tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2352089068952713756.post3760798905763123088..comments2015-07-06T09:39:14.698+12:00Comments on Moons of Mars: Trilogies (3)Marlowhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01016929365656796626noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2352089068952713756.post-60327923824124290722010-08-10T00:31:53.472+12:002010-08-10T00:31:53.472+12:00Interesting. You confirm what I had been thinking ...Interesting. You confirm what I had been thinking all along. Analysis of the stories compared with scientific research in this field revealed that Aran Ashe had to be a woman. Her stories have a similar structure as the politically more correct Angelique stories in the sixties. The story lines and types of detals are unmistakable. The big difference is, in my view, that the young women in Aran's stories do not escape being sexually taken by their captors. Angelique, e.g., is taken prisoner, sold at auction as a sex slave, given away as sex toy, etc. but never once has to suffer any sexual assaults even if beautiful, voluptuous and blond in Arabian settings. And in the end is happily reunited with her fiancee, of course. Now, compare this to the adventures of Anya in the first Lidir book. If something sexual is involved, one can always tell whether a story is written by a man or a woman. A woman's fantasy eclipses that of a man in complexity and subtlety, and, as another give-away, does not, to name a thing typically found in stories by males, focus on the size of a man's dick. e.g. in Pleasure Island sizes are not mentioned although penises figure quite prominently in the scenes.Douglas Colmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17346229416555469736noreply@blogger.com