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What Is Erotic Romance


Romance novels have dominated the fiction marketplace for a long time. A great deal of the genre's appeal is a result of its mutability. Trends surface and swell within the romance fiction industry with some regularity, ensuring a multitude of storylines and settings.

Graphic sex in romance may be the latest "hot" trend. Readers want to see through an open bedroom door to achieve a broader picture of methods the hero and heroine connect to each other. The word "erotic romance" describes a picture level that is very distinct, but due to a tendency by readers and writers to interchange "erotic romance" with "erotica" and detractors' usage of the words "porn" and "soft porn" it has become a confusing morass. The phrase these terms is usually debated, but here is a basic breakdown:

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   Porn: stories written for that express purpose of causing sexual titillation. Plot, character development, and romance are not primary to these stories. They are made to sexually arouse your reader and absolutely nothing else.
   Erotica: stories written about the sexual journey of the characters and just how this impacts them as individuals. Emotion and character growth are essential areas of a true erotic story. However, erotica is not made to show the introduction of an intimate relationship, although it's not prohibited when the author chooses to understand more about romance. Happily Ever Afters aren't an important a part of erotica, though they can be included. If they're included, they are not the focus. The main focus remains around the individual characters' journeys, not the progression of the romance.
   Erotic Romance: stories discussed the development of an intimate relationship through sexual interaction. The sex is definitely an inherent area of the story, character growth, and relationship development, also it couldn't be removed with no damage the storyline. Happily Ever After is really a requirement to become an erotic romance.
   Sexy Romance: stories discussed the development of an intimate relationship that just have more explicit sex. The sex isn't a natural area of the story, character growth, or relationship development, and could easily be removed or "toned down" with no damage the storyline. Happily Ever After is really a requirement because this is basically a typical romance with hotter sex.

I hope you can easily see how distinct these stories are and how the "label" applied to them isn't interchangeable. It's my hope that the erotic romance genre continues to develop and thrive. As it does, probably the distinctions between genres will end up clearer and more readers can get precisely what they're searching for in a "hot" romance.