One of my editing projects, the latest installment of Circlet’s gay speculative fiction anthologies, Wired Hard 4, is now available. Check out the link for purchasing information. There’s a not safe for work excerpt on Circlet. Here’s another!
One of my editing projects, the latest installment of Circlet’s gay speculative fiction anthologies, Wired Hard 4, is now available. Check out the link for purchasing information. There’s a not safe for work excerpt on Circlet. Here’s another!
Hi all. Or as “all” as my readership gets.
Today I have a free one for you folks. My story Waiting for a Train is available on Fishnet, a wonderful source of free smut on the interwebz.
According to Google Analytics, posts about zombies and sex are the most popular on my site. Mind you, this isn’t saying much, as the total number of visits is quite small from day to day, so that it’s not possible to say much about my blog traffic that isn’t lost in the margin of error. Even though I am not a big zombie sex fan, I feel a need to report zombie sex news when it comes to my attention. If anyone feels that they can do better justice to the subjects of zombies, sex and erotica, please let me know and I’ll post a link to your blog.
Zombie sex fans will be pleased to know that Dan Savage’s sex advice column Savage Love addresses zombie sex this week.
The Erotica Readers and Writers Association, one of our favorite destinations on the web, has reviewed our gender-queer anthology Up for Grabs: Exploring the Worlds of Gender.
The reviewer says, “[a]fter reading Up for Grabs, I have one complaint. It’s much too short!” Read the whole review here.
You may remember that I proposed a porn parody contest once upon a time. After an agony of indecision, I have chosen a winner–Julie Cox’s story “I Want to Suck Your…” Without further delay, I present the winner for your enjoyment.
There’s a cute article in Slate about sex words in dictionaries. I remember my Latin 201 teacher patiently explaining the complex meanings of “irrumo” to counter the Victorian editors of our Catullus text. They had footnoted it as “bastard.” Compared to the Roman taxonomy of profanity, I’ve always felt that American profanity is pretty weak.