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the ask@AAR: Can we discuss the term “clean” romances?

What should we call books with no sex in them? AAR has a sensuality ratings system but that’s not helpful when you want a single descriptor. (It has five levels from Kisses to Burning and probably needs to be revamped.) Romancelandia seems to have settled–to the joy of few–on the term clean.

There are those who think the word clean is judgemental. Inspirational doesn’t work because not everyone who wants a clean read is looking for inspies.

So is the term here to stay? Is there a better one? What do you think of when you hear the phrase clean romance?


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Sandlynn
Sandlynn
Guest
11/17/2019 10:23 pm

Yes, I’ve heard of Intercourse. I grew up around Philadelphia. I still find the term. smut, to be coarse. I do not think sexual relations between people who love each other is smut.

DiscoDollyDeb
DiscoDollyDeb
Guest
Reply to  Sandlynn
11/18/2019 9:03 am

I would also add that the word “smut” literally means “dirty,” as it originally referred to the dust coal would inevitably leave on everything as it burned. There was a reason everything in the house had to be cleaned once spring rolled around!

Sandlynn
Sandlynn
Guest
11/17/2019 10:41 am

In my own head, I call romances with explicit sex … sexually explicit. So called “clean” romances — which suggests the alternative is dirty, I usually call closed door or *not* sexually explicit.

Speaking of descriptors … over the past year, I’ve begun to watch romance book youtube vloggers, many of whom are in their 20s and 30s. One term they tend to use for sexually explicit romances — without judgment, I take it — is “smut”. As someone a bit older, that term *really* turns me off. To me, it has always been associated with pornography.

Smut is defined as “obscene or lascivious talk, writing, or pictures,” and I don’t find romantic sex to be obscene. Certainly, sex in a romance can be lustful and wanton, but it’s a slippery slope to being considered wrong or lewd. In any event, the only reason I bring up my age compared to the vloggers is that I mentioned my discomfort with the term in the comments of one of my favorite vloggers, and she kindly responded that it may be just a change over time in how readers view the term. However, another vlogger, who is within that younger age cohort, also expressed a dislike and discomfort with the term, so maybe it’s not totally generational. I don’t know, I just don’t like it.

KesterGayle
KesterGayle
Guest
Reply to  Sandlynn
11/17/2019 11:03 am

I can see why the term ‘smut’ is bothersome to some, but the English language is nothing if not flexible. I live near Intercourse, Pennsylvania, a word that means something vastly different today than on the day that pretty little town was named! A few years ago the term ‘sick’ meant ‘really good’. (I’m not sure if it’s still part of the vernacular or not.) John Denver single handedly changed the phrase ‘far out’ from meaning a ‘long way away’ to ‘amazing’.

To me, smut is a mild term, while porn is not. Smut means naughty, porn means graphic, emotionless sex; sex for the sake of sex. I would object to a romance novel being called porn, but I feel that in some cases smut is the appropriate word.

Holly Bush
Holly Bush
Guest
Reply to  KesterGayle
11/17/2019 9:36 pm

Hello Intercourse neighbor! From Manheim

KesterGayle
KesterGayle
Guest
Reply to  Holly Bush
11/18/2019 12:52 am

We live near Pottstown, just a hop away. When we were courting we spent a lot of time exploring Lancaster County. It’s such a lovely part of PA! We still enjoy Good’s Store, where we add to Hubs toy car collection on a regular basis.

Holly Bush
Holly Bush
Guest
Reply to  KesterGayle
11/18/2019 8:15 pm

I host a Lady Jane’s Salon 4 times a year at a restaurant in Manheim. We usually have 4 or 5 authors who come read from their newest books and we get to eat and gab about romances! It’s great! If you’re ever interested in attending, see our FB page at Lady Jane’s Salon Lancaster or message me and I’ll get you the details. Entry is $5 or a gently used romance, all of which goes to the Women’s Homeless Shelter at the YWCA in Lancaster.

KesterGayle
KesterGayle
Guest
Reply to  Holly Bush
11/18/2019 9:13 pm

I will keep that in mind Holly! It might be a good excuse for a side trip to Lititz and the Wilbur chocolate factory…

Nutmeg
Nutmeg
Guest
11/16/2019 11:09 pm

It seems that everyone is focusing only on the sexual content with regards to the description “clean romance”. But I suspect many readers of those types of books would also have an expectation about the language used (for example excessive use of the F-word, other swear words and crude language to describe body parts). When I see a book described as “clean” the language used inn the book seems just as important as the sexual content (or lack of).

KesterGayle
KesterGayle
Guest
Reply to  Nutmeg
11/17/2019 2:27 am

You’re right, I hadn’t thought of that. Explicit language is also an issue in some romance novels. A lot of readers prefer not to be exposed to that, either.

Sandlynn
Sandlynn
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/17/2019 10:42 am

Just read this comment *after* I made my comment below! LOL! What a coincidence!

DiscoDollyDeb
DiscoDollyDeb
Guest
11/16/2019 8:43 am

Im really enjoying this discussion. I’m old enough to remember when almost EVERY romance novel was either no-sex or closed-door/fade-to-black sex—and the occasional on-page sex scene would be presented in a very detached and euphemistic fashion (and would still be fade-to-black where anatomical details were concerned). I suspect one of the reasons my generation gulped down volumes of bodice-rippers in the decade following the publication of SWEET SAVAGE LOVE is because we were at long last able to read on-page explicit sex scenes written (mostly) by women about women for a majority female readership. I think it’s wonderful that we are now at a point where we can discuss the gradations of sexual explicitness in romance novels—and that there are romances at every level of sexual heat to suit every reader’s taste.

KesterGayle
KesterGayle
Guest
Reply to  DiscoDollyDeb
11/16/2019 11:16 am

Me too! Maybe a kiss before ‘The End’, and that was it. I never much cared for bodice rippers because of the treatment of women in many of them…way too rapey for me! But I’m totally on board for books depicting men and women mutually enjoying sex, experiencing love and desire, and dealing with the ebbs and flows of life together.

DiscoDollyDeb
DiscoDollyDeb
Guest
Reply to  KesterGayle
11/16/2019 1:20 pm

Agreed that in retrospect the sexual politics of bodice rippers were awful and you couldn’t pay me enough to re-read SWEET SAVAGE LOVE or any books of that type and vintage today, but it is important to remember that as a cultural watershed bodice rippers did have some positive value: they gave women something they’d never had before—sexually-explicit material written by women, about women, and marketed to women.

KesterGayle
KesterGayle
Guest
Reply to  DiscoDollyDeb
11/16/2019 2:54 pm

On yes, I know what you mean! I read some of them, I was in my late teens/early 20s when they started coming out and they intrigued me. But I got my fill after just a few and basically stopped reading romance for a long time.

I started reading Elizabeth Lowell in the late 90s sometime, and came back to romance quite eagerly! I miss Lowell’s westerns so much. I guess she’s retired now, since it’s been years since she’s given us anything new.

Interesting side note here: Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander book was described by one critic as a bodice ripper. Diana took issue with that, and wrote the scene in which she and Jamie meet the very young Lord John Grey on the eve of battle, and Claire’s bodice gets ripped in order to get Lord John to give up secrets about the nearby British encampment. I think this is hilarious, and shows the clever and devious mind of Ms Gabaldon to be truly a thing of beauty!

Sandlynn
Sandlynn
Guest
Reply to  DiscoDollyDeb
11/17/2019 10:23 am

I also associate myself with this comment. That’s why Woodiwiss literally blew up in the 1970s.

Frankie C
Frankie C
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/16/2019 8:39 am

Is there a way to bring up review comments in power search?

Holly Bush
Holly Bush
Guest
11/15/2019 10:31 pm

I’ve noticed that some historical writers I read refer to their books that do not include any sex scene as ‘in the style of Jane Austen,’ or ‘drawing room not bedroom.’ Both are a bit cumbersome but I appreciate the descriptor. Sweet sounds too much like it’s going to be insipid. I wrote a book with no sex scenes although there is kissing and I get called out on my other books because they do contain sex scenes typical of historical romance. Those folks get pretty unpleasant in their reviews.

Marian Perera
Marian Perera
Guest
Reply to  Holly Bush
11/16/2019 12:42 am

“Those folks get pretty unpleasant in their reviews.”

No kidding. When my first romance was published, I got a review on Goodreads calling me “a dirty old pervert”.

I really wanted to reply, “Excuse me, I am not old.”

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
11/15/2019 9:54 pm

Wow! There are a lot of great suggestions here for a new AAR rating system. The struggles with defining what is mild versus smoking hot reminds me of the MPAA ratings. There was an entire documentary about the often arbitrary differences between what constitutes an R versus NC-17 rating. It is entitled “This Film is Not Yet Rated,” and I highly recommend it. (Warnings for explicit movie sex scenes used for illustrative purposes.)

So much about ratings is subjective, as Caz Owens pointed out through her use of “warm” versus “hot.” And things definitely change over time. Using movies as an example again, rated G films used to allow mild swearing, non-sexual nudity, and war violence that wasn’t deemed too graphic. None of those things would ever get near a “G” rating today. On the other hand, a lot of non-explicit, non-violent movies with homosexual content or even implications used to be routinely slapped with an “R” or “NC-17” (used to be “X”) rating. And the big issue today is that PG-13 films tend to have more violence than rated-R films. A lot of people complain the system is outdated and arbitrary, and I agree it is. But changing cultural values and attitudes can make creating a rubric difficult.

As for AAR’s rating system, I like the suggestions of a 1 to 10 or 0 to 10 scale or “no sex,” “implied sex,” “vanilla sex scenes,” “BDSM sex scenes,” etc. I’ve also seen romance sites that rate from 1 to 5 chili peppers for spiciness or 1 to 5 lips. The tricky part is creating a rating system that gives readers the information they want to know without creating too many spoilers.

Regarding “closed door sex,” this can be a bit vague for readers who would prefer their characters to remain chaste. Does “closed door” mean there is no sex mentioned/happening at all, or does it mean we *know* the characters had sex but the author isn’t kissing and telling the details? I think this needs to be specified.

Even erotica or erotic romance can have different levels of steaminess. Is it erotica with toys and/or BDSM, or are the characters having somewhat conventional sex in extreme detail? Should there be a rating system or content warning system regarding certain sexual practices that may be a turn-on or turn-off to individual readers? Or would readers find this to be too much of a spoiler?

It might be too specific to write types of sex scenes included in each book, but in some of my books, I think a clear description helps readers know what to expect. Maybe you could have a drop button to open comments that contain spoilers, like they do on Smart Bitches, Trashy Books?

For illustrative purposes, let me give you an example of a warning/come on I included in “Sweet Fever Dreams,” one of my more humorous m/m erotic romance novellas:

“‘Sweet Fever Dreams’ contains six sex scenes/fantasies that include, but are not limited to, the following sexual practices: public spanking on a football field, a historic desert sheik with a jade butt plug, naughty nurses, 1970s funky soul music, and lots of frottage and c*********g.”

Sorry for the plug, but I couldn’t figure out how else to explain a possible sexual explicitness description system. Kind of like how movies now say, “This film is rated R for extreme violence and persistent language.”

Mark
Mark
Guest
11/15/2019 7:54 pm

When I wrote about Genre labels on the old AAR message boards, I said “I think more than half of the content of a book should belong to a single genre to get a single genre label: romance, science fiction, fantasy, mystery, etc.”
I suggested the term “Romance Quotient”, used as follows: “The Romance Quotient is the portion of the book devoted to genre romance content OR advancing the relationship even though at one level it could be categorized as belonging to another genre. If the Romance Quotient of a book is less than 50% I would like to see it categorized as something other than a genre romance.”
I think something similar could be applied to the sexiness label problem: a Sex Quotient (SQ) or a Sex Act Quotient (SAQ) or a Sex Percentage (SP) or Sex Act Percentage (SAP) or a Sex Ratio (SR) or Sex Act Ratio (SAR). There would need to be agreement about what counts as sex or a sex act (intercourse, oral, manual stimulation, masturbation, but what about heavy petting?), but then a simple page count ratio could be used. If 100 pages of a 200-page book are spent on sex acts, the quotient or ratio or percentage is 50%. Using a page ratio removes some of the subjectivity problems.

Annelie
Annelie
Guest
Reply to  Mark
11/17/2019 12:35 pm

Nice to meet you again! But I fear your labels are a bit too complicated for as readers.

nblibgirl
nblibgirl
Guest
11/15/2019 6:52 pm

Anyone here know more than me about “cozy” mysteries? I believe they lack graphic violence, language, and sex? Would that work?

I vote no on “clean” for all the reasons stated above. Hadn’t heard about “keeping sweet” (eew!) but if sweet wasn’t doing it for me even before that concept was presented, it definitely doesn’t work now. “Closed-door” is probably the best so far if cozy doesn’t work.

Lil
Lil
Guest
Reply to  nblibgirl
11/15/2019 8:49 pm

I’m not crazy about “cozy” for mysteries either. It’s a bit too cute for something as inherently violent as murder. I’m not asking for blood and gore, but surely murder should be taken a bit more seriously than “cozy” suggests. I’ve read some romances that would fit under the “cozy” umbrella, but they aren’t all “closed door” or “clean” or “sweet.” Just cozy—as in not making any emotional demands on either the reader or the characters.

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  Lil
11/15/2019 9:25 pm

Yeah, I’ve always had trouble with the term “cozy” too. I’m not much of a mystery reader, never have been. But it seems to me that a plot revolving around someone getting *murdered* can’t really be that cozy by definition.

oceanjasper
oceanjasper
Guest
11/15/2019 6:38 pm

My personal preference is for whatever amount of sex and level of heat that suits the characters and the style of the book. I’ve read oodles of books that get the balance wrong. And additional sex scenes are never an effective substitute for actual conversations and sharing of thoughts.. Just sayin’, all you authors out there…..

‘Closed door’ is too specific to replace the term ‘clean.’ ‘Closed door’ suggests that the characters have sex during the period of their relationship depicted by the book, but the scenes are not described to the reader. It doesn’t fit romances in which the characters do not have sex at all during the story, like most old trad regencies. The book ends with a declaration of love or proposal of marriage and any sex will take place after the events of the book.

Since there is so much personal interpretation involved in the current AAR ratings system, I like Camiah’s suggestion of literal descriptions – no sex, implied sex (i.e. closed door), explicit sex, etc. That would be especially good for audiobook listeners, since I can always skim the sex scenes on the page if they’re boring or redundant (which in my experience they frequently are), but I can’t escape listening (and secondhand embarrassment prevents me listening to explicit romance which I’d otherwise be happy to read).

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  oceanjasper
11/16/2019 12:12 am

“And additional sex scenes are never an effective substitute for actual conversations and sharing of thoughts.” Absolutely! I remember reading a book review on SBTB that said a certain romance novel (can’t remember which one) had too much info dumping when the hero’s backstory could have been more naturally woven into the plot if it was sprinkled during pillow talk scenes. It got me thinking. Romance could use a lot more of that- pillow talk during the morning after.

I remember one of the last pre-code films, “Queen Christina” with Greta Garbo, was famous for its scandalous morning after scene in an inn. It is sensual, touching, and gives great insight into the heroine. And because she and the hero are talking and eating grapes during afterglow, there is a soft, vulnerable quality to their conversation that wouldn’t have happened in another context. So let’s hear it for more pillow talk in romance novels!

seantheaussie
seantheaussie
Guest
11/15/2019 3:11 pm

I am in the minority here, as clean is perfectly acceptable to me, fade to black, off page and closed door are more cumbersome, but still work. Sweet would be a no-no as I really like sweetness in the romances I read, even when they have sex scenes.

The worst term in romanclandia is enemies-to-lovers when meaning hate-to-love or dislike-to-love. It renders finding (different sides) enemies to lovers like Romeo and Juliet impossible.

Lisa Fernandes
Lisa Fernandes
Guest
11/15/2019 2:48 pm

I don’t like the unspoken implications of “clean and wholesome” (sex suddenly isn’t?). I like fade to black. Tue of what happens on page, and film noir classy.

Caz Owens
Caz Owens
Editor
11/15/2019 2:15 pm

I don’t like either clean or sweet for the reasons that have been discussed here. Closed door or fade to black work for me, although I can’t see either being widely adopted.

elaine s
elaine s
Guest
11/15/2019 11:45 am

Maybe a numerical scale of 1 to 10 could be used as an indicator of the amount of explicit physical sex in a romance with 1 being utter chastity and 10 being demi-pornographic. I agree with those above who think that “clean” implies that explicit descriptions of physical sex are “dirty” but I also think that “closed door” smacks of the old Hollywood Hays Code. Remember the twin beds and one foot on the floor rule? In the end, no matter how a romance is “rated” it will be the interpretation of the reviewer and maybe not the reader.

This discussion reminded me of Georgette Heyer’s Venetia. Definitely clean, closed door or chaste – whatever – but the conversations between Venetia and Lord Damerel over the dinner table were shimmering with sexual tension and, for me, quite erotic despite the fact that they never so much as touched each other. A well-written romance can be red hot where the sexual content is all in the mind and that takes true talent.

nblibgirl
nblibgirl
Guest
Reply to  elaine s
11/15/2019 7:16 pm

I was thinking about Heyer as well while reading through comments here. I don’t think any of her characters did more than kiss once per book, and if that, always at the very end of her books. It is an interesting thought exercise to consider, if she were writing today, would she write more explicitly? Other issues in her writing aside, the attraction/tension between her characters is always palpable and without a single reference to engorged body parts anywhere.

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  nblibgirl
11/16/2019 12:05 am

@Elaine s and @nblibgirl- You are so right about palpable sexual tension in books without a single sex scene. “Forever Amber,” for example, was banned in Boston for being so sexually frank and scandalous- but there isn’t a single on-page sex scene! Everything is implied or fade to black but good Heavens! It’s a fantastic book that I highly recommend, a real page turner. And I assure you that despite it’s lack of explicitness, it is hardly rated G.

camiah
camiah
Guest
11/15/2019 10:48 am

I’m a fan of fade to black or closed door. I would also be okay with a rating system that went something like no sex/implied sex/explicit sex. I don’t require sex in a romance novel, but don’t like the judginess inherent in clean or proper, which is another term I see used occasionally. Sweet isn’t as bad as clean, but sweet to me also implies fluffy/low-angst, and that isn’t a good descriptor for books that have a higher emotional pitch that are also no sex or implied sex. I pretty much avoid any book labeled inspirational, since that usually implies religious/spiritual overtone that I really don’t enjoy, so I definitely don’t want to see books without sex be labeled that way just because they don’t have sex.

Estelle Ruby
Estelle Ruby
Guest
11/15/2019 10:15 am

I prefer closed door or fade to black to “clean”, they don’t carry a value judgement to me whereas “clean” does. I don’t like hearing stories labelled clean, since it implies all other stories are somehow “dirty”, and I’m not here for that.
I read both closed door and explicit or even erotic romance and enjoy all levels of sexual content. All of them can have layered, compelling emotional development between the leads and that’s what I’m looking for.

Sweet means something completely different to me. I don’t know if it’s cultural, but when I say sweet, I mean a lighter story, with that adorable warm fuzzy feeling between the leads. No angst or tortured characters. It has nothing to do with sexual content or lack thereof, but with the tone and the type of rapport the couple have.

CarolineAAR
CarolineAAR
Guest
Reply to  Estelle Ruby
11/15/2019 10:17 am

“off-page” as an analogue to “off-camera?”

Em Wittmann
Em Wittmann
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/15/2019 10:46 am

Hmm..I never thought of it that way. I like off-page, too.

Mara
Mara
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/15/2019 4:52 pm

I think private instead of hidden which is why I think I prefer it over clean. Very interesting how perceptions are so different

Lil
Lil
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/15/2019 8:42 pm

“Something unsavory”? I never think of “closed door” that way. Private, maybe, but not in any way judgmental. I think I have read too many explicit scenes that go on far too long and end up, frankly, boring. I prefer the closed door scenes that leave more up to my imagination. (It’s in good functioning order, thank you.)

Em Wittmann
Em Wittmann
Guest
11/15/2019 10:00 am

I like our current system with ‘closed door’ as an addition or replacement for Kisses. I don’t like sweet or clean. Hot (or warm) sex can also be sweet – in fact, I love it that way in my romance novels. I enjoy sex in novels and tend to steer away from romance where it is 100% absent or wholly off page.

Marian Perera
Marian Perera
Guest
Reply to  Em Wittmann
11/15/2019 11:42 am

” I enjoy sex in novels and tend to steer away from romance where it is 100% absent or wholly off page.”

Same here. I feel that if an author lets me into a character’s mind and heart, the character’s body shouldn’t be off-limits to me.

Caz Owens
Caz Owens
Editor
Reply to  Em Wittmann
11/15/2019 4:37 pm

“Sweet” always makes me think of something sickly and treacly – and I certainly don’t want that in a romance!

Edited to add: I don’t mean I don’t like sweet characters or gestures or whatever – I meant as an overall descriptor, I find “sweet” too cloying.

Lil
Lil
Guest
11/15/2019 9:38 am

Closed door works for me. I dislike sweet, because the door can be closed in a book that deals with all kinds of dark and powerful emotions and situations that are anything but sweet. Clean doesn’t sound to me as judgmental as it apparently does to others, but it’s hard to find a word for any level of heat that isn’t going to offend someone. (These days it’s hard to find a word for anything that isn’t going to offend someone.)

KesterGayle
KesterGayle
Guest
11/15/2019 9:22 am

Maybe the term ‘explicit romance’ could be used for books containing sex, and ‘fade to black’ or ‘closed door’ for those that do not.

I am not bothered by ‘clean’, it’s a term that’s worked for years. I find the term ‘sweet’ annoying, but I think that is because of the religious implications. In the more patriarchal Mormon groups, including the polygamous ones that marry off very young girls, the women are frequently told to ‘keep sweet’, which seems to mean ‘shut up and get back to work’. I find the use of the term to be, at the very least, sexist. So the phrase ‘sweet romance’ is somewhat repellant to me.

CarolineAAR
CarolineAAR
Guest
Reply to  KesterGayle
11/15/2019 10:16 am

Oh – I’ve never heard the phrase “keep sweet” before. If “sweet” had that connotation for me, then I wouldn’t like to call them “sweet romance” either!

Chrisreader
Chrisreader
Guest
Reply to  CarolineAAR
11/15/2019 10:26 pm

I’ve never heard that term before -and I’m completely rejecting it because I actually love the word sweet. It’s one that I will use just as much to describe a hero as a heroine when it applies, and I think it’s a wonderful quality.

Example: Gilbert Blythe is a perfect example of a “sweet” hero. He’s darling and endearing but still strong and smart and capable. His kindness and innate decency are part of his sweetness as well as his complete lack of cynicism.

Sorry, but they can’t have that word and I refuse to let them corrupt it.

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  Chrisreader
11/15/2019 11:27 pm

That’s a good point about Gilbert Blythe being a sweet hero. The hero in Cat Sebastian’s “A Duke in Disguise” could also be described as sweet, even though there are a couple of sex scenes in the book. On a related note, I really think romances could use more sweet heroes who are also strong, intelligent, and capable. Not to be disparaging of classic romance alpha heroes, but there are many kinds of strength and heroic qualities.

As I said in my post below, “sweet” to me connotes more of a behavior/character trait than a measure of sexual explicitness. Using your example of Gilbert Blythe again, he is a sweet hero in a non-explicit romance story. Then there is Ash in “A Duke in Disguise,” a sweet hero in a romance story with mild sex scenes. And on the erotica end of the spectrum, two of my heroes are definitely sweet to each other even though they engage in several X-rated sex scenes throughout the series. That’s why I think a rating of “NS” or “No Sex” would be a little more helpful and descriptive than “sweet” as an AAR rating.

Mara
Mara
Guest
Reply to  KesterGayle
11/15/2019 4:50 pm

I agree about “sweet,” although I’ve never heard the phrase “keep sweet” before, it just annoys me ha

Blackjack
Blackjack
Guest
Reply to  KesterGayle
11/15/2019 5:15 pm

Interesting use of the word “sweet” for keeping women in line. I too had not heard this. Ugh!

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  KesterGayle
11/15/2019 10:17 pm

I have never heard “keep sweet” either. *Shudders*

One of my problems with “sweet” is that it can connote that explicit romance/erotica cannot be sweet. What I mean is, two characters could treat each other very sweetly and kindly in bed, especially if one of the two needs extra tenderness or consideration at that moment. I think there is a misconception that explicit sex scenes have to be burning hot with animalistic passion. While they certainly can, they can also or alternatively be humorous, sad, joyful, romantic, or yes, even sweet.

Perhaps the disclaimer “This is a no sex romance” or “NS” for “no sex” could be used instead?

Patricia
Patricia
Guest
11/15/2019 9:20 am

I had never heard “closed door romance” as a term before, but I like it. It’s non-judgmental and it tells you what you are going to get (and not get) in terms of sex scenes. It gets my vote.

DiscoDollyDeb
DiscoDollyDeb
Guest
11/15/2019 7:07 am

I prefer “closed door romance.” I don’t like the term “clean romance” because—as noted above—it implies that the opposite (sexually-explicit romance) is “dirty.” I also don’t think the term “erotic romance” works for every romance where there’s an open door to the bedroom, so to speak. “Erotic romance” tells me the book focuses on sex to the exclusion of almost everything else; many romances have some sexually-explicit scenes but have other subplots or additional factors driving the storyline: the sex scenes might be very explicit, but the central focus of the story is not the main characters’ bedroom activities.

It’s disheartening to know some writers just excise sex scenes and dub their books “clean”—the best romance novels present a story that evolves organically, so the heat level is appropriate to the way the writer is presenting the story. I was similarly perturbed to discover that some writers (or their ghostwriters, I suppose) take one of their existing m/f or m/m romances and—by changing some names, pronouns, and a few anatomical details—create a new book with an opposite sexual pairing. But I suppose that’s another issue for another time.

Blackjack
Blackjack
Guest
11/15/2019 2:06 am

I think “closed-door” as a term works well for a rating that isn’t mired in judgmental adjectives.

It’s not an issue I’ve given much thought to because the quality or enjoyment of a romance in a novel for me doesn’t usually depend on how much or even if sexuality is included. The only time I consciously look for clues on how much sex is depicted and how graphically the scenes are portrayed has been when my teenage niece wants to read one, and then the parent kicks in and I look more closely.

Why is the current system of kisses-burning not working though? I don’t think that current system has ever confused me.

Rosie
Rosie
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/15/2019 1:41 pm

I find the “warm” category to be particularly confusing.

As an example, I recently read “Someone to Wed” by Mary Balogh. It has a warm sensuality rating here on AAR. I enjoyed this book a lot, and it did have sex scenes in it. As I believe is common for Balogh, her wording is somewhat vague (for example, “she felt him at the most sensitive part of herself” as opposed to using a more specific word to identify this part). “The Kiss Quotient” by Helen Hoang was also given a warm sensuality rating here on AAR.

From my perspective (and I realize some of this is subjective), these two books are very, very different in terms of how “hot” or “explicit” they are. The latter doesn’t use vague terms or a birds-eye view; it is very detailed. If I had time, I could list other examples. I think it might be useful to differentiate between mildly warm books like “Someone to Wed” and very warm books like “The Kiss Quotient.”

Caz Owens
Caz Owens
Editor
Reply to  Rosie
11/15/2019 2:08 pm

As Dabney has said here, we probably need an overhaul of our sensuality ratings. Books rated as “hot” 15-20 years ago wouldn’t be classified that way were they reviewed today, and similarly our expectations as to what constitutes “hot” in a romance novel have changed in the same way. For me – and this is my personal view – if it’s two people having sex, regardless of gender, regardless of language used then it’s warm. And yes, that is a very wide spectrum. I would regard anything other than that as hot, and I find it very hard to think of anything that I’d rate as “burning”.

Over at AudioGals, where I review frequently, we’ve switched to a number system 1-9 (where 1=kisses).

Caz Owens
Caz Owens
Editor
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/15/2019 4:35 pm

Yep. And I know I’m someone who rates rather “leniently” – for me, warm is pretty much every book with descriptive sex UNLESS there’s kink, toys, more than two people… and then it’s hot. But others may rate that stuff as burning. It’s a difficult task to offer some sort of consistency for readers about something which is so subjective.

Rosie
Rosie
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/15/2019 10:50 pm

I’m sorry that my comment didn’t address the initial question. Nevertheless, thanks to you and Caz I now have a better understanding of how to view the sensuality ratings. I appreciate this.

Anne Marble AAR
Anne Marble AAR
Guest
11/15/2019 1:40 am

I’m not a huge fan of the terms “clean romance” or “clean reads” because of the way they imply everything else must be dirty or even germ-ridden. I’ve also come across too many annoying reviews where someone one-starred a romance and angrily wrote “Not a clean romance!” If it’s not marketed as one, don’t dump on it for having sex. Do your research — and understand that not every book is written to your specifications.

On the other hand, I’m not crazy about some of the opposition to the term (and the opposition to the very concept). People are allowed to want to read romances without sex. I’ve seen people say that clean romances should be labeled as “dull” or “insipid” or worse. Oh, stop! That just sounds silly. Great stories can be written without sex. (Boring stories can be written with sex.) it reminds me of recent rants where fans complain about horror movies that are PG-13 instead of R. As if a movie can’t be scary without an R rating. :-\

OTOH we should also keep in mind that the “clean romance” category has become a big marketing category, especially the n indie publishing. I didn’t realize how big until I saw a Facebook ad for a company advertising a course about how to tap into the clean read trend. So it makes me wonder how many of the authors writing clean romances are doing just to ride the wave. Those same authors could be writing erotic shapeshifter reverse harem BDSM dark romances at the same time.

I’m also annoyed because I’ve heard that some writers have put out both “clean” and “dirty” versions of the same book. Uhm… The love scenes should be so important to the story that you can’t pull them out without hurting the book. Gah! Then there are the possibilities that some of these authors are hiring ghostwriters so they can keep putting out books…

In the interest of public disclosure, for this site, I wrote a mini review on a book that was classified as a clean romance. It was boring and insipid. But I’m sure it would have been bad even with send. It was also inaccurate and just plain silly. And some have alleged the author’s books may be ghostwritten. Ugh.

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  Anne Marble AAR
11/15/2019 11:53 pm

Wow! Great comment. Here are some of my thoughts about a lot of the points you made:

“I’ve also come across too many annoying reviews where someone one-starred a romance and angrily wrote “Not a clean romance!” If it’s not marketed as one, don’t dump on it for having sex. Do your research — and understand that not every book is written to your specifications.”

Yeah, it can be quite funny to read one-star reviews. Some of them are real head scratchers. But as far as research goes, it can sometimes be difficult to discern a book’s content without reading it first- especially if the author pulls a bait and switch, whether intentionally or not. For example, someone publishes a Regency era romance and gives a fairly vague, generic description that misleads the reader into thinking it’s an old fashioned clean story. Then the reader gets unhappily surprised. Outside of erotica, it simply isn’t common to give a sexual content warning in the product description of a book.

As another example, Harlequin is pretty good about describing heat levels for each line- except HR. Since they accept HR submissions in pretty much every heat level, readers really can’t tell how explicit a particular book will be unless they read it or are familiar with the author’s work. It would help if Harlequin and other publishers gave a heat rating for each of their published books to avoid unwanted reader surprises.

“People are allowed to want to read romances without sex.” Absolutely! And I think there should be more choices in this category than inspirationals/firmly religious novels and Jane Austen style Regencies.

“So it makes me wonder how many of the authors writing clean romances are doing just to ride the wave. Those same authors could be writing erotic shapeshifter reverse harem BDSM dark romances at the same time.” Personally, I don’t see a problem with this. Writers are allowed to write stories of various heat levels just as readers can like both non explicit and explicit novels. I think of it this way: The late comedian George Carlin did profanity-laden rated R material but he could also do clean comedy and was even Mr. Conductor on “Shining Time Station,” a children’s television program. So if Mr. Carlin could do all that, and do it well, I think we’ll survive.

“I’m also annoyed because I’ve heard that some writers have put out both “clean” and “dirty” versions of the same book.” That sounds like when rated-R movies get watered down for network television. Depending on the movie, it can be okay or it can be a total disaster.

“The love scenes should be so important to the story that you can’t pull them out without hurting the book.” Again, I think this depends on the book. Some movies, for example, have been remade many times. Some versions, particularly those produced in the Hays Code era, may be sanitized whereas the versions produced pre-code or post-code may be more explicit. And more than one version may be good.

“Then there are the possibilities that some of these authors are hiring ghostwriters so they can keep putting out books…” I have mixed feelings about ghostwriters. Sure, people should be allowed to use them, but to me, it would feel like taking credit for someone else’s work. My recommendation would be to credit the other person and say “Author with So-and-So” or “So-and-So, based on a story idea by Author.”

The whole ghostwriter thing can also make authors appear more prolific than they are, and cast suspicion on truly prolific authors by saying something like “Oh, So-and-so couldn’t *possibly* have written all those books. She must have used a ghostwriter.”

Lots of interesting things to think about.

Tina
Tina
Guest
11/15/2019 1:07 am

I’ve seen them referred to as ‘closed-door’ romances and even though I don’t read all that many of them I still find that term pretty useful. It’s literally what it says on the tin: you’re privy to kissing and flirty thoughts (maybe even lusty thoughts? I don’t necessarily know where readers who prefer this type of romance would have the line drawn), but the reader isn’t a fly-on-the wall of the couple’s bedroom action.

Mara
Mara
Guest
Reply to  Tina
11/15/2019 4:45 pm

I prefer this term as well : closed-door. The implication is that there is physical intimacy, it’s just not described in detail.

Marian Perera
Marian Perera
Guest
11/15/2019 1:03 am

I prefer “sweet romance” because the word “clean” makes me think of sanitation, of scrubbing away germs and dirt. Whereas the sweet/spicy distinction doesn’t carry the same connotations for me. Sweet food is good, spicy food is good too.

JCG
JCG
Guest
11/15/2019 1:02 am

Why not just call them romances?

Then we could call the ones featuring sex “erotic romance” instead.

Overall I would like more romances without sex, as those usually are better, most sex is just a chore to skip over these days, and not having that as a crutch for the writer makes for better character and plot development. Note: Constant lusty thoughts also counts as sex in my book.

However, not really a fan of so-called “clean” romances as those too often have religious undertones and preaching in my experience. Just plain, good old-fashioned romances, but with no or minimal sex is the ideal for me.

Caz Owens
Caz Owens
Editor
Reply to  JCG
11/15/2019 2:02 pm

Then we could call the ones featuring sex “erotic romance” instead.

Er, no we can’t, because sex scenes in a romance don’t automatically make it an erotic romance. An erotic romance will most likely have a larger number or sex scenes than a contemporary, for instance, and may include ménage, toys, and more explicit language. The average romance written today – contemporary and historical – that includes sex scenes doesn’t include those things, so just lumping anything with a sex scene into the same category wouldn’t be an accurate reflection of the sexual content of the book.

Caz Owens
Caz Owens
Editor
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/15/2019 4:31 pm

Agreed. My own interpretation is that an erotic romance has the sort of emotional context and content associated with romance novels in general, whereas with erotica the driving force is the sex, and there is little actual plot. It might not be the “industry standard” definition – maybe Nan de Plume will be able to provide a better one!

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  Caz Owens
11/15/2019 9:07 pm

“It might not be the “industry standard” definition – maybe Nan de Plume will be able to provide a better one!” Wow! Thanks for the shout out, Ms. Owens. Although as a self-published erotica and erotic romance writer, I’m not sure how closely I meet industry standards as set by traditional publishers. But I’ll do my best to make some clarifications.

In my own opinion, here’s what I would say about “erotica” vs “erotic romance.”

To begin with the overlaps, both erotica and erotic romance MUST have explicit sex in order to be classified as such. One exception to this rule: certain fetishes that do not actually involve conventional sexual practices. For a fairly PG-rated example, someone might have a fetish for women popping balloons. In this case, if the erotica or even erotic romance writer were to write a heroine who popped balloons in a manner meant to entice the reader with said fetish, then the story could still be classified as erotica even if there were no (conventionally) explicit sex scenes. Even so, sex (regardless of form) drives the story in both erotica and erotic romance.

Now for some differences, at least how I see them:

Let’s start with erotica. In erotica, sex is the foundation of the story. The character or characters are going on some kind of sexual journey, whether that journey is a one-night stand, a long-term relationship, or maybe even a personal exploration of some kind (i.e. a journey of self-discovery). Unlike romance, erotica industry standards do not require an HEA or HFN, although an erotic story certainly may end happily. Incidentally, this is why erotica author Susie Bright criticized the romance genre in a notorious article. She argued that the romance requirement for an HEA is too restrictive. A romance writer then retorted that erotica’s requirements are too restrictive because a romance novelist can choose whether or not to include sex in a book whereas an erotic novelist must include sex by definition.

Now for erotic romance. Unlike erotica, erotic romance must follow romance industry standards. That means the story must have a central romance and end with an HEA or HFN. What separates erotic romance from a steamy romance is not necessarily the number of sex scenes or the inclusion of BDSM or toys. In an erotic romance, the explicit sex scenes are integral to the plot. It is through sex that the characters learn, grow, and develop- and the plot moves forward. If the author were to remove the sex scenes, there would no longer be a story- not even a readable “clean” romance. Trying to “clean the story up,” so to speak, would destroy the work irreparably.

“with erotica the driving force is the sex, and there is little actual plot” You have stumbled on one of the great debates between erotica vs pornography. And it’s an iffy line that isn’t easily defined. I like to think of the difference as written versus visual, but even that is an overly broad definition.

As for plot, erotica stories vary greatly. On one end of the spectrum, you have the 3,000 word short story written in two hours about the pizza man who shows up at the door to offer a horny housewife in a bathrobe the extra large sausage. On the other end of the spectrum, you might have an elaborate 120,000+ word soap opera of a novel that spans many characters and generations.

Fun fact: Amazon prohibits the publishing of pornography, but allows (and in some ways encourages) the publishing of erotica. So to stay on Amazon’s good side, keep everything consensual, write only adult characters, nothing illegal (no incest, animal sex, etc.), and have at least a very basic plot with a goal, motivation, and conflict to make sure your story has some literary or artistic merit. (FYI you can totally do a story about the pizza man and the bored housewife- just make sure to have a beginning, a middle, and an end like any other story.)

Great question, Ms. Owens! If anybody else has questions on this topic, I’ll try to answer.

Nan De Plume
Nan De Plume
Guest
Reply to  Dabney Grinnan
11/16/2019 11:46 am

Aw, thank you! I’d definitely consider writing a guest blog for AAR. But before I make a commitment, please let me know how you would like me to go about it as in what questions/specific topics would you like me to address, word count, etc., and how to get it to you. Thanks!