Celestial Reviews 150 - January 18, 1997
Note: Ah, distinctly I remember. It was in the bleak December. In my
guileless lethargy I blithely decided to combine work with play and proclaimed
the Third Annual Celestial Writing Contest. I wasn't credulous enough to
believe that more than two or three people would enter.
The basic idea was that authors had to use a specified set of words in a
really good story. My theory was that irascible students who are typically
put off by more mundane approaches to vocabulary instruction would easily
become adept users of these words.
Response has been overwhelming! It's refreshing to realize that the creative
hedonists who spend their time on this newsgroup are not impervious to public
service. Some of the stories were submitted by prolific authors whose names
we have seen often in this newsgroup, other authors appear here for the first
time.
The most egregious omission from the entries is the failure of Grammaticus to
submit a poem containing all the words.
I see an incipient educational revolution taking place here. I am confident
that any intelligent person reading these stories will (a) not suffer and (b)
learn these words. Certainly, not all eight stories would be necessary. In
an academic setting, the best way to use these stories might be to show
students the list of words and their definitions (and perhaps discuss
interesting aspects of the words), then let the students read the first three
or four stories, then give the vocabulary test. The rest of the stories could
be sprinkled throughout the rest of the semester, so that the students could
review and retain them. Assuming we wanted to teach, say 2000 words rather
than a mere 20, we would obviously need 800 stories; but hey, that's what
libraries (and the Web) are for!
{Actually, the best way to teach these words would be to tell the students
that the stories are available, and then FORBID them to read such disgusting
trash.}
When I first looked at the list of words I had selected, I thought maybe I had
made the task too difficult. I could imagine incipient orgasms and perhaps
constricting cunt muscles and a relaxed lethargy after sex, but most of these
words appeared to be completely unrelated to sexual activity.
But the authors rose to the challenge. Perhaps the most mundanely creative
was the author who used this disclaimer: "The following three stories contain
the words acerbic, adept, ameliorate, apocryphal, assuage, blithe, constrict,
credulous, dilatory, egregious, fatuous, guile, hedonism, impervious,
incipient, irascible, lethargy, mundane, prolific, and redundant. If these
words offend you, or if you are not old enough to read these words in your
community, then don't read any further."
{Incidentally, "mundanely creative" is a genuine oxymoron. The phrases that
appear as "oxymorons" on talk shows and joke pages - military intelligence,
cultured Canadian, sexy engineer, etc. - are jokes. By claiming that these
are oxymorons, the speaker or jokester is making a satirical comment about the
military, Canadians, or engineers. A real oxymoron describes the tension in a
situation: "Parting is such sweet sorrow" means that it is paradoxically both
pleasant and unpleasant to say good-bye to a loved one. If we describe a
person as possessing intelligent stupidity, we might mean that he is looking
so hard at the abstract aspects of a problem that he is missing the obvious
point - or we might mean that a person who is considered really stupid by
everyone around him is using his common sense so well that he is more
intelligent than others. By saying that this writer was mundanely creative, I
meant that his approach was simultaneously simple and surprising. But enough
of these dilatory ramblings! We had better get back to the stories.}
As I began to read these stories, I realized they were all excellent. In
order to make my decisions make sense, I decided to tighten up the ratings a
little. If I gave all the stories straight 10s, how could I account for the
winner? And so, maybe a side benefit of this contest will be an improvement
in the rating system.
THE WINNER IS: "Susan" by Uther Pendragon. It was an extremely close choice
between this and one other story. I won't give the name of the other story,
so that all the other authors can assume that they almost won. Thanks to
everyone who entered. We got some really excellent stories from this contest.
READERS' CHOICE: Since there were so many good stories this time, I found it
difficult to select my winner. I'd like to get input from readers. If you
have time, send me a vote stating which of these stories you think was best
and a brief comment explaining your selection. Or, if you prefer, write a
note to the author whose story you prefer and tell him/her why you think
he/she got shafted by Celeste. Also, if you have ideas for a topic format for
the Fourth Annual Celestial Writing Contest, I am open to suggestions. Don't
worry; I live in my own little world and I don't have to wait another year for
my next "annual" contest.
- Celeste
"Susan" by Uther Pendragon (hot but poignant hedonism)
10, 10, 10
"Whitewash" by Tom Bombadil (blackmail & sex slavery)
9.5, 9, 8
"Three Variations on a Theme" by OddManOut (variety) 9.5, 8, 8
"Adventures on the Oregon Trail" by Rhett Dreams (sex
in the wild west) 9.5, 10, 10
"After Hours" by hamlet (shoe store sex) 10, 10, 10
"Parking" by The Englishman (emerging adolescence) 10, 10, 10
"Lady Distressed" by Mary Anne Mohanraj (chivalrous romance)
10, 10, 10
"A Night Out" by Taylor Norton (strip joint sex) 9, 10, 10
"Amy the Dark Part 1: Payback" by Daniel Rabe (incest & revenge)
7, 7, 7
"Susan" by Uther Pendragon (anon584c@nyx.net). I think what we have here
could be entitled "Everyman's Wet Dream"; but it's also a poignant story. The
narrator stumbles upon a beautiful woman who essentially believes that each
person should seek his or her own pleasure, but seek it by offering pleasure
to others in exchange. Susan brings Joe to heights of pleasure he has never
experienced before. The poignant part is that Joe eventually falls in love
with Susan and wants an exclusive relationship; but exclusivity is not part of
her repertoire.
Even taken in isolation, this is one hot story. But what amazes me to the
point of incredulity is that this story is written by the same person who has
been posting the Bob and Jeanette Brennan stories. I think this level of
versatility is wonderful. As I read a Bob and Jeanette story, I say to
myself, "This author really understands simple, monogamous passion." As I
read the present story, I say to myself, "This author really understands
hedonism." This same author has written about an exploitive guerrilla officer
in "Duty"; and "Wagtail" contained bestiality, incest, and rape, but was just
a good, creative story. This kind of versatility is wonderful.
Ratings for "Susan"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10
"Whitewash" by Tom Bombadil (stbush@iglou.com). Jane and her husband
have fallen on hard times financially. She has padded expense accounts
to make ends meet. But now the boss has found out, and it's time to pay
the piper. In his prologue this author states that he was trying to
imitate Deirdre's style with this story. Now, if you're ever a character
in a Deirdre-style story and somebody asks you to promise to do without
question everything he says, remember to "just say no," unless the idea
of sex slavery sounds attractive to you. In the context of the present
Writing Contest, an _acerbic_ "No way, Jose!" might be in order. In
preparation for the Fourth Writing contest, Jane is more amenable to
persuasion. So anyway, our fallen heroine, overcome by blackmail,
submits to the evil intentions of Dick Small. That's right, Dick Small.
Jane concludes that if she has no choice in the matter she might as well
enjoy the coercive sex with her boss and with Cindy Darling, whom the
boss imposes on her. And so she does begin to enjoy it. An unexpected
benefit of the sexual slavery with the boss is an amazing amelioration of
her sex life with her husband. Jane also develops a close relationship
with Cindy. The story has a bit of a surprise ending; so I don't want to
tell you any more about the plot.
This was a good story, but in comparison to some of the other contest
entries, the plot developed too slowly. In fact, the plot is not nearly
as well developed and to the point as was this author's "Chosen," which I
reviewed last week.
Ratings for "Whitewash"
Athena (technical quality): 9.5
Venus (plot & character): 9
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 8
"Three Variations on a Theme" by OddManOut (oddman0ut@hotmail.com). What we
have here is a set of three unrelated very short stories, each of which fits
the requirement of using the specified vocabulary words. Two out of the three
also include good writing advice. The first story focuses on Pam and Sandy
getting it on together while they discuss using "sexier" words in Sandy's
advertising copy. The final story presents a lad who is caught reading a porn
magazine when he should be studying vocabulary words, and the kindly teacher
locks him into a room with the stories from a contest much like this one (but
with lower-quality stories) for his reading assignment. In between we have a
light-hearted mind control story, in which the local geek has acquired from an
ancient tome mysterious powers to control cheerleaders.
This story falls a bit short of the winner with regard to both (1) accuracy of
word usage and (2) coherence of the plots. These are three good stories -
just not good enough to win the prize. My biased opinion is that the plot of
the third story has great potential; and if there is a similar Fourth
Celestial Writing Contest the author should develop that plot into a real
masterpiece.
Ratings for "Three Variations on a Theme"
Athena (technical quality): 9.5
Venus (plot & character): 8
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 8
"Adventures on The Oregon Trail" by Rhett Dreams (Rhettxxoo@aol.com). Josh is
a teenage scout for a wagon train headed from Missouri to Oregon. What he
learns about sex from the experienced widow Claire he applies to the much
younger Shelly as they grow closer during their dangerous trek. The sex is
very hot, and it occurs within a realistic pioneer setting. As the author
states in the epilogue, this is the beginning of a longer story about this
group of sexy settlers.
This author writes extremely well. Aside from the engrossing story, I also
appreciated his choice of words. On a few occasions his use of the "contest"
words seemed a bit artificial - but hey! this is an artificial contest. It's
his choice of non-contest words that I admired. On the other hand, the author
made silly but irritating errors with simpler words - for example, past for
passed - which could have been corrected through more careful proofreading.
Ratings for "Adventures on the Oregon Trail"
Athena (technical quality): 9.5
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10
"After Hours" by hamlet (brian@ISI.EDU). Mark is selling shoes and Susan is
on the make. She tries on shoes till closing time. Then after hours, she
captures him and gives him the ride of his life. It's very hot sex - if such
a thing is possible in a shoe store.
An interesting aspect of this story is that it uses the word "apocryphal"
perfectly - with reference to the stories Mark had heard about Susan pulling a
train in the men's restroom. In fact, were I to base first prize completely
on word choice, this one might be the winner. It's an excellent story!
Ratings for "After Hours"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10
"Parking" by The Englishman (Eskilton@aol.com). Julie and her boyfriend have
been parking and necking, and Phil goes too far. Julie is upset not so much
over Phil's ejaculation as over her loss of control, the inconvenience, and
her need to explain to her father why she has walked home without a purse. We
get a surprise ending, but if I told you any more about it, it wouldn't be a
surprise, would it?
Because my database is seriously corrupted, I cannot check my records
carefully; but my recollection is that The Englishman has most often written
incest stories. This is a departure from that pattern, and it's a very good
story. I like this level of flexibility.
Ratings for "Parking"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10
"Lady Distressed" by Mary Anne Mohanraj (mohanraj@mills.edu). Jane (or Janet)
has been persuaded to go to one of those Medieval Faires, where her date has
abandoned her for greener pastures - or, more specifically, for a lass in a
red skirt in a haystack. One of the courtly workers comforts Jane, and soon
she no longer begrudges her date his greener pastures.
This story is not nearly as dorky as I have made it sound. It's really
fascinating. I'd call it charming, but then all you macho readers would stay
away from it. Instead I'll point out that it has hot sex in a really
interesting context.
In addition, the author blends the vocabulary words seamlessly. In many of
the other stories the "big words" jumped out at me as unusual; but in this
story they blended in with other equally sophisticated words and invariably
expressed exactly the meaning that the author intended.
Ratings for "Lady Distressed"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10
"A Night Out" by Taylor Norton (jocon@tiac.net). This is a strange story - a
really strange story. The guy comes into a strip joint and seems determined
to get really drunk, while remaining aloof from the dancers and waitresses.
Eventually he is attracted to a very sensuous Mexican dancer. He gets carried
away, and a brutal bar fight follows. The actual sex is minimal, but the
reader is left with a vivid impression of some mysterious events in a decadent
but erotic atmosphere.
The author's style reminds me of good detective stories; and the atmosphere of
the stories reminds me of Wollstonecraft at his best. The only thing wrong
with this story is that it's poorly proofread - occasional apostrophes instead
of plurals and that sort of thing. Ignore the mistakes and enjoy the story.
I hope this author writes some more stories.
Ratings for "A Night Out"
Athena (technical quality): 9
Venus (plot & character): 10
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 10
"Amy the Dark Part 1: Payback" by Daniel Rabe (aquilada@mail.dial-up.net).
This story was inspired by the Writing Contest. Although the author did not
manage to work all the words into the story and although it is not quite
complete, I thought I should review it in this issue of CR anyway.
This is a vivid description of a young girl killing her parents after the
father has raped her and the mother has done nothing to intervene. The rape
itself (described in a flashback).is realistic, but not sexy. The author's
commendable goal seems to be to set people straight who think that kiddy-rape
is a lot of fun. Actually, most people who believe in child incest would
probably reply that it doesn't happen this way - kids who have sex with their
parents do so "freely," and both they and their parents have a good ole time.
The author needs to sharpen this angle. I recommend that he read and imitate
some of the Michael K. Smith stories (such as "Justice") that focus on this
topic.
The author _begins_ by announcing that this is a story about the real effects
of incestuous rape. The first thing I would do would be to omit that warning;
the author would achieve his impact more effectively if he simply told the
story with no preamble. In addition, the entire story needs a careful
proofreading to eliminate some fairly obvious grammatical errors.
This story possesses the kernel of a good idea. It's not finished yet, and
the author acknowledges that. My hope is that rather than just adding words
to "finish" the story, the author will revise the whole thing while bringing
it to completion.
Ratings for "Payback"
Athena (technical quality): 7
Venus (plot & character): 7
Celeste (appeal to reviewer): 7
CELESTIAL VOCABULARY: A problem with some of the stories was that some
authors seemed to lack a full comprehension of a few of the contest words.
I'll try to clarify these meanings here:
A few authors tended to use AMELIORATE when they should have used ASSUAGE. or
vice versa. Here's the difference:
ASSUAGE implies softening or sweetening what is harsh or disagreeable. <A good
blowjob might assuage the pain of an engorged cock.>
AMELIORATE implies making more tolerable or acceptable conditions that are
hard to endure. <A man might ameliorate his sex life by undergoing a sex-
change operation or by acquiring a sex slave.>
Although dictionaries often give "fictitious" as a definition of APOCRYPHAL,
it is not accurate to use the two words interchangeably. Here's the short
version of the distinction:
APOCRYPHAL implies an unknown or dubious source or origin, or it may imply
that the thing itself is dubious or inaccurate. I think the word came into
the English language through the term APOCRYPHA, which early Christian leaders
applied to those books of the bible (such as The Gospel of St. Peter or St.
Thomas) that claimed to be authentic but where rejected as fakes by the early
Church leaders. Thus, stories of Jesus making mud animals that came to life
were considered to be apocryphal. The term has expanded to include any story
that sounds plausible but might be fraudulent. Some of the statements I
attribute to Mark Twain or Yogi Berra are APOCRYPHAL - that is, it's likely
that those people didn't really say these things. <A wife might listen to an
unfaithful husband's probably apocryphal account of where he had been last
night.> <The veteran nun assured the novice that the stories she had heard
about the tunnel between the convent and the rectory were entirely
apocryphal.>
The advertisements indicating that Fondle Me Elmo dolls will be available by
Valentine's Day are all apocryphal. The following story, obtained from
rec.humor, is possibly apocryphal:
"In retrospect, lighting the match was my big mistake. But I was only trying
to retrieve the gerbil," Eric Tomaszewski told bemused doctors in the Severe
Burns Unit of Salt Lake City Hospital. Tomaszewski, and his homosexual partner
Andrew "Kiki" Farnum, had been admitted for emergency treatment after a
felching session had gone seriously wrong. "I pushed a cardboard tube up his
rectum and slipped Raggot, our gerbil, in," he explained. "As usual, Kiki
shouted out "Armageddon", my cue that he'd had enough. I tried to retrieve
Raggot but he wouldn't come out again, so I peered into the tube and struck a
match, thinking the light might attract him." At a hushed press conference, a
hospital spokesman described what happened next. "The match ignited a pocket
of intestinal gas and a flame shot out the tube, igniting Mr Tomaszewski's
hair and severely burning his face. It also set fire to the gerbil's fur and
whiskers which in turn ignited a larger pocket of gas further up the
intestine, propelling the rodent out like a cannonball." Tomaszewski suffered
second degree burns and a broken nose from the impact of the gerbil, while
Farnum suffered first and second degree burns to his anus and lower intestinal
tract.
FICTITIOUS implies fabrication and suggests artificiality or contrivance more
than deliberate falsification or deception. FICTITIOUS is a broader category
than APOCRYPHAL. While it makes sense to refer to Ebenezer Scrooge and Tiny
Tim or to a name John Smith uses at a motel as FICTITIOUS, neither would be
considered APOCRYPHAL.
MUNDANE means WORLDLY only in the sense of "worldly as opposed to heavenly or
celestial." The more frequent meaning is "ordinary." Several authors tried
to use MUNDANE to mean "knowledgeable in the ways of the world, which I don't
think is right. At the very least the second meaning ("ordinary") would
interfere with an attempt to use "mundane" in the phrase "experienced and
mundane lover." Here are two examples of effective use: <At the heights of
her sexual ecstasy she was distracted by the more mundane matter of her
stomach growling.> or <I enjoy the ribald tales of hedonism on the Internet,
but what I crave most in real life is mundane, loving sexual intimacy with my
husband.>
CREDULOUS means "gullible or disposed to believe too readily." A CREDULOUS
woman is likely to believe that the cowboy who tells her she is beautiful at
closing time really is interested in her mind rather than her pussy. A
related meaning is "arising from or characterized by credulity." So we might
have a CREDULOUS story or a CREDULOUS gasp from a girl who has suddenly
realized that the shoe salesman's hand has found her pussy. <I am not so
credulous as to believe that most virgins are likely to be multi-orgasmic when
they are deflowered by a pimply geek in the back seat of a car.>
INCREDULOUS is the opposite. It means "skeptical or disbelieving." I might
emit an incredulous gasp when I see one of those monster cocks I so often read
about. In fact, those stories leave me incredulous. <The experience of being
transformed into a sexy young female left the former fullback feeling
incredulous.>
INCREDIBLE means "unbelievable." It is not the same as INCREDULOUS. If I
emitted an incredible gasp when I see one of those monster cocks, it would be
my gasp (not the size of the cock) that would be hard to believe. <An
incredible orgasm roared though her body as the pimply geek deflowered her in
the back seat of the car.>
If other writers have comments on these words, or if Grammaticus has a poem,
I'd be happy to hear from you. Come to think of it, if someone else wrote a
raunchy poem and attributed it to Grammaticus, I suppose that would be an
apocryphal poem. Imagine that!