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Book Review/Booklist: Beyond Fifty Shades of Grey

“Why are you writing about Fifty Shades of Grey?” you ask. Good question. Fifty Shades is supposed to be erotic romance, and this is a review site focused on the horror genre. Well, first, it’s pretty much inescapable. The movie comes out here on Valentine’s Day, although it really doesn’t sound romantic at all. Second, I find them kind of horrifying. And, while before the books were published, most people were unlikely to ask for them at the library, as Sarah Dorrance-Minch points out below, they did make it a lot easier for the curious to admit an interest in learning more. So what’s a librarian to do?

However, there are a lot of people who find Fifty Shades of Grey disturbing on multiple levels. Beyond the bad writing, there are problems with presenting an abusive and frequently nonconsensual situation as a romantic one, and additional issues with the inaccuracy with which it depicts BDSM. The book has inspired some not-so-safe situations when readers try to put the actions into practice, and unfortunately the media has jumped on that bandwagon– as Redbook does here.

Sarah Dorrance-Minch is a freelance writer who has considered the many issues involved in the world of the book and movie, and has offered to share her thoughts on the books, followed by suggestions in both fiction and nonfiction for the curious reader.

Beyond Fifty Shades of Grey 

by Sarah Dorrance-Minch

The much-hyped movie of E. L. James’ best-selling Fifty Shades of Grey premieres this weekend; and despite the fact that most of the reviews seem to be in fifty shades of negativity, the movie will very likely be a box office smash. Like the books, the movie will most likely inspire extremes of love and hate on the part of its viewers.

In the interest of disclosure, I will admit up front to being one of the haters. As a reader, I dislike the prose, which does not seem to have ever been subjected to an editor, not even for basic copy editing. As a feminist, I dislike the relationship dynamics – and enough has been written elsewhere about the ubiquitous rape and abuse that I won’t go into detail here.
And as a dominant (in the BDSM community), I object to the way the sex scenes are written. Not only are they set up as coercive (coercion is not acceptable in the kink subculture) but when they do involve bondage or sensation play, they use set-ups that are extremely unsafe. The protagonist, Ana, is at one point suspended from a bedpost by her wrists in a way that would have resulted in tendon damage; in another scene, she is mounted on a St Andrew’s cross in a way that would have had her falling behind the cross due to being improperly positioned. The worst example of unrealistic, unsafe play is the “Spem in Alium” scene, which has Ana tied up, deprived of sight and ability to hear what is going on around her, disallowed the use of a safeword, and subjected to flogging on the genitals with a beaded cat-o-nine-tails prior to rough sex. This is described as intense but not painful. In real life, the beaded flogger would have not only hurt, it would have caused severe lacerations, because that is what beaded floggers are made for: causing intense pain and, if moderate force is used, breaking the skin. Do not try replicating that scene at home.

Some good has come of the Fifty Shades sensation, though, and that is mainstream visibility. It is becoming okay to admit to liking kink. Up to thirty six percent of Americans make use of bondage, discipline, sadism, masochism, and negotiated power exchange, according to one study conducted by Durex, at least to some extent , but until recently, it was seen as something extremely dangerous and edgy, and not at all acceptable to admit to enjoying. That has changed. When you can find Fifty Shades themed, limited-edition laundry detergent on a grocery store shelf, with complimentary souvenir handcuffs, BDSM must be a little more mainstream.

Also acceptable to talk about in public: enjoying reading erotica while being female. It used to be that people thought only men got into porn. E. L. James put an end to that. The readership of Fifty Shades of Grey, an overtly sexually explicit novel in the erotic romance genre, is overwhelmingly female.  Conclusion: yes, women do like smut. They like it a lot. Write it, and they will buy it.

But for those people who are interested in reading kinked erotica, or who are interested in reading up on the specifics of BDSM and don’t want to get their information from Fifty Shades of Grey, what alternatives are there?

Here are a few possibilities to explore. Please note that this list is not comprehensive, nor is it definitive.  It should, however, serve as a beginning point.

 

FICTION
       

Kushiel’s DartKushiel’s Chosen, Kushiel’s Avatar  by Jacqueline Carey. This is, among other things, a highbrow speculative fiction series about an alternate Earth in which medieval France has been colonized by Nephilim. The series actually has nine books in it, but the first three have the most sadomasochistic sex in them, because the protagonist is a spy and a courtesan who also happens to be an anguissette – an extreme submissive who was born with a divine gift of craving, and being able to handle and recover from, nearly anything that can be dished out. There is a lot more to the plot of the series than just sex, but there is a lot of sex. And it’s all negotiated and consensual.

Macho Sluts: Erotic Fiction by Patrick Califia. This is a book of extremely hard-core pornographic short stories, one of which (“Calyx of Isis”), ironically, impressed E. L. James when she read it decades ago. The characters are all lesbians, because the book was written for the kinked members of the lesbian community-– used copies may be advertised as being written by Pat Califia, because the book was written before he came out to himself as a transman. Most of the stories involve characters that consent enthusiastically to whatever happens to them, and Califia is careful to make his set-ups workable and safe. Exceptions occur when the setting of a story is obviously fantasy or science fiction and it is clear, from context, that the story is meant to be nothing more than titillation or indulging in fantasy. There’s also a sequel, Melting Point, that is a little harder to find, but there are some pretty hot short stories in there, too.

Venus in Furs – Leopold von Sacher-Masoch. Von Sacher-Masoch was the Stephen King of his era; then this novel got published, and his fortunes sank under a massive flood of public disapproval. This is unfortunate. At times, his prose is almost luminous. Venus in Furs is about a man who wants to be dominated and hurt by a woman, who he dresses in furs and worships as a goddess. It’s also the book that gave us the term “masochism.”

Justine, or the Misfortunes of Virtue (Oxford World’s Classics) by Donatien Alphonse Francois, the Marquis de Sade. I can’t mention a book written by von Sacher-Masoch without also mentioning something written by Sade. He was, after all, the fellow who inspired the term “sadism.” A mention is all I will give, though. I can’t give a recommendation. As a work of philosophy, and of dark humor, Justine is actually rather interesting – it reads like Voltaire channeling the as-yet-to-be-born Ayn Rand. However, as erotica, it leaves much to be desired, not least because the book is full of rape.

The  Sleeping Beauty Trilogy: The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty, Beauty’s Punishment, Beauty’s Release  by Anne Rice. This trilogy (written under the pen name of A. N. Roquelaure) is considered a classic mostly because it was written by Anne Rice. The quality of the writing is very good. The situations described are frequently coercive, and even more frequently unrealistic, but it’s a fairy tale setting, and nobody expects realism from a fairy tale. Rice also wrote a somewhat more real-world erotic novel, Exit to Eden, under the name of Anne Rampling, that involves a switchable female starting as a submissive and eventually becoming a professional dominatrix at an exclusive sex club, and a submissive male who becomes one of her clients at the club and winds up falling in love with her.

The Story of O by Pauline Reage. Another erotic classic involving female submission. The plot is full of coercive situations and involves the systematic breaking of a woman’s body and soul, ultimately ending in her death. (How romantic!) That the writing manages to be erotic anyway is a testament to the incredible skill of the author.

 

NONFICTION

Screw The Roses, Send Me The Thorns! by Philip Miller and Molly Devon. This is considered a classic guide to BDSM.

The (New) Topping Book  by Dossie Easton. What the title says it is. Also a classic.

The (New) Bottoming Book  by Dossie Easton. Again, you can probably guess what this book covers by looking at the title. And again, considered a classic.

Sensuous Magic by Patrick Califia – In addition to his erotica, Patrick Califia has written various nonfiction books on the pragmatics and psychology of BDSM, also numerous essays for The Advocate on kink, queer rights, and other sex-related topics. This particular book is a good introduction to the basics.

— Sarah Dorrance-Minch is a freelance writer who lives in Indianapolis.

 

Banned Books Week: America’s Top Ten Countdown

 

Hey, it’s Banned Books Week!  The news is out now from ALA’s Office of Intellectual Freedom– the top ten banned and challenged titles for the year! And we’re counting them down here, just like Casey Kasem!

Thank you, Casey Kasem, for counting them down with us!

At number 10, Beloved by Toni Morrison took the place of To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee.  Both titles are often challenged, and have appeared on and off the top ten list over the last several years.

At number 9, newcomer The Glass Castle by Jeanette Walls took the place of The Gossip Girls series by Cecily von Ziegesar, a series that has been in and out of the top 10 over the last ten years.

At number 8, Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, a favorite here that’s no stranger to challenges (last seen on the top ten list in 2008), jumped back into the top ten, displacing What My Mother Doesn’t Know by Sonya Sones, which also made the top ten in 2010 and 2011.

At number 7, newcomer Looking for Alaska by John Green displaced Brave New World  by Aldous Huxley. Brave New World had been in the top ten since 2010.

At number 6, The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini, which also made the list in 2008, took the place of the Alice series by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor,  which has made the list three times in the past ten years.

At number 5,  the heartwarming story of a penguin family, And Tango Makes Three by Peter Parnell and Justin Richardson, moved The Absolutely True Story of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie… but we haven’t seen the end of that, so stay with me! As a side note, And Tango Makes Three has been number one four times and number 2 once in the past ten years already. Those penguins are alarming folk, apparently.

At number 4, the controversial erotica title Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James, overshadowed My Mom’s Having a Baby! A Kid’s Month-by-Month Guide to Pregnancy by Dori Hillestand Butler.

At number 3, Thirteen Reasons Why by Jay Asher displaced… The Hunger Games trilogy. Yes, really. With all the media attention directed to The Hunger Games, I’m kind of surprised those books didn’t make the top ten.

At number 2, guess what shows up? The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie actually moved UP the list, displacing The Color of Earth, a Korean manga series, entirely.

And… the number one banned or challenged book in the United States this past year is….. drumroll, please….

CAPTAIN UNDERPANTS!  

Now, I’m not a fan of potty humor, but really? What does this say about us as a society that the books most objected to in the country are challenged because of poop jokes?  Dav Pilkey’s Captain Underpants series knocked the series ttyn; ttyl; l8r, g8r by Lauren Myracle out of first place. Both series have had frequent appearances, in the top ten, though. That means her books will probably be back.

Wouldn’t it be great if we didn’t have to have a list like this every year? It’s great to hear how we should all promote literacy and do our best to put books into kids’ hands, to give them ownership. But look at the books in our top ten countdown here. Every one of them is a book a teen or child might read. Some might only read them in school, but some of them are absolutely written for and intended to be set in the hands of the people we want to be growing readers and thinking individuals. So a book makes a few people uneasy. How can we dare to take it away from everyone?

And that’s the Monster Librarian, counting them down. America’s Top Ten Banned Books. Now go find a copy of one and read it! And find a second one, and give it to a teen or child who otherwise might miss out on some really good reads. Or at least some quality potty humor.

 

 

 

 

Linkity Links: Monster Kids, Scary Stories, Fifty Shades, and Maurice Sendak

First, I’ve learned about a couple of cool Kickstarter projects. We received an email telling us about a documentary about “Monster Kids”- the kids who grew up on classic creature features and horror movies and became the next generation of artists, moviemakers, writers, and actors. From Rose Fox at Genreville, I learned about Nightmare Magazine, soon to be presented by Creeping Hemlock Press, and edited by John Joseph Adams. The lineup for the first issue is impressive- it includes original short stories by Sarah Langan and Jonathan Maberry, among others. Both of these projects are still in need of funding, so if you’re intrigued I encourage you to check them out.

Not that long ago, I wrote about an excellent reason to read the classics– Harry Clarke’s illustrations of Edgar Allan Poe’s Tales of Mystery and Imagination At the time, I had seen them only in an article from io9, but now, those who would like a full scale experience (and don’t have the book) can go here to the book design blog 50watts.com and see how disturbing they really are when they fill the entire screen.

And, over at Agnostic, Maybe, Andy Woodworth discusses why the Brevard County Library System’s quandary over Fifty Shades of Grey should lead to pairing Banned Books Week with “National Update Your Collection and Challenge Material Policies Because You Probably Need To (No, Seriously, Do It)” week. Apparently the Fond du Lac Library in Wisconsin declined to purchase it as well, but at least they made the decision, based on their selection policy, BEFORE purchasing the book. Not that the average person who wants to check out Fifty Shades of Grey will care whether the reason it’s not there is because of selection policy or because of censorship, but librarians are going to have to take a position, because it affects them now, on a practical level. It’s going to be an interesting Banned Books Week this year, no matter what.

Finally, Maurice Sendak and his impact on children and children’s literature (and me) can’t be summed up in a couple of paragraphs here. When I went to Amazon.com to look at children’s bestsellers, up at the top was Higgelty Piggelty Pop!  I was a little surprised, since I don’t think of it as being as well known as many of his others. It’s an odd little book, with a lot of story devoted to eating (and being eaten, by a lion). This afternoon one of my kids said “I don’t care” in response to something, and the other said “Well, you’ll be eaten by a lion”. They were referring to Sendak’s Pierre, in which a little boy who only responds to his parents with “I don’t care” is, in fact, eaten by a lion. And then there are the Wild Things, who scream to Max “Oh please don’t go! We’ll eat you up, we love you so!”  And so I was glad to have this article come my way. It does an excellent job of expressing why Sendak’s nightmares and bizarre fantasies are so powerful for so many. And maybe also why he wrote so much about being eaten.

And that’s all for now! Whew!