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Stavros
12-05-2012, 08:13 AM
The 2012 awards throw up, in a manner of speaking, the usual astonishing bad writing about sex -if it is so difficult to get it right without making writing appear to be torture, why do it in the first place? My favourite is the post-coital moment:
as the steppe cacophony segued seamlessly into the kind of trickling-stream-plus-birdsong music they play in mental hospitals to calm things down.

Not having much experience of mental hospitals I can't comment other than to take his word for it.... I also suspect Will Self is confusing quiddity with quidditch...??...ENJOY!!

The Independent
Amol Rajan (http://www.independent.co.uk/biography/amol-rajan)


Tuesday 4 December 2012

Sex doesn't get worse than this: Why Nancy Huston deserved the Bad Sex Award 2012 for Infrared




Literary London poured into the In & Out (Naval & Military) Club in St James’s Square this evening to toast what is still the funniest and most charming award in British fiction. Nancy Huston won the 20th annual Literary Review (http://www.literaryreview.co.uk/) Bad Sex in Fiction Award for Infrared, a novel whose central character, Rena Greenblatt, is a photographer who enjoys nothing more than taking infrared snaps of her lovers mid-canoodle.

The award – established in 1993 by the late Auberon Waugh (son of Evelyn) to draw attention to the “crude, badly written or perfunctory use of passages of sexual description in contemporary novels, and to discourage it” – could hardly have had a more deserving victor than Huston.
Here is one of her offending (not to say offensive) passages:
***
“He runs his tongue and lips over my breasts, the back of my neck, my toes, my stomach, the countless treasures between my legs, oh the sheer ecstasy of lips and tongues on genitals, either simultaneously or in alternation, never will I tire of that silvery fluidity, my sex swimming in joy like a fish in water, my self freed of both self and other, the quivering sensation, the carnal pink palpitation that detaches you from all colour and all flesh, making you see only stars, constellations, milky ways, propelling you bodiless and soulless into undulating space where the undulating skies make your non-body undulate…”.
***
Sorry to go on at such length, but if it’s worthy of such a distinguished literary prize, it must be worthy of your time. In fact while we’re at it, you can find some of the (ahem) sensational passages below. Just so you know what the competition was like.
At a wonderful ceremony, champagne was quaffed with a vigour familiar to Waugh’s father Evelyn, as writers, journalists, publishers, agents and festival organisers said hello to the festive season. At least 400 crammed into the London venue.
One of the joys of this event each year is that it’s very democratic: young wannabes mix with old pros. Last year, for instance, I introduced myself to V S Naipaul, telling him I was an admirer of The Suffrage of Elvira, and enquiring if he’d read any good books on spin bowling in cricket lately. “What a stupid question!” he spat at me, more in anger than sorrow.
This evening, the luminaries included Naipual again, Nancy Dell'olio, A C Grayling, Sir Tim Rice, and Edward St Aubyn. As feted as any of those was the Literary Review’s Jonathan Beckman, the organiser of this event, who gives the impression being able to throw a good party even when he doesn’t mean to.
“Nancy Huston is a worthy and gracious winner of this year's award,” he told me. “Her winning passage pushes a number of classic bad sex buttons: sea imagery, astronautical travel and the ripe use of alliteration.”
Alas the winner wasn’t there in person to receive the award. Huston, a Canadian, writes her books in French and then translates them into English herself. Only the third woman to win the Bad Sex Award, her latest novel left the judges wondering what exactly was lost in translation.
The runners-up:

The Adventuress: The Irresistible Rise of Miss Cath Fox by Nicholas Coleridge: “In seconds, the duke had lowered his trousers and boxers and positioned himself across a leather steamer trunk, emblazoned with the royal arms of Hohenzollern Castle. ‘Give me no quarter,’ he commanded. ‘Lay it on with all your might.’ Cath did as she was told, swishing the twigs hard onto the royal bottom.”
The Quiddity of Will Self, by Sam Mills: “ … oh, yes, oh, yes, oh, Will, oh, yes, oh, semen-bedizened blood-pusillanimous bed onanistic quiddity fulcrating pelvic thrusts smoke thick typewriter’s click-clack-click Will Our Cock is Spent screaming loving Will is pleased Will is Saved I have done it I have done I am the Chosen One I am his Chosen One oh Will for ever I am yours for ever I am yours for ever I am.”
The Divine Comedy by Craig Raine: “And he came. Like a wubbering springboard. His ejaculate jumped the length of her arm. Eight diminishing gouts. The first too high for her to lick. Right on the shoulder.”
Noughties, by Ben Masters: “We got up from the chair and she led me to her elfin grot, getting amongst the pillows and cool sheets. We trawled each other’s bodies for every inch of history. I dug after what I had always imagined and came up with even more.”
Back to Blood, by Tom Wolfe: “But then the tips of her breasts became erect on their own, and the flood in her loins washed morals, despair, and all other abstract assessments away in a cloud of some sort of divine cologne of his. Now his big generative jockey was inside her pelvic saddle, riding, riding, riding, and she was eagerly swallowing it swallowing it swallowing it with the saddle’s own lips and maw”
The Yips by Nicola Barker: “He knows her body now, even tightly sheathed and slippery as it is; a ripe, red plum, its yellow flesh pressing out against the smooth arc of its cool, fragrant skin. He understands the basic groundwork, has visited the orchard like a hungry finch, has gorged on the fruit and rejected the pips, has explored the geography.”
Rare Earth by Paul Mason: “He switched to some ancient steppe language as he ejaculated, blubbering and incoherent. Chun-li faked an orgasm, keeping her mind focused on an eighth-century lyric of sadness, and her face still as a lake in winter. Khünbish collapsed below the neck of the horse, where he clung now, like a forlorn circus rider, as the steppe cacophony segued seamlessly into the kind of trickling-stream-plus-birdsong music they play in mental hospitals to calm things down.”


http://www.independent.co.uk/voices/comment/sex-doesnt-get-worse-than-this-why-nancy-huston-deserved-the-bad-sex-award-2012-for-infrared-8381962.html

robertlouis
12-05-2012, 08:19 AM
I'd have expected every word of 50 Shades of Grey to be nominated....

GroobySteven
12-05-2012, 02:21 PM
I'd have expected every word of 50 Shades of Grey to be nominated....

I believe it's a literary award.

Stavros
12-05-2012, 02:35 PM
Ouch!

robertlouis
12-05-2012, 04:32 PM
I believe it's a literary award.

I'll just crawl away then.....:hide-1:

Stavros
12-05-2012, 06:15 PM
Is that a quote from 50 Shades? Sounds like an extract from a ts-seduction script...or a line from one of your songs?

Dino Velvet
12-05-2012, 06:29 PM
Any of you characters ever see this?

Stavros
12-05-2012, 07:53 PM
Any of you characters ever see this?

Dino the original stage version ran in London theatres from 1971 until 1987; it lasted 16 performances on Broadway. I never saw either the stage version or the film which I understand changed some of the original script. It might be an example of the inuendo as part of the sub-culture of working class comedy in the UK, but I don't think it travels far; and as Seanchai might say, its not exactly Literature...

Prospero
12-05-2012, 08:04 PM
That play - if that is the right word so tawdry a thing - is part of a genre that also pervades british cinema with the Cary on series ... smutty an innuendo laden comedy of the worst kind. Clumsy stuff with people running around without their trousers and such stuff. One of the biggest names was a man called Brian Rix who starred in a number of stage shows known as the Whitehall Farces.

But on the subject of bad sex it really is hard to produce "literature' about the real nitty gritty of the sexual encounter. Lots of very fine writers stumble when it comes to trying to convey that. Pornograpy of course is something else altogether - with a very different purpose.