I’ll wager I’m among the few—perhaps the only—person who counts a cheaply published piece of erotica titled Full Bodied Charmer as a cherished book.
It follows a plus-size woman who buys a date with a handsome man at a charity auction, despite the fact that his typical taste in women runs to the slender, and her ugly romantic history with blonde men. They fall into a relationship, thanks to their unexpected chemistry, but her insecurity nearly breaks them apart. The sex scenes are clunky; at one point, someone’s dick is referred to as a “big hot sausage.”
The laminate is peeling off the cover, which looked hokey when it was published in 2003, but has slowly acquired a sort of vaporwave coolness. (It was actually among the better covers produced by indie publisher Ellora’s Cave, which were notoriously bad.)
I haven’t read it in years, but I hang onto it in memory of a time when I was young and vulnerable and clung to any assurance that it was possible for someone to find my body attractive, when I eagerly consumed any piece of media with a positive representation of a fat or even moderately thick woman: Mo’Nique’s Phat Girlz, Queen Latifah rom-coms, and In Her Shoes. Most treasured of all: any romance novel with a “curvy” heroine who appeared to be larger than a size 18 that I could get my hands on.
despite the ascendancy of “body positivity” and a rash of movies and books marketed on the concept, I’ve found myself persistently dissatisfied with almost everything I encounter
I’m still hungry for stories about fat women. I should be awash in options, especially since the cultural discourse around fatness has changed significantly over the last decade and a half. But despite the ascendancy of “body positivity” and a rash of movies and books marketed on the concept, I’ve found myself persistently dissatisfied with almost everything I encounter. One protagonist is too miserable; another is sailing through the world weirdly untouched by the fact of being fat in a culture that quite obviously fears and hates fat people. I’ve begun to wonder at my own endless pickiness, and to ask myself what—if anything—would please me. What movie, what book, could possibly have the capacity to carry 30-plus years worth of my baggage?
Here are some pieces of popular culture that I should have consumed in order to write this essay, but didn’t—and delayed filing a draft until my editor was driven nearly to murder—because the thought filled me with absolute dread, to the point of totally overriding my usual compulsion to over-research.
This Is Us
I’m thrilled that Chrissy Metz has a starring role on one of the biggest shows on television, and I take a sort of pleasure in every time I’ve seen Milo Ventimiglia look solicitous and inclusive of her during interviews and red carpet appearances. But there’s almost nothing the show could do to overcome the fact that my introduction to her character in the first trailer was her standing in front of a refrigerator, looking dolefully at a cake with a note: “Do not dare eat this cake before your party, Kate. Love, Kate.”
It promised misery porn for those who think that fat people just need to work through some emotional shit and suddenly they’ll be motivated to get serious about their health. Sitting down to write this piece, I did a little YouTube investigation to see whether perhaps I had judged too quickly and found this video, which has the explanatory caption, “Kate commits to an immersive weight loss experience, where she discovers that the hard work is finding out what’s deep inside.”
Insatiable
I’m not watching anything that prominently features a fat suit, sorry.
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