The Denver Post

Bad Sex in Fiction Award canceled; 2020 bad enough

- By Alan Yuhas

For the first time in more than a decade, a contest to award the worst sex writing in the English language will not deliver a winner to the public, a relief for readers left mortified by the annual selection and sad news for the world’s connoisseu­rs of cringe.

The Bad Sex in Fiction Award is canceled.

The editors who run the contest announced the decision Tuesday on the website of their magazine, Literary Review, saying that the year 2020 has been unpleasant enough without their contributi­on.

“The judges felt that the public had been subjected to too many bad things this year to justify exposing it to bad sex as well,” the statement said. “They warned, however, that the cancellati­on of the 2020 awards should not be taken as a license to write bad sex.”

Staff members for the Literary Review, a British magazine not to be confused with a New Jersey- based publicatio­n of the same name, have curated terrible sex writing for almost three decades. The award’s purpose, according to the magazine, is to honor the year’s “most outstandin­gly awful scene of sexual descriptio­n” and to draw attention “to the poorly written, redundant or downright cringe- worthy passages of sexual descriptio­n in modern fiction.”

Since the award was establishe­d in 1993 by critic Rhoda Koenig and editor Auberon Waugh, the son of Evelyn Waugh, the nominated passages have included a comparison of an orgasm to “a demon eel,” unconventi­onal descriptio­ns of the human body — such as haunches “that could support a whole array of toothbrush­es” — and coital journeys into outer space.

The winner in 2013, Manil Suri, compared sex to exploding supernovas, having characters “streak like superheroe­s past solar systems” and “dive through shoals of quarks and atomic nuclei.” Norman Mailer won, posthumous­ly, in 2007, thanks to his inventive use of the phrase “a coil of excrement.” The winner in 1997, Nicholas Royle, described an exclamatio­n “somewhere between a beached seal and a police siren.”

Though the list of winners is dominated by men, a few women have claimed the prize, including Rachel Johnson, a former magazine editor ( and the sister of Prime Minister Boris Johnson of Britain), who won in 2008. The judges noted her repeated use of animal imagery, as when she compared a character’s fingers to “a moth caught inside a lampshade” and his tongue to “a cat lapping up a dish of cream.”

Nominees have included some of the most famous names in fiction of the past 30 years. The year of Johnson’s victory, John Updike was given a lifetime achievemen­t award. Authors put on the short list have included Salman Rushdie, Stephen King and Haruki Murakami.

In other years, Literary Review editors gather at the In and Out Club in central London to celebrate, reading excerpts aloud and giving the winner the award: a plaster foot. Most writers have received the award with good humor, including Johnson, who called the award an “absolute honor.”

Others have proved less interested, including the singer Morrissey, who won in

2015 and said it was “best to maintain an indifferen­t distance” from “these repulsive horrors.”

 ?? Andrew Testa, © The New York Times Co. ?? Actress Barbara Windsor, left, and writer Alexander Waugh announce the 2011 Bad Sex in Fiction winner, David Guterson, at the In and Out Club in London on Dec. 6, 2011.
Andrew Testa, © The New York Times Co. Actress Barbara Windsor, left, and writer Alexander Waugh announce the 2011 Bad Sex in Fiction winner, David Guterson, at the In and Out Club in London on Dec. 6, 2011.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States