Books Magazine

Interview with Em Petrova

By Readingromances

What authors do you enjoy reading? How do they influence your work?

My all-time favorite author is the goddess Anne Rice. I love her descriptive writing. I get lost in her works over and over again. As a result, I’d like to think I bring a bit of her macabre style to my work.

I like to find the gritty sides of my characters and their worlds and reveal them.

You also write literary fiction under the name of Em Peters, right?

Yes, I have a book coming out under that name in October 2011. In fact, I’m filling out the cover art request today! The title is Moon Child, and it’s a paranormal romance similar to The Lovely Bones or The Time Traveler’s Wife.

What is it that you wanted to express with Em Peters, that you couldn’t as Em Petrova?

Interview with Em PetrovaThey are two totally different brands.

Em Petrova will set your computer or e-reader on fire.

Em Peters has a bit of the steamy in her writing, but the main theme is different. I used two different names because I don’t want people to be confused about what they’re picking up.

Talking about things getting on fire…What’s your “aha” moment when writing a sex scene in a book – the point at which you realize you’ve captured the essence of a hot tryst?

To be honest, I have no problem writing sex scenes. In fact, the scene plays out in my mind like a movie, and I write as fast as I can.

Readers and editors tell me I write the hottest sex scenes they’ve ever read, and I’m damn proud of that!

Haha, you should be! What do you think about the statement that “F/F doesn’t sell well”?

 I recently did a poll on a menage group I belong to on Goodreads, asking if readers enjoy F/F interaction, or if they tend to shy away from it. I was stunned by the response!

Dozens of women came out of lurkerdom to express their feelings on this topic.

In the end, I discovered women love to read about other women pleasuring one another, as long as there is a connection of some sort. Just as we like to see a bond between M/F characters, they don’t want to read F/F sex just because the writer needed to up her word count. That being said, I find that my F/F doesn’t sell as much as my other works, but I feel the genre is at the starting gate, just as M/M was a couple years ago.

Do you think that there’s still some “prejudice” or fear from the readers to pick a gay novel?

 I think some women are worried that they’d get turned on by it, when they have always locked themself into a “straight” profile. I actually had a loyal reader question whether or not she should buy Tattoo Dream, which is a M/F/F work. After I talked to her about it, she gave it a try and loved it.

I’ve actually found many female readers expressing this same idea. Try it–you’ll like it :)


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