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A dramatic title for a passionate novel!

A dramatic title for a passionate novel!

Nobody names a novel The Man Who Reclaimed His Virginity and then hopes to hide its dramatic light under a bushel! Yes, it is a pulp-style title, in the old “sensationalist” manner, and yet it is  accurate. It is both bravura yet totally descriptive.

In his review of my “slice of life” story Mugged by Love, the superb novelist Jay Cameron Parker said: “His writing is sharp and engaging. Sometimes subtle and sometimes raw.” (See that review here.) Well, despite its aura of theatricality, my new novel The Man Who Reclaimed His Virginity has both subtlety and rawness in both title and tale.

It is, among various things, a story of how too much solitude can shape a person’s thoughts and affect his actions.

It is difficult, especially to a generally self-effacing person like I am, to trumpet one’s own work. I sometimes feel I might sound like a purveyor of patent medicines in an old western or something, but these days “getting the word out” is a necessary task in the life of a self-publisher–otherwise his or her work will vanish in the ocean of digital ink.

I especially hope my noir fiction and crime literature friends online will take a look at this short novel (142 pages) on Kindle, as well as peruse my various flash fiction pieces here. I’m following my own path in noir storytelling, more in the manner of the “noir without crime” template of the novels of Alfred Hayes such as My Face for the World to See, In Love, and The End of Me. These are dark stories about the realm of intimate emotions rather than acts of dangerous criminality. Image

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These are the New York Review Books editions of Hayes’ memorable short novels.

Georges Simenon himself, in one of his standalone “romans dur” or “hard novels” did a noir tale without, as I recall, an actual crime in it: The Nightclub. (He also did a memorable nightclub-set mystery with Inspector Maigret known in the U.S. as Maigret and the Strangled Stripper and in Europe as Maigret at Picratt’s (the name of the nightclub).

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This is the 1979 Harcourt Brace Jovanovich edition.

A friend of mine, a cardiologist by trade, said that my “slice of life” psychological stories are all about rejection, which on reflection I thought was an interesting and valid diagnosis of which I was not completely aware, except already in knowing that “rejection” was certainly one of many different themes I tackle. Well, doesn’t rejection often feel like Fitzgerald’s “3 a.m. of the soul”? As F. Scott put it: “In a real dark night of the soul it is always three o’clock in the morning, day after day.” Isn’t that a frequent emotion in classic noir fiction and film?

Although I’ve made my living in erotica/porn/smut business (pick your fave term for it), and sometimes my psychological stories touch on erotic situations, pieces such as When A Woman Scowls, The Night I Got Off Easy, When She Became Real and Do You Remember Me, Lily? are not porn tales. In fact, with the publication of The Man Who Reclaimed His Virginity, available on Kindle, I have basically completed a 250-300 page volume of these “slice of life” stories. I may assemble them as a collection, to have them all together.

Here is an interesting angle on the novel. Originally I wrote its storyline as a flash fiction piece, which I did not publish because I decided it might make the basis for a good longer tale. But here it is now, in the original flash fiction form. Klein is called “Jenkins” in this early version; Margaret’s name is the same though, but originally envisioned as a warm-hearted blonde instead of the auburn-tressed manipulative amazon, Margaret Emilia Bortwell, that she becomes in the novel…

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I developed the blonde for the novel as the sweet-natured antithesis of Margaret and called her Venus Marie, but her character was not part of the original story.

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So here is the form in which the novel began:

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ON HER TERMS

Flash fiction by Irv O. Neil 

Jenkins felt like a speck on the busy road map of Margaret’s life, but her occasional friendliness to him sometimes made him feel like more; and this both elated and confused him. He was much older than she was and it wasn’t a question of him wanting, hoping, or expecting any kind of romantic relationship; but he wanted to know her better as a friend, if possible. She had been in a play in a small theater in lower Manhattan and he’d written a good review in one of the free local papers, and this led to an interview where he tried to give a boost to her as-yet fledgling career. He couldn’t deny to himself that he had sexual fantasies about her but he kept them to himself; the old goat mode did not appeal to him, however the yearning might persist. So, friendship was the aim. The irony was that if he had met someone like her when he was much younger, she probably wouldn’t have given him much of a tumble; a talented beauty like Margaret had many better options; but as an old man, a good knowledgeable writer and a spry enough seventy–someone recently at the website where he freelanced had said his gait was “youthful,” which pleased him–Jenkins offered her a few attractions that were palatable. 

How long would it take before her talent found the proper role, the astute producer, the best playwright? He’d known her for two years mostly from a distance, even though they lived in the same neighborhood; and he posted helpful things on social media about her and wrote online and print reviews of her latest appearances. He could see over those two years the progression of her skills and beauty and confidence, and could not help but wonder when his friendship would become superfluous to her, like a once-favorite song that now seemed tiresome.

It made him sad, and frightened, to think of this young woman who preoccupied his thoughts so much, but whose life was so rich with possibilities and events, unlike his own. How much attention could she possibly and realistically bestow upon him heading into the future? Not very much, he feared. He had that speck-like feeling again.

How many years on earth could he have left to know her? Oh how he wished he could live another forty years, just to see what she would be like then! But would her interest in him wane before his life did? He was startled by how much the couple of times they’d met for coffee, and the three shows and two films he had seen her in, and the one time he had interviewed her for a site, had so filled his consciousness with her image, voice, beauty, and especially her rich and distinctive laugh, which he imagined perfectly suited to any number of wonderful roles. Time was capricious, he knew, and he hoped his happiness wouldn’t be cut short too soon. He didn’t know Margaret well, really, but he imagined the getting-to-know-her-more, bit by bit, on whatever terms made her satisfied, was a lovely project he hoped to pursue for the rest of his life.  

The End


The story evolved considerably from this brief piece into a 142-page tale of insomnia, claustrophobic New York City living, a weird relationship involving rejection (of course), a subplot of flea market sales of vintage paperback books under the auspices of a booted Margaret in latex dominatrix gear, and the various games she and her admirer play (he now fully re-named Julius Caesar Klein): a rather complex drama which you will learn all about when I hope you will download a copy of The Man Who Reclaimed His Virginity right here

Thanks for reading!  


Holiday postscript! I want to wish everyone a very Happy New Year of 2026!  And thank you for perusing this blog, chatting with me on X aka Twitter, and reading my Kindle ebooks.

This past 2025 marked happy literary milestones as I got two pieces accepted at the terrific web magazine Punk Noir, which demonstrate that while I consider my new novel “noir without crime” I did indeed have some of my characters elsewhere do criminal things in these two brief flash pieces. First is “The Clown Inside Her” for the “clown” theme and following that is the untitled single-sentence piece in the “One Shot Kill” theme that followed. Here are the links.

The Clown Inside Her

One Shot Kill (scroll down to the middle and you’ll find my piece)

Thanks to editors Stephen J. Golds and B F Jones for selecting them and putting me in the company of so many fine writers!

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I created the picture of Venus Marie with the A.I. program at my stock photography account at depositphotos.com.

“On Her Terms” © 2025 Irv O. Neil

 
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Posted by on December 31, 2025 in Amazon.com, ebooks, Erotica, Femmes Fatale, Kindle, New York City

 

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The Philosophical Husband

The Philosophical Husband

On the heels of the first flash fiction I published a few days ago here, I thought I’d put up another one. I’m enjoying writing these short-short tales about a variety of topics, which I worked on throughout the summer; and if you enjoy reading them, do leave a comment. Or if you don’t enjoy them, leave a comment too! I want to know how the stories affect you, or not. As the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow said in 1847, “What a writer asks of his reader is not so much to like, as to listen.” And if you do like them, check out the much longer “slice of life” stories I’ve published in my Specialty Library on Kindle here.

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THE PHILOSOPHICAL HUSBAND

Flash Fiction by Irv O. Neil

Melina told him things he didn’t want to hear. Or did he? It was strange how she always seemed much more attractive to him when she criticized him. In fact, when they were dating, he wondered why he was going out with such an ordinary-looking girl, but only months later asked her to marry him–and, he realized now, he’d proposed at a time when she was particularly critical of him, which obviously must have made her seem more alluring in his eyes.

So what was he going to do now? Keep her permanently judgmental so that he desired her more than when she treated him with a smidgen or two of respect?

He wished he at least had married a judgmental but beautiful girl, so that when she wasn’t reaming him out, at least he could feel a greater consistency of desire. With Melina, he was bored by her when she was nice, but wanted her when she wasn’t. Felt very schizzy.

The thought of living like this forever made him depressed, so he decided to ask for a divorce. But that’s when things became really weird.

In the past she’d criticized him for his looks, his lovemaking, his hobby of collecting monster movie magazines, his selection of clothes, and the way he seemed indecisive about work and money. Now she criticized him to his core, telling him what a failure he was, that he had duped her into this ridiculous marriage to which she, nonetheless, was devoted because, despite his many faults, she could look deep into his core and see the possibilities of what he could become if only he listened to her and took her criticisms and analyses to heart. “This is my way of expressing love,” she said. But he insisted he couldn’t take it anymore and that made her more infuriated, as if he’d spurned her great gifts of insight and self-sacrifice.

And the more she tore into him, the more he wanted her; but didn’t allow himself to show it, lest she see all too clearly how he wasn’t interested in self-improvement under her guidance, but the erotic benefits of her relentless castigation. He felt deeply embarrassed by his perversity and tried to hide it, which blinded him to the fact that maybe if she saw this, she would get disgusted enough to divorce him after all. 

But she told him to forget the divorce for awhile and instead to take her advice and try to improve himself. And, worn down by her logic, he decided that if his life was a half-empty glass of water, he would focus on and be grateful for the water, not the empty air.

They’re soon to commemorate their seventh anniversary.

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The Philosophical Husband ©2024 Irv O. Neil

Both photos ©konstantynov/Depositphotos.com. Posed by professional models.

This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, events and locations are either the product of the author’s imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. The resemblance of any character, living or dead, to actual persons is entirely coincidental.

 

 
2 Comments

Posted by on September 12, 2024 in ebooks, Erotica, Femmes Fatale, Kindle

 

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One Crafty Blonde

One Crafty Blonde

I did a lot of fiction writing this summer, although I haven’t published a new ebook since the spring. Just experimenting with different approaches and ideas, and having some fun with it.

Inspired by all the flash fiction I’ve seen online–the really short tales that pack a quick punch–I gave the format a try myself. It’s not the first time, but I’ve never published any before. I take a single piece of paper, usually go out for coffee, and see what I come up with. Amazing how I can concentrate with people chatting all around me. Sometimes I need a couple more pages, but most of the time, covering one side of a page seems to do the trick.

See what you think about this little tale… 

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ONE CRAFTY BLONDE 

Flash fiction by Irv O. Neil 

Lila kept asking what I wanted to do. She had some kind of scheme in mind. Wow, that Lila! In the weeks I’d known her, that crafty blonde bundle sure began to change. She was flirty and fun at first. We had a lotta laughs. Never felt “serious” but just one of those enjoyable things. I’m a good looking guy, I’ve had these things before, always kept ‘em light, and that was what the gals wanted too. So when things wound down, there was no big drama. We’d go our separate ways, but no hard feelings! A casual hookup in the future if we crossed paths was always a possibility.

I figured it would be the same with Lila, but then she started telling me I wasn’t putting “enough effort” into my life, and she wanted to “help” me. Help me? At first I thought talk like this was just a mood and I humored her. I was satisfied the way things were, running a shoe store, making a decent living in our small city. That was how Lila and I met, in fact, when she came in for a pair of pumps for a wedding she was going to.

But no, she had a bug up her ass! She wanted me to think “bigger” and introduced me to a couple of her friends she thought could help me. Before, I’d only met three, four, of her gal pals, but these were two guys, and they rubbed me the wrong way. Too vague about themselves and what they did.

Soon enough, it came out. They wanted me for a “job.” See, I’m a big guy, strong, slow-moving generally but fast when I have to be; and they thought I could help ‘em “knock over” a jewelry store. I looked at ‘em like they were crazy, and Lila too. She was there when they sprang their big plan.

So I told ‘em no. And told ‘em I didn’t know why they thought I’d go along with something like that. That’s when Lila started laughing and brought out the clippings of jobs I’d done twenty years ago when I was young and stupid. She held out the clips in her red-manicured fingers I always found so sexy. I’d even paid for those manicures lately…

Well, I thought I’d outrun my past, with a new name and appearance, building a different life in this burg. But they had me. If I didn’t play along, they’d see I’d pay one way or another. 

Damn. I knew I shouldn’t have let Lila spend so much time alone in my apartment when I was at work. Crafty babes get up to mischief. 

But I mostly have myself to blame for keeping some goddamn scrapbooks!  

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One Crafty Blonde ©2024 Irv O. Neil

Photos:

The blonde, ©Dutko/Depositphotos.com. Posed by professional model.

The manicure, ©natkin_zu/Depositphotos.com. Posed by professional model.

This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, events and locations are either the product of the author’s imagination or, if real, used fictitiously. The resemblance of any character, living or dead, to actual persons is entirely coincidental.

 
3 Comments

Posted by on September 8, 2024 in Erotica, Femmes Fatale

 

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