Celestial Reviews 210 - August 23, 1997

Note: A man and his dog are shipwrecked on an unpopulated island. After 
a few days he decides to take the dog and reconnoiter the island. He 
discovers that the only other inhabitants are sheep. He recalls how his 
farm buddies used to brag how they would screw sheep for kicks, but he 
says to himself, "I'll never be that desperate." 

So, a few weeks later he can't get those sheep out of his mind, and soon 
he's sneaking up on the flock. Just as he is about to pounce on a really 
cute one, the dog grabs his leg and won't let go. He snaps out of it, 
and thanks the dog for keeping him from making a fool of himself. 

This same scene happens every night for a month, and the guy starts to 
get really pissed at the dog. 

Then one day, the man spies a life-raft bobbing in the surf. In the raft 
is a beautiful young girl, barely alive. He takes her back to his hut, 
revives her, and nurses her to health. After a few days the girl is 
feeling fine, and that evening a rush of gratitude sweeps over her.... 

She confronts the man: "I owe you my life. I'm yours forever. I'll do 
anything  you want" 

"Anything?" 

"Anything!!" 

"OK, hold that dog for ten minutes!!!" 

Final note: Remember: even though someone else may be posting my 
reviews for me, my e-mail address is still Celeste801@aol.com.

- Celeste

      "Fortissimo" by Uther Pendragon (post-partum lovemaking)
            10, 10, 10
      "Wet Camera" by James Lawson (animalistic sex) 10, 8, 8
      "Muse" by Seurat (writer's block) 10, 10, 10
      "Mistress Molly" by Mary Anne Mohanraj (threesome &
               ff femdom) 10, 10, 10
      "Emptiness" by DevoSpudC (disillusionment) 9, 10, 10

Guest Reviews:

      "Passages in Life" by Jubal Harshaw (emerging adolescence)
            10, 10, 10
       "Cary" by daVinci (romance) 10, 10, 10

Reposted Reviews:

    * "Siblings" by Michael K. Smith (consensual sibling incest)
            10, 10, 10
    * "Summer Dreams" by Lysander (romance) 10, 10, 10

"Fortissimo" by Uther Pendragon (anon584c@nyx10.nyx.net).  When I 
found a "story" posted in a.s.s. last week labeled "Forceps," I 
was at first happy (because I looked forward to another 
installment in the Brennan story) and then sad (because it wasn't 
really a story at all, "just" a birth announcement.)  Now that the 
story has actually arrived, I guess I should send a virtual 
present or at least plan to attend the virtual baby shower.

As you may have surmised, the newest Brennan has arrived and Bob 
and Jeanette are engaged in celebratory copulation.  Jeanette is 
concerned that Bob considers her breasts, which have been 
exploited by Catherine as a source of nutrition, to be 
unattractive.  Bob disabuses her of this notion.  Then, just a 
foreplay is getting really good, they are interrupted by the 
"fortissimo" cry of the baby.  And so it goes; lovemaking is 
delayed, but climaxes come later.

Most men and many women who haven't had or nursed a baby have no 
idea how sensuous the combination of nourishing a baby and making 
love to the baby's father can be.  The author seems to have 
figured this out and has made the connection pretty clear in this 
story.

Ratings for "Fortissimo"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10

"Wet Camera" by James Lawson (jdlawson@cybrtyme.com).  This is not 
a complete story.  Just two minutes worth of a hot set-up and 
brief follow-through.  To find out what that means, check out this 
story.

Ratings for "Wet Camera"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 8
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 8

"Muse" by Seurat (dantedibby@aol.com).  The narrator is a man who 
is writing a femdom story for this newsgroup - perhaps this is 
genuinely autobiographical!  His wife catches him in the act, 
looks at the story, tells him it is silly, and recommends 
something more romantic - if you know what I mean <wink>.

Ratings for "Muse
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10

"Mistress Molly" by Mary Anne Mohanraj (mohanraj@goonsquad). Michael is 
happy with Kate, and partly to please her he invites Molly in for a 
threesome.  They have one wild night together, but almost immediately 
Kate finds herself drifting away from Michael and falling under the 
control of Mistress Molly.  OK.  I'll admit it sounds a little lame, but 
the author makes it all sound both enticing and plausible.

Ratings for "Mistress Molly"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10

"Emptiness" by DevoSpudC (cwilson9@ix.netcom.com).  Erika has 
always known herself to be beautiful: she won her first beauty 
pageant at age eleven.  Tonight her boyfriend has been murdered in 
a drive-by shooting and she has run off into the street, tried to 
kill herself, been rescued by a passing motorist, and has 
essentially been raped by that man.

This is a weird and confusing story - but deliberately so.  It's 
not really all that sexy, but it certainly did hold my attention.

Ratings for "Emptiness"
Athena (technical quality): 9
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10

"Passages in Life" by Jubal Harshaw (jubal@flash.net). Guest 
review by Green Onions.

Ah . . . the joys of church summer camp. Fresh air, tall trees, 
silly skits, roasted marshmallows, clear spring water,  and--um--
the other stuff. 

No, I don't mean sneaking out at midnight and managing to put all 
the camp superintendent's furniture out on rowboats tied to the 
pier or any of the other clever stunts that bored kids do in order 
to while away the first time in their conscious lifetimes in which 
they must somehow survive bereft of the blandishments of computer 
games, the vidiot box, and the local cruising strip. (Well to be 
frank: this is a.s.s.--not a 'Leave it to Beaver' rerun on cable 
TV--so you can bet that the "other stuff" I was talking about is 
the forbidden fruit normally denied to kids young enough to be 
denizens of these would-be gardens of Eden.)

But <ah-hem> this is not a child porno story <amen!>; in fact the 
protagonist is an almost unbelievably mature seventeen year old 
boy whose brilliantly planned and skillfully executed pranks of 
several years ago have since become legendary at the camp.  His 
lover is another counselor who happens to be scarcely nineteen 
herself and the job they both have ahead of them is to make their 
relationship fully functional.

Well, what is there to a boy's 'first time' anyway?  Is it a 
gradual process, one that begins with a lot of groping, giggling, 
cuddling and caressing and that eventually ends all-too-quickly in 
a juicy sticky splattered mess? Actually our hero's baptism is a 
long drawn-out affair, one that the author studies reverently in a 
remarkable number of sensual and psychological dimensions through 
the mind of an unusually reflective protagonist. This is _anything 
but_ a story of a 'quick fuck.'

Indeed this piece isn't principally about sex at all, even though 
there's no shortage of hot scenes. It has much more to do with 
romance and the recovery process from a short lifetime of failed 
youthful expectations--AKA: 'growing up.' As the plot develops, we 
discover that he and his lover have met before; both have an 
intricately developed past that turns out to account in large 
measure for mysterious ways in which they move.

What does it mean to cross the sacred threshold between childhood 
and adulthood in the context of romantic relationships? What does 
it mean to have a love affair based on more than superficial 
attraction or hot passing passion? How does a sensible person (or 
to be more precise, _two_ sensible people) deal with the molting 
of their adolescent fantasies and the emergence of integrated 
romantic, sensual, and spiritual desire? And how will our hero 
step out of the shoes of a boy in order to don the vestments of 
His Lover's Man?

This is not a story for the impatient or intellectually feckless 
reader: at something in the neighborhood of 35,000+ words, it 
almost qualifies for the label 'short novel.' Most of the time I 
found myself enjoying the author's slow, painstaking and loving 
style of careful psychological development--but at other moments I 
occasionally wondered which of the myriad details presented in the 
first few chapters would turn out to be important.

Granted: a certain amount of seemingly 'irrelevant' information is 
desirable in any story to paint the scenes in the reader's mind, 
to frame the events, and to develop the characters. And one so 
often hears from the _literati_ that a typical weakness of erotica 
inheres in the inability or unwillingness of so many writers to 
weave their protagonists' actions into the subtle complex tapestry 
of human needs, desires and motivations--a criticism that 
certainly hits the bulls' eye for all too many a.s.s. submissions.

Yet although the author's gift for careful description tended to 
make the story a bit slow at the beginning (for example, we learn 
the names of nearly a dozen different subdivisions of the camp in 
one of the early chapters: none of which is used later), it turned 
out to be a solid foundation on which to base the unfolding of the 
plot--the basic outlines of which are probably familiar to nearly 
everyone who has legitimate access to this newsgroup.

Overall this is an extremely thoughtful, well written and 
remarkably sophisticated piece that might have been even better if 
the writer had kept in mind that in art, less can sometimes be 
more. It's also one of the sweetest emerging sexuality/emerging 
romance stories I've had the pleasure of reading and one that I 
think most patient straight or bisexual readers will find both 
charming and delightful.

P.S.: My humble apologies to both Celeste and the author for the 
inexcusable tardiness of this review. Perhaps a one-part repost of 
this excellent novella might be in order.

Ratings for "Passages in Life"
Venus (plot & character): 10
Athena (technical quality): 10
Flagger (appeal to reviewer): 10

"Cary" by daVinci (rmbte1@ix.netcom.com).  Guest review by DG.

      Maybe the biggest challenge to writing an erotic story -  a 
good erotic story, that is - is finding a way to keep it fresh.  
There are only so many ways that boy can meet girl, only so many 
things that boy and girl can do to each other, only so many places 
they can do it.  One common solution is to expand the 
possibilities:  boy meets three girls, girl meets German shepherd, 
boy ties up girl and paddles her bottom- you get the idea.  These 
stories can be quite intriguing to read, but the gains in 
originality are generally offset by the loss of the romantic 
underpinnings of the fundamental boy meets girl formula.  
      Another solution, which the author of this excellent story 
uses, is to stick to the old formula and make the characters vivid 
and unique.  The nameless narrator of "Cary," by daVinci, is a 
burned-out classical pianist who decides to take early retirement 
and live a quiet secluded life in the suburbs.   In the third 
floor loft of his house he reads Kafka, listens to Mahler, and 
works on writing a symphony - not your run-of-the-mill erotic 
hero.  We never even find out how long his cock is.  
      His next door neighbor is a beautiful woman with a troubled 
marriage.  She has the opposite problem from the narrator: he 
lived the kind of life that people fantasize about and finally 
found it unfulfilling, while she lives a drab existence in the 
suburbs, feeling that there should be more to life.  If you think 
you know where this is headed, you're right.  But that doesn't 
matter - the enjoyment in this story isn't watching the plot 
unfold, it's in the vivid characters and the realistic 
descriptions of their problems and thoughts.  And when they do 
finally get down to business, the sex is very hot, thank you very 
much.
      It's not a perfect story.  Some (but certainly not all) of 
the character's musings about the meaning of life are overly 
melodramatic, and the dialogue and phrasings are occasionally 
awkward, particularly in the first half of the story.  But these 
are relatively minor quibbles.  This is a story that attempts to 
be both meaningful and sexy, and succeeds.

Ratings for "Cary"
Venus (plot & character): 10
Athena (technical quality): 10
DG (appeal to reviewer): 10

"Siblings" by Michael K. Smith (mksmith@metronet.com).  The author 
labels this a "novel in progress.  The story is long - really 
long; but it's good.  It includes several completed chapters and 
an outline of what is missing.  The main characters in the story 
take the simple perspective that if an action feels good and hurts 
nobody, then it is good; and on this basis the brother and sister 
build a sexual relationship that extends from their childhood into 
their adult lives and enables each of them to embrace other lovers 
as well.

In chapter five the author digresses from the story and defends 
the practice of consensual incest.  His arguments are plausible.  
The most serious objections, as I understand them, are genetic 
difficulties arising from recessive genes (double recessives are 
much more likely to occur among related individuals) and the high 
probability that incestuous relationships are likely to be 
coercive and therefore abusive.  The author is aware of the 
dangers of abuse; his story "Remembering" vividly depicts the bad 
effects of such a relationship.  His argument here is simply that 
those problems do not occur in this story and that the 
relationship between Michael and Alex is healthy and beautiful.  
The story certainly demonstrates his point.

The other objection to this story goes something like this: "The 
bible says incest is wrong, goddamit!"  I'm pretty sure that's not 
true; but certainly lots of people who read the bible and claim to 
be religious people say it's wrong.  This story doesn't address 
theology directly, but what it does do is draw a portrait of two 
main characters and several others who are genuinely good and 
socially responsible people.  Bible thumpers make me nervous and 
annoy the hell out of me.  I'd rather have a couple of incestuous 
hedonists like these for next-door neighbors.

The author states that "the story contains no sex scenes as such"; 
but that's not true.  It would be more accurate to state that the 
story does not glory in sex for its own sake; but it is very heavy 
on romantic sexual contact in the context of the developing 
relationship between this brother and sister. This story is 
extremely well written.  Because it is long and complex, I won't 
even attempt to summarize it any further here.  I strongly 
recommend this story.

Ratings for "Siblings"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10

* "Summer Dreams" by Lysander (lysander@bitsmart.com).  I get more 
than a little annoyed by people who say there are no good stories 
on a.s.s.  The people that call us all sick weirdoes I can at 
least understand and ignore.  But no good stories?  I'm 
desperately trying to keep up with all the good stories on this 
newsgroup.  Certainly there are some weak stories here (and some 
genuine garbage); but I find a.s.s. to be a good source of high 
quality recreational reading for adults.  This set of reviews 
should provide evidence of that quality.  And this story is what 
pushed me to make my comment.  

Lysander has written several good stories; but I think this is his best.  
I have previously enjoyed Lysander for his action stories; but this one 
is almost poetry.  He integrates the narrator's fantasies with his real 
life in a unique and moving manner.  Because the enjoyment arises from 
the unraveling of the story, I can't tell you much about it.  Just take 
my word for it: if you're interested in romance with healthy doses of 
sex and genuine human sentiment, this is a really good story for you.  
And don't be afraid to stop and think after you read this story - and 
read it again.

Ratings for "Summer Dreams"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10