Culture Erotic writing is becoming more explicit


Culture | Full steam ahead

Erotic writing is becoming more explicit​

Gardening metaphors are out. Other things are very much in

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Illustration: Julia Dufossé

Feb 27th 2025

START WITH the nipples. The lover does in “Mistress and Mother”, a steamy romantic novel from the 1990s. Though, since it was written three decades ago, they are not always called “nipples”. Instead, the author also discreetly describes them as “little buds”.

Other erotica from this era has a similarly hearty, horticultural air: in another novel, the paramour enjoys his lover’s “rosebuds”; in a third, he moves lower to her enfolding “petals”. In other books there is swelling, blooming and, of course, “seed”. The aim is oblique eroticism. The overall effect is of an unexpectedly energetic gardening catalogue.

But eroticism is changing. Open “Onyx Storm”, the latest romantasy book (a genre that blends romance and fantasy) by Rebecca Yarros, and things are rather clearer. Hardy perennials are out. Words like “hard” are in—as too are words including “cock”, “fuck” and “straddle”. And people are buying it. Sales of erotica are booming: thanks to pre-orders, “Onyx Storm” had already been on Amazon’s bestseller list for 19 weeks by the time it was published in January. After release, it shifted almost 3m copies in a week. It sold faster than any novel in America in the past 20 years.

There is now a vast variety of erotica available, including cosy erotica (knitwear is torn off), Austen erotica (Mr Darcy has assets even more impressive than £10,000 a year) and fairy erotica. There is even erotica featuring—readers may wish to brace themselves—physicists. These titles contain such explicit lines as, “Your dissertation on liquid crystals’ static distortions in biaxial nematics was brilliant, Elsie.”
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Sex is not entirely novel for the novel, as readers of E.L. James and Alan Hollinghurst will know. But it is more frank and frequent. “The spiciness seems to be increasing,” says James Daunt, chief executive of Barnes & Noble and Waterstones, two bookshop chains. Look at the corpus of English fiction and the word “nipples” has doubled in frequency since the year 2000, while “orgasm” has quintupled; use of the word “clit” is 14 times higher (see chart).

In some ways this is unexpected. It was once assumed that erotica was a male pursuit and that its appeal was not merely the sex but the sin. Obscenity was legally defined in Britain in 1868 by a judge called—in a detail no novelist would dare attempt—Justice Cockburn. “Nine-tenths of the appeal of pornography”, wrote Bertrand Russell, a philosopher, “is due to the indecent feelings concerning sex which moralists inculcate in the young.” Obscenity laws were relaxed in Britain in the 1960s in the wake of the “Lady Chatterley’s Lover” trial, but the illicit thrill remained.

The world has changed since then. The moralists have faded. Whatever hold the patriarchy had on publishing has waned. Yet the sex remains, and it is women who are driving it. Most of these books are being written, edited and published by women. They are bought, in vast numbers, by women. The novels are promoted by women on social-media platforms, particularly TikTok, using hashtags such as #Spicybooks and #Steamyreads, then appear on Amazon with the phrase “TikTok made me buy it!”, which sounds less like an endorsement than a defence.

As the interest in #Darkromance shows, this sex is not all nice. In Ms Yarros’s books, the hero pins the heroine violently to the floor in wrestling matches; in the romantasy novels of Sarah J. Maas, who has sold almost 40m copies, faeries do things that would make Tinker Bell blush.

What has driven this is new digital formats, such as audiobooks. (Ms Yarros and Ms Maas dominate those charts, too.) The e-book has been especially consequential. It is discreet—no one can see what you are reading on a tablet. And it lets authors self-publish cheaply, as Ms James did in 2011 with “Fifty Shades of Grey”, a story of sadomasochism. It was later republished by Vintage, but romance lovers retained the habit of reading books digitally.

Authorial autonomy online means it is “impossible to police” what goes into books, says Hal Gladfelder of the University of Manchester. The ubiquity of internet pornography means that even to try to do so would feel “ridiculous”.

In one sense this new generation of erotic prose is more realistic than what came before. Floral analogies are out; proper body parts are in. But in another sense, it is not remotely realistic. Everyone is gorgeous; names like “Xaden” and “Aetos” dominate; most characters have remarkable powers, if not superpowers.

In Ms Yarros’s books, the hero and heroine, who are long-term lovers, can creep into each other’s minds, where they find each other thinking hot thoughts in an italic font, such as “How do you want me to take you?” and “You’re astounding” rather than, as might be the fear, “Did I switch the tumble dryer on?” or “It was definitely your turn to take the bins out.”

It is easy to smirk, but writing about sex is tricky—as a trawl through the back catalogue of the Bad Sex in Fiction Awards shows. The now-defunct prize, which ended during the pandemic, was set up in 1993 by Britain’s Literary Review to “highlight and gently discourage redundant, poorly written or unnecessarily pornographic descriptions of sex in fiction”. Given that the contenders in its final years included such phrases as she “offer[ed] her moist parts to my triumphant phallus” and her vagina was “slowly chugging my organ as a boa constrictor swallows its prey”, perhaps the discouragement was too gentle.

Part of the difficulty in writing about sex is what Julian Barnes, an English writer, called “the naming of parts”: “At the basic level, he put his what into her—or indeed his—what?” “Boa constrictor” is probably best avoided, but, as Mr Barnes observed, almost all terms are tricky. “Where between the Latinate and the Anglo-Saxon do you pitch it?”

Being biological can be as bad as being too oblique, as a contender for the Bad Sex award in 2019 clearly showed. “I have 8,000 nerves in my clitoris,” explained one character. “Your penis gets by on 4,000.” (Such a pronouncement would leave most lovers unsure whether to take notes or take flight.) At times characters seem to be enjoying sex as little as the reader. In a nominated work of 2019 a character, in a moment of high passion, “screamed as though [she] were being run over by a train”. The reader can only sympathise.

Most winners of the prize were, unsurprisingly, men: the male gaze does not always improve male prose. But the internet is changing the balance of power in fictional sex, just as it has in actual sex. Male misbehaviour is called out by such things as the “menwritingwomen” Reddit thread. (John Updike—the “penis with a thesaurus”—features heavily.) A popular parody pokes fun at a man writing a woman’s morning: “Cassandra…breasted boobily to the stairs, and titted downwards.”

Eroticism always “reflects what is going on in society at the time”, says Sharon Kendrick, a popular British romantic author. In the liberal 1970s, literary lotharios were in fashion. The arrival of the AIDs pandemic in the 1980s brought on a period of “sexual fastidiousness” and heroes who had one true love (and a condom).

The new generation of erotic prose may be easy to mock. But it is reflecting a society in which women can often get precisely what they want. That should give any feminist a bit of a thrill. ■
 
I've noticed a lack of "vulva" because it's "too clinical" even though that's the entire outer genitalia, but they just focus on "clit" and the vagina in its many variants. "Cunt" is also being used more, which is a huge turn-off like "pussy" is.

But that makes me a prude, apparently.


Pretty much. Even between loving couples they don't write their love scenes like that.

In The Shattered Rose by Jo Beverly, a knight returning from the Crusades after several years to find his wife had a toddler. The story is about repairing their marriage. The sex scenes were part of that.

Istr reading a big name romance writer years ago saying sex scenes must have a purpose to the story like any other scene. Now they're just shoved in every few pages, needed or not.
 
Who the hell cares about erotic writing? I don't read it because I don't care for it, it can't be compared to porn which does harm not only due to depending on human trafficking but watching such graphic porn warps young minds in making them think the disgusting hardcore shit is what you're supposed to do in a relationship (i.e: spitting, choking, humilation shit)
 
50 Cent was saying recently how in music, the quality of writing dropped in the mainstream.
He was at least doing metaphors like Candy Shop and Magic Stick so at least it's more poetic and even kids can listen to it.
Now, it's Wet Ass Pussy, very explicit, direct and nasty.
Some of the lyrics these days sound less sexy and more like someone really needs to see a gynecologist.
"Grab a bucket and a mop"
"Sticky like apple pie"
"I got that flavor that lasts"

And then you have "Unholy" by Sam Smith and Kim Petras. Considering Petras is a troon, the line "She be poppin' it" can only refer to two things - a rot pocket or a prolapsed anus.

I recently learned of an OnlyFans content house (we were warned about this more than a decade ago, but they went and did it anyway) called BOP House. Apparently, BOP stands for "blown-out pussy". Again, that just sounds like someone needs immediate medical attention for a prolapse.
 
truly, shakespeare could not compare
Oh, but it does. If you can manage to decode the fruity Medieval English and deranged meter, a lot of Shakespeare is lewd jokes and cringe teen romance. I’m ashamed that academics are so fucking clueless that they sell this trash as the foundation of English literature.
 
Perhaps both are schlock, sir?
but one doesn't get people banned from financial services
Oh, but it does. If you can manage to decode the fruity Medieval English and deranged meter, a lot of Shakespeare is lewd jokes and cringe teen romance. I’m ashamed that academics are so fucking clueless that they sell this trash as the foundation of English literature.
I always thought his plays were way too melodramatic, honestly. People hyped them up too much
 
Who the hell cares about erotic writing? I don't read it because I don't care for it, it can't be compared to porn which does harm not only due to depending on human trafficking but watching such graphic porn warps young minds in making them think the disgusting hardcore shit is what you're supposed to do in a relationship (i.e: spitting, choking, humilation shit)
Imagine thinking modern erotica (which is just porn) doesn't have spitting, choking, humiliation in it. Doesn't lead to people (especially children) watching video porn. Doesn't warp young minds at all. Not like 50 shades of grey forced the disgusting BDSM culture into the mainstream. Thankfully I'm not a vagina-nigger apologist, so I don't.
 
The incel conservatives of Articles & News gather 'round the latest tism storm over nothing. Their monitors have remained uncleaned for over 18 months and reflect their decayed environ and discarded Onaholes and vibrators bedecked with crude graffiti of Pepe the frog. They pound into their mechanical keyboards how much better the porn was under Reagan and rant about the Boomer generation just as the microwave dings and produces the refried microwave dinner bought with Grandma's stolen EBT card.

As the usual buzz words get bashed in over and over "Journo's, troons, muh conservatism" pants unbuckle and unfurl the gnarled genitalia beckoning for the Conservative-approved sex toy. As buttons are clicked into place, they discover the battery is empty and the charger needs charging. Thus, they stammer over to their dresser in search of more batteries or a sex toy replacement with confused pets being shooed away and locked out of the room. Then, once they have secured their tool of vice, they apply it to the meagre tools of reproduction as they type away their long screeds howling into the void much like how their fathers howled into the gaping holes that birthed them.

Once they reach the zenith of self-pleasure, they unironically shout JULLLLLLAAAAAAAAAYYYY in autistic orgasm that which drowns the petulant life for it numbs the pain of being born.
 
Here's a game for y'all: go to any book store, find a BookTok-looking volume, and open it randomly. You'll find some of the most boring, mechanical descriptions of extreme sexuality. A well-written textbook is more engaging, though the embarrassment at BookTok shit makes for a sort of meta-captivation.

It's ChatGPT level shit, weirdly enough. Like female authors have all been working from the same AI model and secretly had AI all along. Hey maybe its just survivorship bias for who gets published and put on a store shelf. And then you go to various fem websites and read female authors and ummm...

I recently learned of an OnlyFans content house (we were warned about this more than a decade ago, but they went and did it anyway) called BOP House. Apparently, BOP stands for "blown-out pussy". Again, that just sounds like someone needs immediate medical attention for a prolapse.


Didn't take long.

So if we want more women to read our shitposts we need to make them erotic?

I sensually put on my blue robe and wizard hat..

No you need it more clumsy and implausibly retarded. Add in a few animals, relatives, aliens and mythical creatures who would have no standards and would therefore be interested in the frumpy female protaganist who typically has no sex appeal or skills.

"AS HE DAWNED HIS WIZARDING ROBE HE CAST AN UNKNOWN SPELL BY ACCIDENT AND A MASSIVE TURGID CENTAUR APPEARED AND SAID HE WAS IN NO MOOD FOR SPEAKING. I WAS UNABLE TO MAKE A SOUND FROM ACCROSS THE PARLOR SO I JUST WATCHED THE POOR WIZARD COMMUNE WITH NATURE. I WASN'T SURE IF HE DIED OR NOT BUT I KNEW I WAS NEXT AS THE CRUEL CENTAUR STARED ME DOWN BUT LITTLE DID HE KNOW I HAD BEEN BORN READY FOR THIS."
 
Women are freakier than men in general. Some of them unironically enjoy Goosh Goosh and would have liked Redo of Healer better if the protag was far harsher on his enemies. As in hot poker on the girl action. Reminds me of that little chart detailing the top rated Hentai tags between men and women. Men's side is tame and women... have alot of crazy shit in it. Like Bestiality. Interestingly enough, both find Impregnation to be top of the list.

So if we want more women to read our shitposts we need to make them erotic?

I sensually put on my blue robe and wizard hat... 🧙‍♂️
You need to be very descriptive on how you put on robe and wizard hat. Women just love the details. Hence why every character entrance in girl-centered fiction goes crazy with descriptions.
 
Porn has had a worse effect on women than men. This girl I'm trying to hook up with at work (not a girl, she's 38 lol) was talking about how hot she is for like 50 shades of gray and shit and how her "sexual education came from her mom's romance novels" and talking about this nicole kidman smut movie and how she gets hot about it

Women got wrecked by porn
Always makes me chuckle knowing 50 shades started off as literal twilight fan fiction. What makes me laugh is remembering what the woman who wrote it looks like.
 
I actually didn't know if you were kidding about the rape so I looked up the script. That sure was a lot of words somebody wrote one handed.

I can see why it was taken out.
The problem with the replacement scenes Type Moon wise is less the writing and more it clashes with the story or what was originally there is how the rest of the story was written, leading to weird situations where the protag is blushing over being eaten by the dragon that exists inside his crush (This is a real actual thing).

That was the most acceptable replacement scene so far since it's just a disturbing bad end. Worst is the "intimate" blood sucking (This is also a real thing).

At least Nasu had the decency for a fade to black instead of whatever awkward mess that would've been in Tsuki Re.
 
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