Please give a warm welcome to Morgan Wyatt who joins us this morning.
Who Writes Erotic Romance Anyhow?
As a Catholic school teacher, I penned serious novels about
abused women escaping their abusive mates to carve out a life for themselves and
their children. It all sounded rather noble in print, but it wasn’t riveting
enough to get published, although an agent did pick it up and went immediately
out of business. I am not sure the two were connected. Getting published always
managed to elude me.
There was one woman in my former RWA group that managed to
get everything she wrote published. She wrote erotic novels, some of the other
members whispered as if it were a secret. No secret since she dressed like a
character from the cover of her books in a major push-up bra that peeked out
from a top barely resting on her shoulders. With her flamboyant hair and tiny
stilettos, she became our own regional Dolly Parton. In my mind, she was the epitome of an erotic
romance writer.
Can’t say I knew exactly what an erotic romance writer wrote,
but I knew it was hotter than anything I ever wrote. My stories pounded out of
the gritty reality of day to day life were less than slinky. They didn’t enter
a room on a cloud of perfume and promise, instead they clomped in with a chip
on their shoulder. I was that angry
white woman writer.
Something unusual happened. I kept going to workshops,
conferences and Nationals and met tons of writers, even ones who confessed to
writing erotica. Their ordinariness amazed me. I met school teachers, nurses,
grandmothers, and stay-at-home moms that wrote such steamy, and complex tales
that I had to ask a few for explanations of how certain things were possible.
Sometimes I would argue that they weren’t, but they’d assure me they were. I
never asked how they knew.
My image of the erotic romance writer evolved from my
flamboyant friend to a middle-aged woman, a mom, a teacher, maybe even someone
like myself. I played with writing hot
love scenes, and felt a little silly for my efforts. My first success came when
I sent a snippet from a story I wrote to PLAYGIRL Magazine. They published it
in their twins edition. I got paid and got a free copy for my efforts, which
did not please my husband at that time. I still have the magazine, but not the
husband.
Even with that small success, I did not consider myself a
writer of steamy scenes until a fateful submission call from Secret Cravings
for hot cougar novels. Why not? I gave it a try with my first erotic novel,
RELUCTANT COUGAR, whose main character is a fortyish woman who is pursued by a
younger man she meets at a funeral.
I followed that novel with my current one, CUB IN BLUE,
which details a woman getting passionately involved with a young police officer
wounded in the line of duty. I still have another one coming out in February,
PUPPY LOVE, followed by two more in the works. Suddenly, I am an erotic romance
novelist.
Have I changed to suit my new genre? Not too much, although
I am less the angry white woman. Now, I am more the smiling author. Partly
because Secret Cravings took a chance on me, but mainly because I took a page
from one of my novels and winked at a younger guy, and now I’m marrying him.
What is your image of an erotic romance novelist?
Two lucky commenters will get their choice of either
RELUCTANT COUGAR or CUB IN BLUE book.
Also go to www.morgankwyatt.com to win Godiva chocolate and a
strand of cultured pearls. The answer to the contest question is 9 ½ Weeks.
Good Luck.