Q: How do you handle sex in your books? Or, if you don’t, why not?
by Catriona
On Tuesday, Frank talked about a Left Coast Crime panel where winners and honourable mentions from that year's Bad Sex Awards were read out.
Minds, I was on that panel. And the excerpts were an astonishingly effective vaccination against ever writing a sex scene, let me tell you.
One had a bit about a dog with a penguin its mouth climbing to the top of a sand dune. (Oh God how I wish all but one of the panellists had got together beforehand and agreed to nod with recognition and make the reader of that think he was the weirdo. We missed a trick there.)
Another compared a woman's suntan marks with rings round a boarding-house bathtub (which I think is a great image, actually, but these were supposed to be the thoughts of a man in the throes of passion ...)
And they're not the worst. Google Guardian Books Bad Sex Awards if you like a laugh and aren't planning to eat watermelon, sardines or custard (yes, really) in the near future.
So how do I handle it? Well, I take my cue from the name of the award. I think good sex leads to bad writing - whether it's the insert tab A into slot B kind or the choir of angels on titian clouds of ecstasy kind.
But bad sex is much easier to write well. (Isn't that like life? I'm sure I remember reading some brisk agony aunt - one of the ones with that trademark excruciating lack of bashfulness - say that if all's well it's about 10% of a relationship, but when it goes wrong it shoots up to 90%. Claire Raynor maybe? Or Anna Raeburn? Virginia Ironside? Splendid women all, but if you sat next to them on a bus, you'd leave before your stop.)
I also believe bad sex earns its place in a crime novel more honestly. It can reveal character and you can hide clues in the ensuing storm of embarrassment.
So I have written a couple of sex scenes. In fact, three. Two and a half. One and two halfs.
In THE DAY SHE DIED, there's an abandoned effort at sex (Can I get points for not using the term "coitus interruptus"? Not now, I can't.) This shows something about the character of the male participant. Or does it . . .? (You've got to say that when you're talking about the inner workings of a plot. It's in the MWA, CWA, and SinC bylaws.)
Later in the book, there's another more successful - or at least completed - attempt looked back upon minutes later by the protagonist. This gives some insight into her character. Or does it . . .?
5 comments:
This is sort of the problem, isn't it, Catriona: "The other thing about 'bad sex' scenes is that they can be funny. Of, course the Bad Sex Awards show us that attempts at 'good sex' scenes can be coffee-down-the-nose funny, but I mean deliberately." Good or bad sex scenes can come off funny, but not always intentionally....
Writing funny, bad sex scenes beats choirs of angels on titian clouds of ecstasy every time.
Oops! It's my birthday and I've been skyping and generally whooping it up all day. But as promised: titles that came to mind were "The view form Slot B" and "Sit up and Write for England" and worse than that.
Brilliant, Catriona! This post hits it on the head. Or does it?
Jim
I love “deliberately” funny sex scenes. The not deliberately funny ones not so much.
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