, but we're all a bunch of thieving magpies building our nests with the details stolen from our lives.


I have to be honest, I've read everyone of her books. I read the first one as a preteen (Sula). It blew me away. I just read her last release, which went so fast with the preorders it was almost impossible to purchase for a moment. I teach her. She is on a higher plain. I actually believe her when she says that she creates from conception to completion. Nothing blue, nothing borrowed. I just can't see how she does it. *Whispers* Therefore, I have doubt. I plan on making a statement similar to hers when I get my Nobel and become rich&famous. It's a great way to avoid being sued.JseDdL7bI8nC9Ll8

I'm not going to say she's wrong. I'm just saying that if she is right. I'm going to writer's hell.

Everything I write is an amalgamation of me, it, them, theirs, us, you and those others. I'm not quoting, I'm not mimicking, I'm not copying. I'm just affected by all that I consume and as it flows through me, it has an influence on what I put out. But isn't that the art of it all. Everyone sees a tree. You are taught to call it a tree. You have experiences with that tree that are truly your own. Your definition of that particular tree becomes specifically yours. That tree communicates with you. When you write about that tree, someone could stand under that same tree reading what you have written and never recognize that tree. They're not suppose to. You are writing about your tree--the one that you don't own.

So yeah *I'm sliding over and making room for you*, you are going to writer's hell. What kind of wine are you bringing? And, now we expect snacks too.mwHoSpgrlF90Lppo

Seriously, who reads those authors stuck in heaven?
? A True Story ?
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by PanJinlian
The only thing that I scavenge is names. The characters to whom I give those names bear no resemblance to the real bearers of said names, and I'm sure that my friends would be stunned to find out what they do in my stories



Oh.
You are going to hell too.
Can I borrow that corset?
? A True Story ?
Chuckanator
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl
Anyone who knows me knows that I love the amazing Toni Morrison. Every word she shares is a gift—until she called me a scavenger. The shame.

Toni Morrison never uses anyone she knows when she writes. She admits to using some gestures and dialogue of her mother’s in certain places when writing The Bluest Eye. That's it though. She says that she has never done it since. An interviewer asked her, “Why is that?”

Here is her response:

I don’t do what many writers do. There is this feeling that artists have—photographers, more than other people, and writers—that they are acting like a succubus … this process of taking from something that’s alive and using it for one’s own purposes. You can do it with trees, butterflies, or human beings. Making a little life for oneself by scavenging other people’s lives is a big question, and it does have moral and ethical implications.

In fiction, I feel the most intelligent, and the most free, and the most excited, when my characters are fully invented people. That’s part of the excitement. If they’re based on somebody else, in a funny way it’s an infringement of a copyright. That person owns his life, has a patent on it. It shouldn’t be available for fiction.


There is obviously no end to the depth of her creativity. I bow down. I’m just working with what I have.

I had to admit to myself that I’m a Succubus.

I’m going to writer’s hell. I hope they have wine.

I may be forever haunted by the people who recognize themselves in my stories, with no grounds to sue of course. When I say I’m writing fiction, it is fiction—based on…uhm… However, I take who I am and what I feel, what I wish I could forget and what I wish I remembered better, who I know and what they share, what I've seen and where I've gone. I mix it with my imagination, sometimes my laughter or sweat or tears, sometimes with my blood (I’m a writer, I can be dramatic if I want to). Then, I write you the story that forms itself at the tip of my fingers.

Morals and ethics and writing... Are you going to writer’s hell with me or am I alone in this?




Well doll, pour me a glass. We all write from our experiences. Life influences us in every way. The anger I feel about different things have root in my experiences. My morality has ties with my faith and endless hours of sermons and dialogue. How can we avoid not bringing parts of our life experiences and others into our fiction? Even when I write a woman's POV I can find my wife or someone I know in my character. So yeah, poor me a glass. A tall one.
Sophisticate
0 likes
I saw Nora Ephron's son interviewed about the documentary he had made about his mother. Carl Bernstein of Watergate fame is his father and her next husband was writer Nick Pileggi. She was the daughter of two screen writers and wrote for newspapers, magazines, and the screen in her career as well as several books. She wrote Silkwood, When Harry Met Sally, Sleepless in Seattle and Julia and Julia. All of this is preamble to the advice Nora's mother gave her: Everything is copy.

I think that we are scavengers and magpies as mentioned already. All of our life's experiences, interactions with people, thoughts, memories, emotions and observations form a vast trove to draw on when we write whether conscious or not. I have written a story based on a real experience. I have written others that come from imagination but are based on material from that trove. We remember how something sounded or felt or the emotion of a particular moment and that is transferred from our consciousness to the page.

I guess we are all going to hell, but judging by those who have added their voices here we will have a good time. I am with you, ABG. I brought a nice Barolo.
Lurker
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl



Oh.
You are going to hell too.
Can I borrow that corset?


If I'm going to hell then my wardrobe of about 30 corsets will be coming with me. You'd be welcome to borrow any of them, although I suspect that they would be like wearing a mobile torture chamber for anybody of a normal shape. These were custom made for me and I'm well over 6 feet tall.

I'll bring a whole load of home made bhajis and dips and a couple of crates of pinot grigio too, so our time in hell should be quite comfortable
Wouldn't you rather have a nice cup of tea?
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl


So yeah *I'm sliding over and making room for you*, you are going to writer's hell. What kind of wine are you bringing? And, now we expect snacks too.YoBroBclPUt5kJfc

Seriously, who reads those authors stuck in heaven?



More of a beer drinker, but I don't mind a glass of red from time to time: Pinot Noir, Merlot, or a good Cab. If I'm going to be stuck somewhere for all eternity, at least I'll have great company!

Don't believe everything that you read.

In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by Just_A_Guy_You_Know


More of a beer drinker, but I don't mind a glass of red from time to time: Pinot Noir, Merlot, or a good Cab. If I'm going to be stuck somewhere for all eternity, at least I'll have great company!






“Go to heaven for the climate and hell for the company.”
― Benjamin Franklin Wade
? A True Story ?
Lurker
0 likes
Well, if it's Hell, I'll bring the warm lite beer.
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by oceanrunner
Well, if it's Hell, I'll bring the warm lite beer.


Hey, even the theoretically condemned have standards. Ice those mugs.
? A True Story ?
Lurker
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl


Hey, even the theoretically condemned have standards. Ice those mugs.


Something about looking for ice in hell comes to mind...
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
Quote by oceanrunner


Something about looking for ice in hell comes to mind...


? A True Story ?
In-House Sapiosexual
0 likes
For my fellow conspirators ?


? A True Story ?
Active Ink Slinger
0 likes
Dear avgblkgirl,
If you are going to writers hell, I'm coming with you and so is everybody else apart from Toni. She is going to be very lonely. Although there is enough variety among human beings to make literally any behaviour possible, and therefore we can make things up to our heart's content and it's still authentic to someone, somewhere, what is wrong with recounting an actual experience that interested or excited us so much that it wants to be written about?
You don't name names, of course, and it's highly unlikely that the person you're writing about is going to read your story on here anyway, but even in the wider context, I don't see a moral problem with using characteristics, foibles or even details of sexual practices that are based on real people.
The person we reveal most of in our stories is ourselves. You don't have to get far into one of mine to see what turns me on the most, and some of my stories are almost completely factual, so the other person is there too, but only she would know it.
So you're not a succubus - and as delightful as that word is, it doesn't even describe what you're being accused of. I don't think there is a word that describes it. You're not even a betrayer of confidences if no one knows who you're talking about.
Feel free, write free, give readers pleasure, don't hurt anyone.
You're fine.

Vic
Lurker
0 likes
Quote by avrgblkgrl
Anyone who knows me knows that I love the amazing Toni Morrison. Every word she shares is a gift—until she called me a scavenger. The shame.

Toni Morrison never uses anyone she knows when she writes. She admits to using some gestures and dialogue of her mother’s in certain places when writing The Bluest Eye. That's it though. She says that she has never done it since. An interviewer asked her, “Why is that?”

Here is her response:

I don’t do what many writers do. There is this feeling that artists have—photographers, more than other people, and writers—that they are acting like a succubus … this process of taking from something that’s alive and using it for one’s own purposes. You can do it with trees, butterflies, or human beings. Making a little life for oneself by scavenging other people’s lives is a big question, and it does have moral and ethical implications.

In fiction, I feel the most intelligent, and the most free, and the most excited, when my characters are fully invented people. That’s part of the excitement. If they’re based on somebody else, in a funny way it’s an infringement of a copyright. That person owns his life, has a patent on it. It shouldn’t be available for fiction.


There is obviously no end to the depth of her creativity. I bow down. I’m just working with what I have.

I had to admit to myself that I’m a Succubus.

I’m going to writer’s hell. I hope they have wine.

I may be forever haunted by the people who recognize themselves in my stories, with no grounds to sue of course. When I say I’m writing fiction, it is fiction—based on…uhm… However, I take who I am and what I feel, what I wish I could forget and what I wish I remembered better, who I know and what they share, what I've seen and where I've gone. I mix it with my imagination, sometimes my laughter or sweat or tears, sometimes with my blood (I’m a writer, I can be dramatic if I want to). Then, I write you the story that forms itself at the tip of my fingers.

Morals and ethics and writing... Are you going to writer’s hell with me or am I alone in this?




I'm with her - even further away than her. I go out of my way to avoid using anything that reminds me of people I know or have met or have seen in movies and on TV. I can't stand the unaware filtering that happens, it bugs the crap out of me.

Only a few times have i actually written about my husband - and that was sex straight from my sex life, not just character traits.