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Behind Closed Doors (1994)

door Alina Reyes

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1565175,812 (3.11)4
This novel, written by the author of The Butcher, offers inter- active erotic exploration. Divided into two halves, with each chapter giving a choice of sexual fantasies, men read from one end, women from the other.
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Engels (4)  Duits (1)  Alle talen (5)
Toon 5 van 5
SECTION 1
You enter a room. On a low marble table lies a paperback book with a vaguely titillating cover. Its pages are well-thumbed; the spine is creased. On the far side of the room, you see another door standing slightly ajar. Beyond it you can hear the sound of laughter and merriment, and the haunting strains of the Benny Hill theme tune played on an accordion. Do you

Examine the mysterious book. ↳ Go to SECTION 3

Investigate what lies beyond the next door. ↳ Go to SECTION 8

Turn and leave the way you came; literature holds no interest for you. ↳ Go to SECTION 9

SECTION 2
Tucking the book under your arm, you pass quickly through the nearest door to find yourself in a small, dark room. It is dominated by a large lectern standing in the centre, the kind of thing you might normally expect to see at the front of a cathedral – except that this one, you realise as you come closer, is covered in obscene carvings of buxom girls and alarmingly ithyphallic goblins. Positioning yourself behind it, you place the book on the lectern and see with satisfaction that its pages fit perfectly.

You settle down to examine the book's contents, which are provocative. Reading from the front gives you a male protagonist, while reading from the back gives you a female one. The female half, at least, is an interesting mix of the cliché (pirates, knights, men in kilts) and the unexpected (clowns?!), ranging dauntlessly from lush, sensual scenes of coy exploration and suggestiveness all the way up to outré descriptions of exhibitionism, orgies, monster-sex, watersports and horny canines. You certainly have to be careful about what choices you make here…. And yet the writing is always dextrously appealing, and not without a strain of playful humour. You scan a chapter in which your heroine and a friend enjoy the company of a whole company of firemen:

Les hommes s'étaient alignés en deux files indiennes, et chacun polissait sa lance à incendie pour nous la présenter dans la meilleur état. Quand ma compagne vit que les deux premiers étaient en mesure d'offrir une queue parfaitement dure et dressée, elle frappa dans ses mains, et aussitôt ils se détachèrent du peloton de leurs camarades pour venir nous rejoindre au petit trot, malgré les pantalons qui entravaient leurs chevilles.

[The men were arranged into two lines, and each was polishing his fire-hose so as to show it off to best effect. When my companion saw that the two men at the front were in a position to offer us perfectly hard, upright cocks, she clapped her hands, and they immediately detached themselves from their platoon to join us at a jog, despite the trousers gathered around their ankles.]

You stifle a chuckle. But it seems late; there may not be time to read much more. Do you

Leave the room and try to find your way back to the exit. ↳ Go to SECTION 10

Turn the book around and explore the Male half. ↳ Go to SECTION 11

SECTION 3
The book is called Derrière la porte, which is best translated as ‘Behind Closed Doors’. A blush comes to your cheek as you flick through the pages, which seem to detail a variety of fantastical and inventive sexual encounters described in fluid, poetic prose. Like the Choose-Your-Own-Adventure books of your childhood, the action advances only as you, the Reader, make choices. Turning the book over carefully, you realise with interest that it can be read from either front or back, the difference being in whether your hero will be Male or Female.

As you are contemplating the book, there is a sound from in front of you. A Beautiful Woman has slipped through the door opposite; she casts a nervous glance to the room behind her, and holds a finger to her lips, begging you not to give her position away. Do you

Stay and talk to the Beautiful Woman. ↳ Go to SECTION 6

Push past her and explore the room beyond. ↳ Go to SECTION 8

SECTION 4
Passing through the crowds, you look from left to right, marvelling at the strange costumes and encounters on every side. Before long, you have lost your way; when you look behind you, the door you came in by seems no longer to be visible, obscured, perhaps, by the sudden orgiastic flashmob enacting Eric Prydz's Call On Me with more than religious enthusiasm.

Just then, there is a commotion of some kind. A woman has entered at the far end; everyone nearby has turned to see her, pointing and whispering excitedly amongst themselves. ‘It's her!’ you hear a bunny-girl murmur to her beau. ‘The Authoress!’ The woman paces calmly through her admirers, until she reaches a small door set into the wall. Smiling graciously at those nearby, she slips through without another word and disappears, to widespread groans of disappointment. Approaching the door, you try the handle carefully, and find to your surprise that it opens at once.

You follow the woman inside. She is standing a short distance away, facing a large wooden desk behind which sits a jowly man smoking a fat cigar. He scowls at you as you enter. ‘Shut the door and keep quiet!’ he shouts. The Authoress only pouts at you conspiratorially. She has a biro behind her ear, and a Hitachi Magic Wand slung in a holster at her left hip.

‘So what's your new project,’ the man demands, jabbing his cigar at her. ‘We need a follow up to that book about sleeping with a greengrocer.’

‘A butcher,’ she corrects him.

‘Whatever. Tell me about the new novel.’

‘It is an erotic choose-your-own-adventure book—’

The man behind the desk is holding up his hand. ‘I've heard enough. Where do I sign,’ he says, pulling a bag of euros from a desk drawer.

The Authoress hands him a contract, and turns to face you. ‘I'm going this way,’ she tells you, pointing to one of the room's many doors. ‘Would you like to come with me? Perhaps we can read my book together.’ Do you

Follow the woman. ↳ Go to SECTION 12

Politely decline, and try the door next to you instead, on your own. ↳ Go to SECTION 10

SECTION 5
You stumble through the corridors for what seems like hours as the light fades. The music you heard earlier seems always to be just around the next corner. Finally, exhausted, despairing of ever finding your way back to the rooms you saw when you first came in, you collapse to the floor, your head in your hands, and gradually sink into a fitful sleep. When you wake, all this will seem, perhaps, like a dream – a strange, feverish dream, like that time you ate too much morbier and passed out on the sofa in front of Nashville. Just a dream: no less, but no more.

Your adventure ends here.

SECTION 6
The woman closes the door behind her and takes a few steps towards you. You know she is French, because she is naked from the waist down and holding a mille-feuille. ‘I hope you have been enjoying my little book,’ she says with a heavy accent and a smile. ‘When I decided to write this little jeu d'esprit, I wanted to provide something for everyone, young and old, male and female, vanilla and kinky. But always elegant: these are, en fin de compte, intrinsically French erotic fantasies.’

‘Ah,’ you nod wisely. ‘Exposing yourself to strangers on the RER, that sort of thing.’

She executes a disapproving moue. ‘Not exactly.’

‘Getting tied up and spanked with a copy of Charlie Hebdo?’

‘No—’

You pause.

‘Fucked by riot police over the back of a Vélib' stand?’

‘Just stop.’

The two of you eye each other warily. Will you

Stay and talk further with The Authoress. ↳ Go to SECTION 7

Leave her, and take the book off to investigate it elsewhere, alone. ↳ Go to SECTION 2

SECTION 7
‘How do you think men and women differ when it comes to sexual desire?’ you ask her, curious.

‘Women's desires are deep and polymorphous, their depths still unplumbed by art or science,’ she says with a shrug. ‘And men – men are adorable. Their desires are best greeted with sympathy and amusement than with disdain.’

‘And what about love?’ you demand, stepping closer. ‘Is there any room for love in all of this?’

Mais bien sûr que oui – but that is what my book is all about,’ she says, surprised. ‘That is the whole point. I hope to show that, in the end, the idealised love-object is just as much a piece of unreality and wishful thinking as the most depraved sexual fantasy-figure. Which is not to say that either of them cannot ever be found.’

She holds a hand out to you.

‘Come with me. Perhaps we can explore these matters in more detail elsewhere.’ Do you

Take the woman's hand and go with her. ↳ Go to SECTION 12

Politely decline, and try another door on your own. ↳ Go to SECTION 10

SECTION 8
Leaving the book, you slip through the door and find yourself in a large, open room filled with activity of every kind. Benches and loungers are gathered in one area, scattered with pillows and throw-cushions; nearby, a large pool of the sort normally associated with a classical harem diffuses the warm light that falls from some distant window in the ceiling. Steam hangs in the air, making everything appear dreamlike and insubstantial. Men and women in varying stages of undress are everywhere: couples push each up against the walls, twins in 1960s nursing uniforms cavort poolside, a troop of shirtless lumberjacks walk past wiping sweat from their brows. A large tricolor hangs on the far wall. ‘What is this place,’ you breathe, eyes wide.

‘This is, like, Alina's fantasy world,’ calls out a nearby girl in an abbreviated baker's outfit, complete with white toque, who is doing something obscene with a ficelle. ‘It's like a sexy French Disneyland.’

‘It's all in the book, friend,’ says a muscled centaur in biker's leathers, putting his hand on your shoulder. ‘Here, take my copy if you like, and go check it out.’ He holds out a copy of the paperback you saw earlier, gesturing to a door nearby. Do you

Take the book and examine it more closely. ↳ Go to SECTION 2

Refuse the book and leave the way you came, having seen enough. ↳ Go to SECTION 9

Stay and explore the room in more detail, and perhaps open one of the other doors. ↳ Go to SECTION 4

SECTION 9
As you leave the strange room, you are hit by a bus and killed instantly. Doctors later say that if you had only been carrying a book with you, it may have been enough to cushion the blow.

Your adventure ends here.

SECTION 10
You pass through the door and find yourself suddenly – unexpectedly – back outside, blinking in the sunlight. For a second you wonder if you shouldn't check something else within; but when you try the handle behind you, it is now locked shut. You move away hesitantly. It is time, you think, to go back to your serious literature, to immerse yourself in a David Foster Wallace and chase it down with a slim Russell Hoban. Perhaps even tackle one of the Russian classics on your to-be-read pile. Only, occasionally, you might drink too much and find yourself late at night flicking self-hatingly through EL James, or downloading a self-published BDSM short to your Kindle, written by a middle-aged male accountant under the pen-name of Trixie Valentine – and you'll wonder, fleetingly…what might have been….

Your adventure ends here.

SECTION 11
A contrivance in the lectern allows you to rotate the book through a hundred and eighty degrees, so that it's now upside-down. Flipping to the back – which is now the front – you study the book from the point of view of a male protagonist. The same lyricism and inventive boundary-pushing is in evidence, though here the author coarsens her language slightly and attempts to inhabit a stereotypically male gaze; the women are simultaneously revered and objectivised, their component parts and accessories fetichised. As, for instance, when the hero finds himself standing under a city pavement that has become magically transparent:

J'étais comme un petit enfant, ou comme un chien, tout fou, bavant de joie, émerveillé ici par un slip brésilien en dentelle rouge tendu sur des fesses brunes et musclées et une chatte entièrement épilée, là par des Dim Up blancs et une culotte à fleurs sous une jupe plissée, ailleurs par une touffe de poils noirs dépassant d'un trop petit slip rose en nylon, dont les élastiques s'enfonçaient dans une chair blanche et grasse, ou bien par des collants résille moulés sur des cuisses plantureuses et portés sans culotte avec des bottes et une robe en daim, ou encore par des socquettes blanches et une culotte Petit Bateau sous un ensemble en coton de style marin…

[I was like a little kid – or like a dog – completely crazy, drooling with joy, entranced here by some Brazilian-cut knickers in red lace stretched over a tanned, toned bottom and a fully shaved pussy; there by white hold-ups and floral briefs under a pleated skirt – elsewhere by a tuft of black hair poking out from a too-small pair of pink nylon pants, the elastic of which was buried in pale, plump flesh; or again by fishnet tights clinging to shapely thighs and worn knickerless with boots and a suede dress; or again by white ankle socks and M&S knickers under a cotton sailor frock….]

This sense of joyfulness to the writing is maintained even through the book's darker moments. But it is now late; the light from above is fading, and you must find your way out.

You drop the book in a hurry, and head back into the corridor. ↳ Go to SECTION 5

SECTION 12
The woman takes your hand and leads you through the door. It takes your eyes a moment to adjust to the light, but when you see what is in front of you, you smile. ‘How did you know?’ you ask her.

‘Because I am you,’ she says simply. ‘I am that part of you. And every time I allow you to make a choice about what to see or do next, I come to understand you better.’ She walks ahead, looking at you over her left shoulder, hips sashaying, whistling the Marseilleise.

You choose again: you choose to follow her. You walk together into to the sunset…and into what lies beyond. ( )
  Widsith | Jun 26, 2015 |
As a romance novel, "Behind Closed Doors" is a fine chardonnay; as titillating erotica, it's either a fine, reserved Cabernet Sauvignon or a reconstituted table wine, depending upon the reader's taste; but the fantasy/adventure story contains shallow characters, a mundane plot, and might as well be a dried-out hamburger. The labyrinthine aspect of the book is the hook, but it is unfortunately used as a plot device that requires the narrative to be written in third person, instead of first, and it prevented this reader from the expected experience of immersion. Yet, here's a book easy to read, that took only a few hours to read and left a few memorable images to stew on, so it's recommended, solely, for romance crowd. ( )
  psybre | Jun 2, 2009 |
This one was recommend to me by Papalaz. I had Reyes once before (The Butcher, Lucie's long voyage). Reyes has been carving out a niche in literary styled erotica for some time now and this book Behind Closed Doors is a very interesting experiment not only in terms of content, format but in allowing the reader to choose his or her own path to get from one end of her erotic labyrinths to the other. The reader has a choice as he or she begins to follow either the male or the female path of sexual fantasy dependent on which end of the book that reader decides to crack open. The reader is then led through doors (or chapters) and must choose which to go through and which not--and/or turn back and begin a new thread which through enticement makes of the reader a more pro-active reader--by skipping forwards and backwards within the text choosing this or that door Reyes very skillfully maneuvers her audience into taking part in the fantasies she outlines. There are several comparisons that I would make--the oldest being Giovanni Boccaccio's 'Decameron'--although this is much more modernistic in tone--another would be Julio Cortazar's 'Hopscotch'--which also called for the reader to skip forwards and backwards in the text. Julian Rios might be another. In any respect--beyond the concepts involved what holds it altogether is Reyes' fluid writing style which accentuates her subject matter without turning it into just mere pornography. The doors-(stories) can almost be read like separate stories on their own and owe a kinship to the Decameron or even 1001 nights though fitting together seamlessly whichever way the reader decides. I read from both ends--and found it enjoyable--not heavy in tone--Reyes has light though somewhat subversive touch. I would recommend. ( )
1 stem lriley | Oct 15, 2007 |
The highest grade adult soft porn. Wonderful to both read silently to yourself AND warmly to that special someone. ( )
1 stem leehopkins | Feb 11, 2007 |
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This novel, written by the author of The Butcher, offers inter- active erotic exploration. Divided into two halves, with each chapter giving a choice of sexual fantasies, men read from one end, women from the other.

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