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Black Issues
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African American
Erotic Fiction Gets Passionate Following By Author Zane
By
The Associated Press
Upper Marlboro, MD - Zane never intended to surround herself in
mystery and intrigue. The author, whose steamy sex novels set among black
professionals have propelled her onto The New York Times list of best
sellers, says if she could do it over, she'd have chosen a less
provocative pseudonym.
About a decade ago, she was in an America Online chat room and needed to
call herself something. She picked Zane because it was the first thing
that popped into her head; she's always liked the name.
When she started writing erotic fiction in her spare time and e-mailing it
to friends and online acquaintances, it made sense to keep calling herself
Zane -- after all, she couldn't be sure who was reading her work. Then she
developed a following and discovered she could sell a book, and Zane was
destined to stay Zane.
"If I had known that this was going to actually end up being a writing
pseudonym, I would have picked something with a first and last name," Zane
says.
Plenty of authors don't use their real names, but there's only one
successful writer of black erotica with a gender-neutral, one-syllable nom
de plume. It makes people more curious about her -- the opposite of Zane's
intent.
"It was a total accident. It is kind of cool. But it wasn't intentional,"
she says. Another drawback: "I'm on the bottom of all the bookshelves."
But don't weep for Zane. After all, as Sean Bentley, the buyer of black
fiction for Borders and Waldenbooks, points out, Zane gets a couple of
shelves to herself these days.
More than 2.7 million copies of her books are in print, she's a mainstay
on the Essence magazine list of best sellers, and two titles, "Afterburn"
and the anthology "Love Is Never Painless," were New York Times best
sellers.
The next frontier for the author: movies and television. She has approved
a script for "Addicted," an adaptation of her biggest-selling novel, about
a woman who seeks counseling for sex addiction. She's negotiating a deal
to turn a collection of stories, "The Sex Chronicles," into a cable-TV
miniseries.
She's also a publisher who runs Strebor Books, an imprint of Simon &
Schuster with more than 50 authors, many of whom get a sales boost from
their association with Zane.
Not bad for someone who never planned to be a writer. Zane, the daughter
of a theologian and an elementary school teacher, graduated from Howard
University in Washington, D.C., with a degree in chemical engineering.
"Whenever I had creative writing assignments and stuff in school, the
teachers would almost be shocked at what I turned in because it would be
so far-fetched and so imaginative," Zane says. "Most of my teachers told
me I should be a writer, but I just never took it seriously until I got
bored enough to do it."
Boredom hit in 1997, when Zane was living in North Carolina, working as a
sales representative. She began writing erotic stories to pass the time
after her children went to bed. (She now has a 19-year-old son, a
12-year-old daughter and a 3-year-old son.)
The stories developed a following on the Internet, and she self-published
"The Sex Chronicles" before landing a deal with Simon & Schuster.
Zane tapped into a market that craves her honest, unvarnished perspective
on sexuality. Her books send a "Sex and the City"-like message that it's
OK to celebrate your libido.
"She's like the Dr. Ruth of our time," said Carol Mackey, the editor of
Black Expressions, an online book club with more than 400,000 members that
counts Zane among its most popular authors.
Zane's take on sex is hardly revolutionary: It should be safe and
pleasurable, and communication is the key to stronger, more satisfying
relationships. But her straightforward, conversational prose resonates in
the black community, Mackey said.
"It's not openly discussed in most of our homes," Mackey said. "I had to
learn from books or friends and big sisters. To have an author come out
and broach this, even in fiction, is a breakthrough for us."
Zane's readers agree. Her work "goes right to the heart of modern
sexuality," said Harold Fisher, a former Baltimore TV news anchor and one
of a few men who joined dozens of women fans at a local book signing. "We
all have sex. We just need to relax about it."
Zane's fans talk about her work with fervor; they remember what book they
read first and how they burned through the rest. They love her brash,
sexually liberated heroines, who are unafraid to use men for their own
pleasure.
In person, the 40-year-old author is equally assertive -- but she's no
vixen. Stylish but not outlandish, with a round, youthful face and a
comfortably fleshy figure, Zane looks like the suburban working mom that
she is.
She discusses her life and career in the cluttered, undecorated offices of
Strebor Books. The location in an office park in suburban Washington suits
her no-nonsense personality, and she lives just a short drive away.
Zane presents a mixture of accessibility and reserve. She sometimes
answers the phone at Strebor. She reads her e-mail and responds to as many
messages as she can -- dishing out sex advice to eager fans. (Highlights
from that correspondence have been compiled into a nonfiction book, "Dear
G-Spot: Straight Talk About Sex and Love," to be published in July.)
But at the same time, she guards her privacy. She did not allow herself to
be photographed or interviewed until 2004, at the onset of her first book
tour. She said she "came out" then only because con artists were starting
to host book signings claiming to be her.
She's more comfortable now with her public, partly because as a publisher,
she has to help her authors sell their books. But she's not forthcoming
with personal details. Now divorced, she speaks only vaguely about the man
she's dating. And she was dismayed in the past at previous revelations of
her real name, which she asks not be published.
"There's no point in it other than to affect my privacy and have people
showing up at my house. And I have a 3-year-old child, so that's my
concern," she says.
She also wants to spare her family, particularly her father, from undue
criticism.
"Whereas most people don't have an issue with what I do, there are those
who are self-righteous and do have an issue," Zane says. "So it's just not
fair for other people who have absolutely nothing to do with it to be
affected by that, because they didn't make this choice. I did."
Zane says she has a good relationship with her parents, but she didn't
tell her mother about her writing career until she had three titles on the
Essence best-seller list. It took her father a while to warm up to the
idea of his daughter writing erotica, but when he read "Nervous" -- about
a meek woman who channels her sexual aggressiveness into an alternate
personality -- "he thought it was brilliant," she says.
Her father's endorsement speaks to another unusual characteristic of
Zane's raunchy tales -- they usually come packaged with a moral. She often
builds a story around an issue plaguing women -- such as drug addiction in
"Love Is Never Painless" and domestic violence in "Breaking the Cycle."
In "Addicted," the heroine was sexually abused as a child and seeks
psychiatric counseling, something Zane said many black women are afraid to
do.
"I've had women out there, with 'Addicted,' who actually come up to me and
fall into my arms crying at book signings, saying they're finally going to
go get help," she says.
That connection with readers is the key to Zane's popularity, said Malaika
Adero, her editor at Simon & Schuster.
"She has a unique voice," Adero said. "She writes erotica for today's
female audience. This is not yesterday's kind of romance writing. She
writes in the African-American vernacular. She writes in a language of
everyday people doing what we do."
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