I have a question about your use of addiction in your stories. Which method do you find more thrilling to use: a narrative wherein the addiction is used as a tool and there for kink, such as giving a man a huge addiction in a few lines, having it pop up as needed to spice up the story’s kinkiness, or making it a plot in itself, forcibly hooking someone on something, light amounts at a time, hating themselves for it until they grow to love it and become complicit in the addiction’s corruption?

The second is better. If anything, the second is the only way to write a good addiction story. That said, a lot of my stories end up looking more like the first, because…I’m really, really bad at remembering to keep mentioning people’s addictions, and incorporating them into the story.

It’s terrible, really. I’ll give someone a cigar addiction, and then, a few thousand pages later, realize they haven’t smoked once since that initial puff. I tend to get carried away with other, more plot focused aspects of the story, and the smoking/drinking/etc. kind of falls by the wayside. I usually go back in and try and edit more instances of the addiction in, and that’s why the stories which are supposed to look like the later type actually end up looking like the former. I’m not a perfect writer, you see, and I just don’t have the time to edit all of these stories to the best they could be. People seem more interested in quantity over quality! I wish I could get these stories into perfect shape every time, but sometimes I fail, like everyone else. 

Which of your stories are you the most proud? And which one did you enjoy writing the most?

That’s…not an easy question, really. I’m really proud of parts of Big Bears on Campus and City of Bears. I’m really proud of Letters From Prison, because that thing took me forever. But which do I enjoy writing? I’ve enjoyed all of them, to be honest. The ones I enjoy more tend to get…longer. So I really enjoyed “Dream Camp” and that “Garage Sale Story” from a while back. I’m a big fan of “Ruining Mr. Fisher.” Basically, if a story runs longer than three entries, chances are I…kind of got into it.