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Brigit Astar
06-26-2010, 06:55 PM
By the time I was sixteen I had read a number of books that had erotic elements in them, but I had not read any thing that I would consider erotic literature. Then, I came across a curious work with the curious title "Pleasures and Follies of a Good-Natured Libertine" with the sub-title "Anti-Justine." And my eyes were opened, as the old saying goes. "Pleasures and Follies" influenced me so much in my writing. It still remains the best erotic work I have ever read. The strange thing about it is that the book was written more than two hundred years ago. When I first read it, the language of the writer and the setting and time of the novel made me think that--wow, this writer can really write. I didn't know anything about the writer, but I assumed that he was still living, and had written a novel of the past. I learned that Bretonne--the author of the novel--had lived in the eighteenth century and had written "Pleasures and Follies" in the midst of the French Revolution. I also learned that "Pleasures and Follies" is the first modern literary work of erotica. I have read the novel four times. Each time I read it, my admiration for Bretonne grows. For what he did was to write the first modern, "realistic" erotic novel. In a sense, Bretonne created modern, natural, realistic erotic literature. He was the father of erotic literature.

crzy67
06-26-2010, 07:41 PM
I had the book "Pleasures and Follies" when in college. At the time I only read-through parts of it think that I would get back to it later. Somewhere along the way the book got stolen that semester. Too bad, I like what I had red and have yet to find another copy. But it did turn me on better to erotic literature. I now always to find something new to read.

Brigit Astar
06-26-2010, 09:23 PM
If you read a lot of erotic literature, you will come to know the good writers from the bad. There are perhaps a half dozen good erotic writers--I mean writers that are published a lot or that have their writing posted a lot on the net.

crzy67
06-26-2010, 10:08 PM
There was a book, now long since lost, and I can't remember the name of. But, if fueled many thoughts that I had in my early teens. I have read books by both men and women and feel for the most part, women do a better job at writing erotica. They have a better insight about sex.

Brigit Astar
08-05-2010, 05:10 AM
I tend to agree with you that women do a better job of writing erotica. I don't know if they have a better insight about sex than men do. Roughly I think that women write better erotica; men write better porn.

jbrick
01-14-2012, 12:34 PM
Not my kind of story but good none the lless

Brigit Astar
01-15-2012, 09:03 AM
I've found that the more erotic writing you read, the more discerning you become in what's good and what's not. Quality will always will out.

Carol53000
08-07-2012, 02:49 PM
I used to have an erotic book called The Pearl.

Brigit Astar
12-16-2012, 03:38 PM
I love "The Pearl"! It's amazing when you think that that book was a compliation of erotic Victorian literature, written circa 1890.

vinooji
06-29-2013, 07:46 AM
Interesting

vinooji
06-29-2013, 07:55 AM
wow thats nice