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My Dad, the Pornographer (2015)

nytimes.com

34 points by _b8r0 5 years ago · 13 comments

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microtherion 5 years ago

The author, Chris Offutt, is a rather enjoyable novelist in his own right. I recommend his short story collections "Kentucky Straight" and "Out of the Woods" for a start. What I find unusual is his perspective: His fiction is set in a very rural and poor environment, and clearly he had a foot in that himself once, but no longer quite fits in (A dilemma spelled out in his memoir No Heroes — and there was a battle on comment sides whether he did or did not misrepresent his native area).

rzz3 5 years ago

Do all of you folks have NYT accounts? I’m not a subscriber and I won’t give them money and I wish people would stop submitting their links to HN.

  • Rebelgecko 5 years ago

    I'd imagine that most people in HN live in a locale where you can get access for free. It's a pretty common service from public libraries, although you have to periodically re-request access. I'd imagine that most people who read without paying for a subscription are just using some combination of ublock/umatrix/clearing cookies

  • ElijahLynn 5 years ago

    I don't think most do. I don't. And can't help but think many just upvote the titles.

  • ageitgey 5 years ago

    You can avoid the NYT paywall by literally just hitting the Stop button in Chrome after the page has displayed but the paywall JS is still loading/rendering. It works 100% of the time for me.

  • drcongo 5 years ago

    I don't, but this article wasn't behind a paywall for me.

raunakdag 5 years ago

Kind of makes you wonder how many other folks have works of art they’ve worked on for lifetimes that are either a) destroyed, b) never released, or c) lost forever.

anonzzz 5 years ago

After reading this account, I felt somewhat sorry for his father.

vmception 5 years ago

(2015)

Really enjoying the comments

milquetoastaf 5 years ago

As someone who has worked in the publishing world, including erotica and "romance" novels, a lot of the retrograde attitudes you see depicted in this article are very much alive today in the US. Perhaps not encoded in law, but it is difficult, for instance, to find a distributor for this material that also caters to a more urbane audience.

Romance / erotica books do not have to be trash, they can very much be moving works of fiction in their own right. But places like McNally Johnson won't buy this kind of stuff even though it does sell very well online. Platforms like Instagram make it difficult as well - Twitter is really the only remaining mainstream platform that will not censor images for pornographic content. You can't use payment processors like PayPal or Stripe either, at least not if you want to keep your money consistently. You have to play a war of attrition with keywords on your site so you can hit SEO thresholds but not set off any content sniffing that payment processors do.

Meanwhile, sell a book about serial killers and everything's hunky-dory. That book can even include heinous sexual transgressions depicted in gruesome detail but as long as you don't have nipples on the cover or 'erotica' in the copy Stripe will cash you out all day long

roland35 5 years ago

From the title I thought that this was about the "My dad wrote a porno" podcast and was hoping the next season was coming out soon.

Well it turns out there are other dads who have made pornography! Who would've thought?

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