Jungle flowers, iron stalks, slippery seals, gnomons (that's the metal pin on a sundial), a fish flipping itself, and audacious swells below - these are just some examples (sadly, all true) of ham-fisted turns of phrase and excruciatingly shonky writing about sex in literature. When leading British magazine Literary Review initiated the Bad Sex in Fiction Award in 1993, they established the one literary award no self-respecting author would want the dubious honour of winning.
The notorious award is dished out each year to writers responsible for the worst lines of sexual description in modern literary fiction (pornography and erotic fiction are not considered). These are novels that are perfectly fine otherwise but are ravaged by poorly crafted sex scenes. And nobody, not even literary royalty is exempt from being made an example of. A dizzying roll call of previous winners and nominees includes Man Booker Prize winners Arundhati Roy, Ian McEwan and John Banville alongside other heavyweights Paul Theroux and Philip Roth. Whether they're going for poetic licence or gritty forensic realism, these sex scenes are eye-watering stinkers, guaranteed to turn you right off.
It's a slippery slope awash with dodgy metaphors. Crucifying the worst sex scenes that are deficient in charm, the awards are presented each November in a lavish booze-soaked ceremony with fire-cracking levels of pomp. Attendees snigger over the worst examples, read out by actors. And if the winning author refuses to show up to the ceremony, he or she risks the threat of being humiliatingly impersonated by well-known actors. Competition is stiff and, for their literary sins, the winner is presented with a crude plaster of paris foot-shaped trophy.
Smug and mean-spirited or simply a light-hearted attempt to encourage good writing?