A Tale of Moral Corruption- Marsha Cornelius
This book is as unique as all Cornelius books.
Those that prefer their authors' scripts predictable might not. I loved it,
even though I'm a bit of a prude, preferring sexual content to be more implied
than graphic. If one is going to lean towards porn, while still keeping the
serious content on top of the page, one had better do sex scenes well. In too
many books porn is included for the sake of commercial successful without
regard to plot. Cornelius includes vivid porn without losing sight of her
intellectual idea. There is also a little fairly graphic violence, which in its
case the story simply couldn't have worked without. Both sex and violence were
written with realistic efficiency, and with a great deal of gymnastics.
Cornelius represents everything that is best about self-publishing, going
places with her scripts that the established publishers generally fail at-
genuine originality. This is inevitable because businesses have to make
commercial decisions. True, reading SP is a gamble, in that one has to read
nine books to find the tenth gem; but a worthwhile gamble, especially when one
can grab a sure fire winner by studying previous form.
Few books are perfect, and this is no
exception, despite my praise. I don't actually think she got the dominated
males response quite right. Every reader will have an independent view about
plausibility. I certainly think the author had tongue firmly planted in cheek.
Men certainly love their kids as much as Mum's do; but on a rather less
psychologically bonded and intimate levels. Their overall emotional attachment
is often just as powerful, and Cornelius certainly get's that right. I'm not at
all sure that many males would ever be quite as into the baby thing in the deep
way that Mason is, even in a matriarch dominated world. Cornelius is writing
first person male, and in the main doing it very well, I just think she
overplayed the we-are-what-we're brought-up-to-be card over-strongly, against
the we're-simply-what-biology-made-us one. The book has a great deal of
interesting feminist angles in it, especially concerning what might actually
happen if women got to wear the trousers all the time, at home, socially and in
the work place. Would women behave a bit like men? To some degree yes, we
already see that in more sexually equal societies. It is certainly true that
nearly all the women who make it to the top of the business world do so by
using traditional male behaviours rather than female ones. To fly high one has
to believe one's own egotistical garbage, that's for sure. We certainly don't
live in a world were quality guarantees success, just bull-shit, connections
and confidence; three male strong suits. Playing dirty comes with the success
package, which Cornelius doesn't shirk from seeing when it's the females in
charge.
On a technical level, this book has all the
mechanics spot on. It's well written and well edited. This is another first
class piece, full of this author's usual inventiveness. The prose is so natural
that I literally floated through the book. This is seemingly effortless writing
that seems to run in a fast river across the page, sweeping the reader along. I
found this to be easy reading done well, with strong and in the main very
believable character behaviours.
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