The Pledge Mistress Ch. 47 Postscript

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EC's thoughts about his novel "The Pledge Mistress".
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Part 47 of the 47 part series

Updated 10/29/2022
Created 03/18/2010
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The Pledge Mistress - Thoughts from the author about the novel and its creation

The Pledge Mistress, the fourth novel out of the erotic discipline series that I have created, continues my effort to bridge my first novel The Wanderings of Amy and my second novel Maragana Girl. Upon finishing my third novel The Freshman, I realized that my fiction and the world in which my characters pursue their lives focuses on two locations: a fictional university in suburban Chicago, and my imaginary country of Upper Danubia. Rather than attempt to create a new setting for any subsequent piece of fiction, I knew that if I chose to write a fourth novel, the plot would take place either at the university or in the Danubian Republic.

I also knew that in any future novel I would want to further develop the life story of at least one secondary character from a previous novel; that I probably would utilize characters already created instead of trying to think up new ones. As I pondered where I wanted to go with my fiction, four previous characters seemed likely candidates to become the main character of a new novel: Tiffany Walker from Maragana Girl, Suzanne Foster and Ruth Burnside from The Wanderings of Amy, and Lisa Campbell from The Freshman. In the end I decided to go with writing a novel about Lisa Campbell, because there were several details about Lisa's life that I want to develop. Telling the story of Lisa Campbell allowed me to further explore the life story of Ruth Burnside without having to dedicate an entire novel to her. I was also interested in developing Lisa's relationships with her boyfriend Ken and in exploring some of her psychological issues that were not developed in The Freshman. Along with the story of Lisa's life and sexual adventures I wanted to create an erotic environment through the fictional Four-Beta Sorority. It is through her membership in the Four-Betas that Lisa has a chance to explore her sexuality, develop herself as a leader, and finally become a vital part of many other people's lives.

My fourth novel mostly takes place in and around the Four-Beta House and the associated Tri-Alpha Fraternity. At this point I must emphasize that the Tri-Alpha Fraternity and the Four-Beta Sorority are complete figments of my imagination and not based on anything I ever saw in real life. The names of both the fraternity and sorority were something that I invented off the top of my head, and I later checked the Internet to make sure there are no active "Greeks" that go by those names. I am fully aware that both organizations are completely unlike the fraternities and sororities that currently exist on U.S. college campuses. My fictional fraternity and sorority are not intended to be accurate portrayals of the "Greek" system, but instead serve as the setting for various episodes of erotic fantasy.

Apart from the subplots and erotic events, I tried to deal with a few serious issues as well, an example being college binge drinking. The pledging abuses that surface towards the end of the novel are loosely based on real events. Also, through my characters I try to examine various personal issues such as sexual identity (Lisa's boyfriend Ken), peer pressure (Bernadette), and depression and Asperger syndrome (Kathleen).

Like my second and third novels, The Pledge Mistress, which is my fourth full-length novel, was written from beginning to end. I started with a basic idea, but instead of working off an outline I simply let events unfold from chapter to chapter. On the surface the story's concept sounds simple, following the life of a university sophomore as she seeks to join a sorority. However, I felt obligated to follow the life stories of several characters simultaneously, as well as describing the sorority and its pledging program, which accounts for the novel's length and complexity. Along with developing the lives of the people surrounding Lisa, I sought to explain why they think and act the way they do, which comes out in the story's subplots. I want the reader to understand what motivates characters to do seemingly irrational things, and also I want to avoid stereotyping characters as purely good or evil.

As I mentioned in the above paragraphs, The Pledge Mistress was not intended to be an accurate portrayal of a typical sorority in real life. An example of where I took liberties with reality was the idea of "summer pledging". In my novel both the Four-Beta Sorority and the Tri-Alpha Fraternity have two pledge seasons: summer and fall. I had Lisa pledge during the summer because I did not want her participating in a group of 20 or 30 faceless companions. Instead of giving her a bunch of anonymous fellow pledges, I gave her only three: Cherine, Bernadette, and Kathleen. I sought to make Lisa's three companions interesting and complex individuals who were very different from each other. Personality issues facing the small pledge group were an important part of the story and how Lisa's views of herself changed over time. If the pledge group were larger, I don't see how I could have done justice to the novel's secondary characters.

I expected to write a relatively short novel of about 25 chapters, but ended up with a story almost twice as long. In spite of the novel's length, when I finished the initial draft there were several scenes that I originally intended to write that ended up not being included in the novel. I felt that I needed to leave out the omitted scenes either because they no longer fit into the story line as I developed it, or because they strayed too far from the story of Lisa Campbell and the people immediately surrounding her. Here are some of the subplots that did not get included in the novel:

Lisa's visit to California following her summer of pledging - Originally I planned to have Lisa travel to her home in California in August to visit her mother in Santa Cruz and her father in Reno. (Lisa's parents are divorced, but I don't directly say that in the narrative.) I also planned to have her run into her ex-boyfriend Mike. Lisa would have found out that her ex-boyfriend was dating a Danubian exchange student and had gone on to become an organizer of mass protests against Mega-Town Associates. However, I had to give that up because a bunch of other things were going on at the end of August that were crucial to the novel's ending. Lisa did not have time to make the trip.

The exile of Cecilia Sanchez and Jason Schmidt - I wanted to develop Lisa's reaction to the fates of Cecilia and Jason by including some correspondence with them as part of Lisa's personal personal journey. However, like the development of Mike's life, I did not see how that could fit with the story as it unfolded during the concluding chapters.

Tracy's personal life - From the beginning of writing the novel Pledge Mistress Tracy fascinated me and I would have liked to examine her personal life a bit more. There were several ideas that floated through my mind about Tracy. I considered, as part of the novel's conclusion, having her Army Reserve Unit getting mobilized and having her killed in action while fighting in Iraq. I also considered developing a subplot in which Tracy's family was extremely religious and that her brothers had sworn to kill her, which would have explained her obsession with combat and self-defense. However, I decided that both those topics were far too serious for an erotic novel, so that material got left out.

Cherine's personal life - Cherine is another character that did not get fully developed. I had thought about having her join the Four-Beta Sorority as an act of rebellion against religious parents, who had pushed her to join a different sorority. In the end I decided that theme was too complicated for a secondary character and dropped it.

Suzanne Foster - I wanted to bring Suzanne Foster into the novel and develop a personal relationship (non-sexual) between her, Lisa, and Tracy. The time-line of the novel did not really give me an opportunity to do that, because Lisa would not have had the chance to interact with Suzanne until after she had sworn in. I would have had to extend the novel's timeline to incorporate Suzanne, which I did not see the point in doing.

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I have discovered, through experience, that I cannot use an outline when I write fiction. Many years ago I attempted to write a political novel from an outline. I made up the outline just fine, but never started the novel itself because my imagination had evaporated. I have to write spontaneously, and then, once I'm finished, I can go back and make revisions. That method has advantages and disadvantages, both of which come out in "The Pledge Mistress". While writing, I was able to adapt my narrative and come up with new scenarios as the story developed in my imagination. As I wrote about them, my characters developed in my mind, I got to know them as complex entities, and over time I made discoveries about them. For example, some of the conflicts that developed in the middle of the story were events I had not yet thought of when I wrote the first several chapters. Writing spontaneously has plenty of disadvantages as well. In the case of "The Pledge Mistress", the story ended up becoming much longer than I envisioned when I started working on it. Also, not working from an outline results in many inconsistencies that need to be corrected, especially with small details.

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The future of my fiction. Whenever I finish a novel, I always hope that it is my last. Writing a long piece of fiction is a grueling and time-consuming experience that requires a lot of sleepless nights and sacrifice of personal time. Whenever I finish the first draft of a novel, I am hugely relieved. The following quote from Eric Blair (pen-name George Orwell) best sums up my feelings about writing a novel:

"All writers are vain, selfish, and lazy, and at the very bottom of their motives there lies a mystery. Writing a book is a horrible, exhausting struggle, like a long bout of some painful illness. One would never undertake such a thing if one were not driven on by some demon whom one can neither resist nor understand. For all one knows that demon is simply the same instinct that makes a baby squall for attention." - George Orwell - 1947 - from his essay Why I Write

Will I write a fifth novel? Possibly. What I have discovered is that normally about five months go by from the time I finish one novel until the plot of another story starts forming in my mind. If I do end up writing another story, it is for sure that it will take place either at my fictional university or in the Danubian Republic. Any new novel either will develop the life story of a secondary character that already has been created, or if I create a new main character, several characters from a previous novel will make their appearances and play important roles in the new story.

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LWulfLWulfalmost 11 years ago
Intensely mixed feeling

I started out REALLY liking your stories. I started reading The Pledge Mistress opposed to another series first. You have a delightful way of describing events in a clearly visual manner. That you gave insightful details in the character's psyche is worthy of applause that I wish other writers would emulate.

Seriously, you need to work on your audibles.

"Pop, pop, pop" is a thoroughly cheap shortcut, considering your previous way of detailing and using a full pallet of color to wonderfully describe both people and scenes, was ultimately depressing.

You are also heavily biased.

Women are not able to be sexually aroused during hazing but men are free game. Men can be used for subjects of disciple training to the four betas, but the reverse is never done. Men are lazy and afraid to take control of their own pledges and women have to step in to get the job done. Who wins the scavenger hunt? Women, it wasn't even close. Dr. Burnside gets upset at Pledge Lisa and what does she do? She gives an erotic spanking and jills her off. Even "Lisa" was expecting a caning for being presumptuous, but as you state "is relieved that she got off with JUST a hand spanking."

I couldn't read chapter 22 , skimming through it KNOWING "The Tri -Alphas are going to lose" and sure enough, lost miserably. I gave up, that's it, no more. It's a shame because a lot of the latter story seemed rather interesting (based on their one line descriptions), if in an overly dramatic way.

Granted, strict discipline isn't everyone's bag, but you seem to like dishing it out to the guys, then go limp wristed with the girls. Yet who is the more feared disciplinarians? The girls.

My bag isn't reading about guys being disciplined. However, I read through those parts clinically to see how you treated one, compared to the other. I never rated poorly based on my own interests, but strictly based on descriptive values and rationalisms alone.

You seem to be interested in real life psychology in one fashion or another and put that in your story (which, again, is fantastic), so tell me this; what would happen in real life if one group is heavily biased against or for another? Especially considering that the Tri-Alphas and Four Betas are supposed to be a linked "brother/sister" association? (I don't know if that is the proper term to describe a sorority/fraternity association).

I'll tell you: resentment and if left unchecked; anger and rage.

Yes, a little competition is natural between the two, but, and I am only guessing on this, there is also supposed to be a bond between the two.

I think it was Tracy who took Lisa off to the side to "help" her regarding her boyfriend, but who was Tracy really helping?? It seemed like she was driving a wedge between Lisa and her boyfriend and that boyfriend is of an associated fraternity?!? Giving Lisa in fact just enough information to get her really pissed off, and letting her imagination do the rest? Tracy is supposedly the one who "really cares" about her sisters?? Seriously? She cares about herself and NOT the sorority she belongs to and SHOULD be drummed out with disgrace.

There were also grammar issues on a few of the stories where it seemed that you used a word processing program to allow it to spell check the stories and it allowed correctly spelled words to be improperly used. This was small potatoes, and while I noticed them, I'll say it would be mean spirited to harp on such an issue. You seem knowledgeable enough to know about that. I am only noting this in passing.

I may decide to read other stories of yours in hope this was just a one-off, but I imagine I will find the same storyline dynamics again. It's REALLY very disappointing, you are an exceptional writer otherwise...

eugene2keugene2kover 11 years ago
Loved the story

It's rare to find a story that focuses on character development on Literotica. The closest I saw was corruption and falling into depravity. This is the first one I saw that focuses on character growth. Overall I liked it. If I were to name any flaws, those would be focus on irrelevant descriptions (the descriptions irrelevant to the main plot or the subplots), which detracted from the story and the lack of explanations about how certain characters know things about other characters that weren't shared with them. An example would be Ruth Burnside knowing about Lisa's plans for having both Ken and Kathleen as her subs or how she knew about Kathleen. There were no hints indicating Lisa ever wanted to talk about her relationships with Ruth or that she did and this inconsistency also breaks the immersion.

denverjohndenverjohnalmost 14 years ago

Would love to see a novel where Jason and Celia are back and finishing school. With Lisa and everyone else. I think the wrap up could be an interesting culmination to all this wonderful work. Not just that but it would be nice to see all of them a bit later in life and see how they have turned out. Maybe with kids and family and marriage.

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