Return To the Celestial Review (This does NOT open a new window)
Return To the Index (This does NOT open a new window)


Note, to make reading multi-part stories easier, story links (links with dejanews.com or www.qz.to, NOT the review or profile links) will open up a new browser window. When you are done reading the story, or section of the story simply CLOSE the story window.


"Inside-out" by Taria (self-exploration) Stephen Peters: 10, 10, 10
http://www.qz.to/erotica/assm/Year98/12870.txt


"Inside-out" by Taria (self-exploration) Stephen Peters: 10, 10, 10
http://www.qz.to/erotica/assm/Year98/12870.txt

One of the most enjoyable things about alt.sex.stories is that the writers
here are free to experiment. Do you want to write a letter to a friend and
put it in the form of an overheard telephone conversation? Go ahead. In fact,
one does not even have to write a sex story to be posted on a.s.s.. And this
tale is not a sex story. At least, not in the sense of describing sexual
activity. It doesn't even attempt to be erotic. Instead, the author has
taken this opportunity to write a essay/meditation on identity, the public and
private self, internal growth, and the strain of taking something as deeply
personal as one's sexuality and putting it on display for all to see. This
tale is about turning oneself 'inside-out'.

This is really a remarkable read, both is presentation and substance.
Technically, the author does a superb job of structuring the narrative; ideas
flow from one to another such that the reader automatically fills in the other
side of the conversation. The narrator's voice itself is smooth but animated,
full of strong inflections. As has been noted by others Taria's writing has a
rhythm to it, and this time it's the rhythm (poetry?) of everyday language.
Remarkable too is the way the narrator draws the reader into the conversation
-- starting with the ordinary and casual (but in Taria's hands interesting)
details of everyday life, then moving to the more personal. However, it's the
substance of the essay that held this readers attention. The author's
struggle between her 'computer persona' and the real 'her' is something that
every one who has written a story (sex or otherwise) has had to deal with, at
least to some extent. There are some hard questions asked her, with few
definitive answers. Sort of like life...which is what the author so vividly
portrays. The difference between love and sex, the public and private selves
- these are questions that each individual, at some point in there life, has
to answer. Starting by reading this wonderfully beautiful 'transcript' is not
a bad idea.

( The numbers. It's very hard to assign a score to this work
--especially the 'Venus' aspect -- because this is not really a 'story' with
plot, character, etc. However, given the originality and quality of the
writing, the clarity of expression, and my own personal enjoyment of the piece
it deserves the highest marks.)

-- Numbers mean nothing without context, read the review --

Ratings for "Inside-Out"
Athena (technical quality): 10
Venus (plot & character): 10
Stephen (appeal to reviewer): 10

{*As Bitbard has pointed out, this is the beginning of my fourth year of doing
these reviews. The following six reposted reviews were the entire contents of
CR #1.}