Archive for Sex+ Writing: Others’
Announcing The Other Dance!
In 2006 my mother introduced me to a small literary arts-and-nature-focused journal called Heron Dance. I experienced her as saying she suspected it would resonate with me, and she was correct. I have been a subscriber and follower of Heron Dance, which has traversed numerous transitions of format, focus, and personnel at the helm, ever since.
The (both original and current) founder and painter of Heron Dance is Rod MacIver, whom I have mentioned or quoted a few times here at The Green Light District. A year and a half ago I even posted an announcement that he was beginning a new venture, an erotic newsletter to correspond with the nude and erotic paintings he had been doing. Shortly after that announcement, a number of transitions, including with staff, occurred at Heron Dance (a very small company and press), and my understanding was The Other Dance was put on indefinite hold in the face of more pressing business concerns that unexpectedly inhibited the practical embarkment on a new project at the time.
At this time Heron Dance has recently undergone a few transitions again, most notably in ceasing the print publication of its journal and instating an online membership fee (of $2 a month) for daily receipt of written content by Rod (entitled “Reflections of a Wild Artist”—this may still be received once a week for free by signing up here), discounts on the purchase of paintings, and access to certain areas of the website only accessible by members.
One of which will house The Other Dance, the erotic online newsletter Heron Dance is now ready to create and develop as an integral part of its professional offerings. The Other Dance will publish a new edition each Tuesday, featuring one of Rod’s nude or erotic paintings alongisde a piece of erotic fiction.
I am introducing and speaking about this so much because, I am thrilled and honored (and a little stunned!) to say, I have been hired to be the editor of The Other Dance.
Since The Other Dance area is only accessible to members, I will take the liberty to quote here from Rod’s paragraph introducing the venture from its page on the Heron Dance site:
”A common denominator in all of the diverse perspectives Heron Dance has explored over the sixteen years since it was founded is a probing of the boundaries of the human experience. The edges — the edges between wilderness and civilization, the edges in terms of the human search for meaning and in terms of what it means to live a highly-creative life. Delving into human sensuality and sexuality is a natural evolution of that exploration.”
As those familiar with me or my work will know, it has long been an aim of mine to open dialogue around sexuality, ease the collective discomfort our society seems to feel around it, relax the repression of the innate and exquisite phenomenon of the human sexual impulse, and ultimately support the cherishing and respect for this facet of life. Ingredients I see as integral to these aims include self-awareness, contemplation, openness, and love. Since I first heard of it, I have experienced Heron Dance as embodying a respect for and focus on the importance of these qualities as well, and my aim continues as the editor of The Other Dance to be to support the manifestation of these aspects in the context of sexuality.
Before I move into the business side of things, I want to mention that at this time, the publisher is only seeking to publish work by female (or female-identified) authors—and I personally and truly apologize to the numerous beautiful male authors I know and whose work I adore that I won’t (for the time being) get to seek to work with them in this endeavor.
With that said, The Other Dance technically launched May 3, when Rod published a piece he had received last year to officially solidify the creation of The Other Dance. After he got in touch with me a couple weeks ago regarding this endeavor, he wanted to publish an edited version of “Rain Check,” my story from Rachel Kramer Bussel‘s anthology Tasting Her (as I understand it, Rod’s introduction to my work was clicking on the video of my reading said story at In The Flesh in 2008 when he visited my website), and it went live last Tuesday, May 10.
Two days ago, on Tuesday, May 17, the first piece officially published with me as the editor went live: “Strands of Imagination,” by Robin “Erobintica” Sampson! It has been an honor and delight to work with Robin as I take my first steps into this venture, and I offer her my thanks and congratulations. Robin wrote “Strands of Imagination” for one of Alison Tyler‘s flash fiction contests some time ago, and when I presented it to Rod, I experienced him as very in favor of publishing it.
For any female erotica authors reading this, I would likely love to work with you in such a capacity too! :) The Other Dance submissions guidelines may found on the Heron Dance website here, and I plan to submit them to the Erotica Readers and Writers Association call for submissions page as well.
There is a page on the Heron Dance site where reader feedback is posted—and it is not confined to the complimentary. I have had the impression over the years that Rod has received feedback encompassing varying perspectives and levels of appreciation for his offerings throughout the 17-year duration of Heron Dance. As I recall his stating at the time, never did this seem so active as when he first introduced the subject of sexuality to the work he offered to the public and his followers. When I was perusing the feedback page a few days ago, this comment caught my eye:
“Please cancel sending me Heron Dance, after a number of years! I am a published author and enjoyed your readings and paintings, etc., until you got all hepped up about sex. You had a nice, decent, above board periodical, now you have trash just like the next guy.”
While I honor this commenter’s experience and perspective, I feel sadness that the inclusion of discussion about or the mere mention of sexuality would relegate a literary/artistic endeavor to seeming like “trash.” I was a subscriber to Heron Dance when Rod’s transition to sharing and speaking about sexuality occurred, and whether or not one desired to see or be exposed to the subject, I never felt like anything I read seemed like “trash” at all. Granted, I have tended to feel quite receptive of open dialogue about sexuality, but I also truly found what Rod expressed on the subject quite in line with the way I had experienced his sharing in general about art and nature—probing, thoughtful, curious, raw, and sincere.
At the time, I certainly never imagined I would be offered the opportunity to become the first editor of the project into which that orientation would develop: a weekly electronic newsletter created to feature Rod’s erotic/nude paintings alongside written content of an erotic nature.
It is my honor to accept it.
Love,
Emerald
-LIVE “Dance With You”
e[lust] #25
[Note: The following is the full text (and photograph) of digest #25 of e[lust], organized by Dangerous Lilly and in which I am included for the first time with my post about the recent MOMENTUM conference! Love, Emerald]

Photo courtesy of Sadie
Welcome to e[lust] - Your source for sexual intelligence and inspirations of lust from the smartest & sexiest bloggers! Whether youíre looking for hot steamy smut, thought-provoking opinions or expert information, youíre going to find it here. And in this edition you can read all about the best sexuality conference of the year (ever?), Momentum, in a one-time-only Editor’s Choice anomaly: I couldn’t choose just one, so I chose them all! Want to be included in e[lust] #26? Start with the rules and subscribe to the RSS feed for updates!
~ This Weekís Top Three Posts ~
Where We Are - It was only supposed to be about the fucking. I don’t know how I convinced myself that it could be. I fretted before we began, about how I could ever possibly separate sex from emotion.
The Edible Slut - His hand made an audible crack as it connected with her ass, loud in the dim bedroom. Did he really sink his hand into her hair, turn her head to face him, and shout, ìStop being such a brat!î
Beyond Bisexual – I donít identify as bisexual, because I am interested in so many more people than just two of the variety of sexes or genders out there. Except, that is a word that a lot of people understand.
~ Featured: Momentum Conference Posts (Lillyís Picks) ~
An Extraordinary Gathering (and a Gathering of the Extraordinary)
Finally! A Real Momentum Post
Inspired by MomentumCon
#mcon Rehash
Momentum
Momentumcon, Part One
~ e[lust] Editress ~
To Be or Not To Be….Anonymous, That Is – If youíre out or decide to be outÖ.youíre not just outing yourself. Youíre outing them all. And did they give their consent? Probably not, Iíd guess. And even if they did give their consent could they even have a clue what consequences there will be?
All blogs that have a submission in this edition must re-post this digest from tip-to-toe on their blogs within 7 days. Thank you, and enjoy!
Thoughts & Advice on Sex & Relationships
A Bump In The Road – A Swinger Party Goes Bad
Bridging the Gap (Between Swinging and BDSM)
con-sent
Eating Pussy
Jane Says: What Does Sex Feel Like For A Man?
Let’s talk about food
Safe Word
S&M And Abuse
The Rules, Revisited
The Wet Patch
Who Cares About Your Open Relationship
Where There’s Smoke…
Kink & Fetish
BDSM Advice: Nipple Clamps
bloodfucking
Communicating by touch
Consent [Violated]
Debasement
getting ready…
He mixed pleasure and pain, and my body responded to it all
Invitation
Stolen
Safety Scissors
Topping From the Bottom: An Ode
Wantonly Restrained
You Can Make It Feel So Real
Erotic Writing
3. Wrath
Cunt Licking
Definition of Inspiration
Linger
Miss Me?
My Sex Life: The Journey Continues, Part 2
Silk Memories
Sexy Dance-Ing
teacher sweaters and the cock that haunts me
The Casino
The miseducation of Ms. Mullins
Wow. Confession #558
When I come
WWWednesday
You Want This
Call-in Radio Chat with Rachel Kramer Bussel and Authors Today!
I’ve just returned from Florida so am rather late announcing this, but today (Saturday, March 19) at 2:00 p.m. Eastern U.S. Time (which is in an hour!), there will be a live call-in chat on BlogTalkRadio for Rachel Kramer Bussel‘s brand new brand new Online Book Club! The club debuted last week, and today’s chat will be recorded and archived afterward as well.
I will be one of the authors on the call today, and listener call-ins are welcome. The call-in number is 626-414-3413, and the call will be for one hour. Find all the details here. Feel free to join us just to listen in, and if you feel so moved to call, we’d love to hear from you!
UPDATE: The call-in chat, which included host Rachel Kramer Bussel and authors Mercy Loomis, Tenille Brown, Elizabeth Daniels, and myself, has taken place and been archived! It may be found here or listened to here via this widget:Emerald
“Operator, won’t you put me on through…hurry up, won’t you put her on the line, I gotta talk to the girl just one more time…”
-Garth Brooks “Callin’ Baton Rouge”
In Praise of Protection
In the United States, we are currently in the middle of National Condom Week, which is recognized in the U.S. during the week of Valentine’s Day (February is National Condom Month). Thus it seemed an appropriate time to post my ode to this rubber entity I love and appreciate so much.
Several weeks ago the beautiful and inspiring Nikki Magennis initiated a series of posts honoring the condom on her blog. I deeply appreciated the sentiment and much enjoyed reading the lovely pieces, many of which were fiction flashers, she offered on the topic. (In fact, she has now created an entire blog devoted to the loveliness of the condom—check out Rubber Soul!)
In one of Nikki’s posts, she linked to this piece, in which three authors discuss their respective perspectives about including the mention of condom usage in the fiction they write. The piece is specifically about M/M romance, but I myself frankly don’t see distinctions either among which populations it is more appropriate to use condoms or in which genres their use is appropriately included/displayed—to me condom usage seems appropriate across the board in partnered sex unless the partners are monogamous with each other and have been STI/STD-tested*—so I read it as a general post about condom usage/mentions in fiction.
In the comments, I saw a number of assertions of something I have heard before (in regard to both erotic fiction and pornography of other media): These are “fantasies,” so the realism of condom usage is not necessary and/or desired and may even seem misplaced.
I feel very differently about this. The first thing that strikes me, I think, is that I don’t feel I write erotica just to write “fantasy” (this may be different in the romance genre, which the aforementioned article appeared to be more related to). I write it because sex interests me, and its inclusion in life is what I want to reflect in my writing—the ways sex enlightens, challenges, connects us, the plethora of sensations and emotions we feel around it, how it shows us things about ourselves, others, society. For me, the idea that I’m writing an “escape” and thus should not or would not want to include real-life concerns in what I’m writing does not resonate. To me, in fact, it feels more accurate to say the opposite would be true.
As I mentioned in the interview Ashley Lister did with me for the Erotica Readers and Writers Association, I have been carrying condoms in my purse since I started having sex. Rarely am I anywhere without them. This has of course been quite deliberate, and I have made use of condoms I’m carrying with me numerous times. Often the characters I’ve written have adopted this trait as well, and as I mentioned in the interview, while some readers may find this unrealistic or “too” convenient, the first part of this paragraph may show why I do not.
It thus seems odd to me to not include this aspect of sexuality in what I write. I am, as I mentioned, aiming to write about the integral nature of sexuality in life, and to me condoms are a significant part of that. Since I myself have never found condoms a “mood-killer” or any such thing, I have not aimed to portray them as such in what I’ve written (which is not to say one would never interpret them as such—I have no control of course over how my work is interpreted). Rather, I have mentioned them generally the same way I have experienced them in my life—matter-of-factly, as a requisite and understood aspect of sex. I myself have often found condoms sexy: they offer a protection I appreciate indescribably, and they tend to represent that I will soon be, well, having sex. :)
Also on the aforementioned post, I saw comments such as this one, from someone who posted as Tam:
Don’t expect me to care about “real” characters who only act like “real” people when it’s convenient and I have to ignore everything else. If I’m sitting there thinking “what kind of idiot has bareback alley sex with a stranger” I’m not thinking “that was really well written and wow, that was a funny line and I loved the description of the garbage bin.”
I will admit I feel relieved to see comments like this, not because of a vested interest in regard to my own writing or because I want readers to agree with me, but rather because I have sometimes felt there has been an underlying idea permeating society that condoms somehow “aren’t sexy” and aren’t really important or desired or used in real sexual interaction. I find that very disturbing, and probably in large part given my history as a reproductive rights and health activist, I have tended to place a lot of importance on the open acknowledgement and embrace of condoms as an essential and desirable component of modern sexual landscape. It is both because I feel no desire whatsoever to contribute to the perpetuation of the idea that condoms are “un-sexy” or “kill the mood” or somehow decrease the quality of sex in any of the depictions of sex I offer (including in video porn) as well as the simple reality I have experienced of the connection between condoms and partnered sex that leaving out the mention of them in writing erotic fiction feels jarring and inappropriate to me.
That all being said, none of this is to say any or everyone else, writer or reader, should feel the same way I do. I am simply stating my perception and experience of condom use in life and fictitious portrayal and why I have made the invariably deliberate references to condoms in my writing that I have. On the subject of fiction, incidentally, I will say that applying a rule that characters must use condoms does not seem appealing to me. Characters are characters; they do what they do. To state what a character in fiction must do before the character has even been born or created (even by the author) seems dubious and intrusive to me. As Nikki said, it is not that I support any installation of such a rule; rather, I am stating why I personally find it called for to include condom use and the reference to it in sexually explicit fiction and why I have chosen to do so (as well as why I find condoms sexy!).
Happy belated Valentine’s Day, and happy National Condom Week and Month!
Love,
Emerald
-Rob Thomas “Real World ’09″
The Gotta Have It Book Trailer
Here it is! Editor Rachel Kramer Bussel has just debuted the book trailer for the brand new anthology Gotta Have It: 69 Stories of Sudden Sex. The trailer, embedded below, contains excerpts of the authors themselves reading from their Gotta Have It stories. Watch/listen for the tantalizing snippets and sultry voices of, in addition to Rachel herself, Andrea Dale, Shanna Germain, Jeremy Edwards, Helia Brookes, and Donna George Storey, along with yours truly and a number of others! The full list of trailer contributors is listed below it.
Gotta Have It is on sale now at Amazon and these retailers!Christen Clifford
“After Ten Years”Giselle Renarde
“Meet Me In The Kitchen”Andrea Dale
“Wasn’t It Good”Shanna Germain
“Genesis”Elizabeth Daniels
“Dining In The Dark”Emerald
“Suggestion”Marina Saint
“Eat Me”Jeremy Edwards
“No Blame, No Shame”Heather Lin
“Seven-Letter Word”Kay Jaybee
“The Advantage of Working From Home”Vampirique Dezire
“A Forced Witness”Monocle
“Plotter”Rachel Kramer Bussel
“Manners”Kirsty Logan
“Pierced”Anya Levin
“Continuing Education”Helia Brookes
“Over The Line”Donna George Storey
“Anal-yzed”
Love,
Emerald
-from “Suggestion” (as read in the book trailer)
Passion, Recitation, and Celebration in New York

Photo by Laura Boyd
Left to right: Sarah MacLean, Donna George Storey, Rachel Kramer Bussel, Emerald (me), Monica Day
So I’m now finally getting around to blogging about the reading for Passion in New York, which was organized by Rachel Kramer Bussel (Passion‘s editor) and a truly delightful time. Donna George Storey, one of my favorite writers and people, was there all the way from Berkeley, California, and, of course, it was such a treat to see her. She sent me the picture below that she requested be taken of us be taken prior to the reading (I apologize that I don’t remember who the actual photographer of it was!)—I love that there is a poster above us that says, “Beautiful Children.” ; ) (It may be necessary to click on and enlarge the photo to see this clearly.)

Following the reading, we went to a lovely restaurant to celebrate Rachel’s 35th birthday, which was the day before; I found it a fabulous time with magnificent food and even more magnificent company, and I’m so glad I got the chance to be there to celebrate with her!
Lastly, the reading was videotaped, and the video of my reading is now available and embedded below. I myself feel it’s hard to hear me—there was no microphone, and I think I forgot to be conscious of projecting accordingly, lol. ; ) Regardless, here it is (video of the other readers of the evening may be seen as well at Rachel’s YouTube channel):
Love,
Emerald
-OneRepublic “Good Life”
Cleis Press’s Gratitude and Giving Holiday Special!
Publisher Cleis Press is having a year-end sale in the form of 20% off all their and Viva Editions books through December 31, 2010! Called the “Gratitude and Giving Holiday Special,” all that is required is to enter the code found here to receive the discount off all titles until the end of the year.
Cleis states that this special is an expression of their gratitude for their customers’ support, which I share. I also, in turn, feel much gratitude toward Cleis Press for publishing me in the books they have. I deeply appreciate and feel honored by the opportunity to have been represented in the following Cleis Press titles (all of which are of course included in the sale):







The Merry XXXmas Book of Erotica
Edited by Alison Tyler I mentioned this one here last year, but it was past Christmas by the time I did. Since its theme coincides with this time of year, I am excited to recommend it again now as one of my favorite overall erotica anthologies I have read.

Fast Girls
Edited by Rachel Kramer Bussel
Of course I already talked about Fast Girls in detail during my day on its virtual book tour, but in short, it is definitely a Cleis title I recommend!

Fairy Tale Lust
Edited by Kristina Wright
I have been working my way through Fairy Tale Lust, the debut-as-editor anthology of the magnificent Kristina Wright, since it came out. Though I am just short of finishing it, I have read enough to know I recommend it. :)

He’s on Top
Edited by Rachel Kramer Bussel
I found this, one of Rachel Kramer Bussel’s earlier anthologies of female submission (twin to She’s on Top), hot, intense, varied, and complex and recommend it to all interested in male dominance and female submission themes. To those celebrating it, happy Thanksgiving, and happy rest of the year (and always) to all!
Love,
Emerald
“The giver became the gift, all one…love, this day now, this day…I know that love will overcome…”
-Live “Sparkle”
Philadelphia Tonight!
Even though I’m just back from my trip to New York for the Passion reading, I am headed right back to the train station today and excited to be attending The Erotic Literary Salon this evening to see Jeremy Edwards and Robin Elizabeth Sampson/Erobintica as the feature readers!
Jeremy will be reading from his comedic erotic novel Rock My Socks Off, which I, given how behind I am on my reading list, am still in the middle of reading (and laughing out loud at!). Robin will be reading a selection of her erotic poetry, including her two poems that were finalists at the 2010 Seattle Erotic Art Festival’s Literary Art Showcase. (I just recommended one of them a few weeks ago.)
I am delighted by the opportunity to support Jeremy and Robin tonight, and I will also be taking the opportunity to read as an audience member (audience members get the chance to read for five-minute increments). In addition, I am honored that The Erotic Literary Salon’s founder and host, Susana Mayer, has invited me to appear at next month’s Salon as the featured reader. More on that to come—in the meantime, if you’re in Philadelphia tonight and want to come out and see us, you can find all the detailshere!
Love,
Emerald


















