The Denver Post

What is Bigfoot erotica?

A Virginia congressio­nal candidate accused her opponent of being into it

- By Ron Charles

Our weird political era just got a little hairier. For the first time, millions of Americans are asking, “What is Bigfoot erotica?”

That question has been inspired by Leslie Cockburn, a Democrat who’s running for Congress in Virginia’s 5th District. On Twitter last week, Cockburn accused her Republican opponent, Denver Riggleman, of being a “devotee of Bigfoot erotica.” Her tweet included a crudely drawn image of Bigfoot — with the monster’s genitalia obscured — taken from Riggleman’s Instagram account. She added, “This is not what we need on Capitol Hill.”

Actually, it would probably fit in just fine.

On the Cook Political Report, political analyst David Wasserman notes, “The most curious element of Riggleman’s background may be a recently-deleted Facebook author page appearing to promote a self-published book titled ‘The Mating Habits of Bigfoot and Why Women Want Him.’ ”

Reached by phone Monday, Riggleman said he has no interest at all in Bigfoot erotica, and he characteri­zed Cockburn’s accusation as ludicrous. “We’re stunned by it.”

He said that he did write an “anthropolo­gical book sort of based on parody and satire,” which has been a running joke with “a bunch of miliary pals” for the past 14 years. The Bigfoot image that Cockburn grabbed from Instagram was drawn by an artist friend who told Riggleman, “This is the best way to present your book.”

“I thought it was funny. There is no way that anybody’s dumb enough to think this is real,” said Riggleman, a former Air Force intelligen­ce officer and defense contractor who owns a Nelson County distillery with his wife.

“I do not believe that Bigfoot is real,” he added, laughing. “But I don’t want to alienate any Bigfoot voters.”

He plans to publish his book someday. “When people read it, they’ll be like, ‘Oh, my goodness, this was 14 years of practical jokes.’ ”

This is a dark day for political discourse in America. But it is an enlighteni­ng one for Bigfoot erotica.

The genre, a subset of pornograph­ic literature called cryptozool­ogical erotica, was in the news a few years ago when Amazon.com and other online bookseller­s began deleting so-called monster porn from their websites. Critics complained that the books featured rape, bestiality and pedophilia. Some authors responded by changing their titles, toning down the descriptio­ns of their plots or labeling their stories “ADULTS ONLY!”

Amazon currently lists dozens of e-books with titles such as “Shiver for Yeti,” “Where the Wild Things Ravish” and “Bride of Bigfoot.” (Amazon.com founder and chief executive Jeffrey P. Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

These books are almost always self-published, short and inexpensiv­e. Their covers frequently sport obscene puns and bizarre images. In 2013, one author, Virginia Wade, told Business Insider that her self-published monster erotica sometimes earned $30,000 a month.

Bigfoot erotica may seem like another abominatio­n birthed by the internet, but its antecedent­s are centuries old. Sexual encounters between humans and mythical animal creatures can be found in ancient Greek myths. Zeus, for instance, took the form of a swan when he seduced Leda; Pasiphae had a tragic thing for bulls.

Girl, they’re just not that into you.

Chuck Tingle, the pseudonym of an author of comically absurd erotica, is perhaps the most wellknown creator of monster porn, including about 10 books featuring encounters with the Yeti. Reached via email, Tingle said he understand­s why Bigfoot monsters are so attractive as romantic heroes: “They are natural outdoorsme­n ... which I think is nice, and, even though it seems like they could have a bad-boy way, they are actually very kind.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States