I nominate Charles Petersunn
I nominate Charles Petersunn for “Most Influential Writer” regarding his body of work, or if the nomination must be connected to a specific story posted in 2009, “Miss Anderson's IBS.”
After reading a few paragraphs in virtually any of Charles Petersunn's stories, the reader will find himself nearly seamlessly sliding into the bizzarre world Petersunn creates in the majority of his work, where it's as if you have one foot in contemporary times and the other in a skewed and erotic variation of a 1950's - early '60's sitcom, yet the world he creates seems both natural and believable.
His stories are not only erotic but are also so funny it's normal to laugh out loud while reading them. He proves that it's not always necessary to write a dramatic story in order to have a definite erotic element woven into the story line, nor have realism be the foundation for believability.
I nominate Charles Petersunn for “Most Influential Writer” regarding his body of work, or if the nomination must be connected to a specific story posted in 2009, “Miss Anderson's IBS.”
After reading a few paragraphs in virtually any of Charles Petersunn's stories, the reader will find himself nearly seamlessly sliding into the bizzarre world Petersunn creates in the majority of his work, where it's as if you have one foot in contemporary times and the other in a skewed and erotic variation of a 1950's - early '60's sitcom, yet the world he creates seems both natural and believable.
His stories are not only erotic but are also so funny it's normal to laugh out loud while reading them. He proves that it's not always necessary to write a dramatic story in order to have a definite erotic element woven into the story line, nor have realism be the foundation for believability.