Incest Romance

Incest Romance




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Incest Romance

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Ten of the best books on incestuous relationships
Original reporting and incisive analysis, direct from the Guardian every morning
© 2022 Guardian News & Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. (modern)
This is where it starts. Thanks to Freud, the story of the young man who unwittingly kills his father and marries his mother has long been treated as an expression of every male child’s unconscious desires. In the actual play, it is Oedipus’s desire to “find the truth” that is fatal, with everyone else (including mother Jocasta) advising him to stop probing. Best not to know.
There are plenty of nasty couplings in this collection, and none more disturbing than the story of Myrrha, who lusts for her father Cinyras. To frustrate her passion she tries to hang herself. A maid saves her and helps her consummate her desire with her drunken father. When he chases her from his court, the gods turn her into the eternally weeping myrrh tree.
Ben Jonson called this chaotic romance a “mouldy tale”, but it begins with a dark discovery. King Antiochus sets a riddle to defeat the many suitors for his beautiful daughter. Pericles finds the solution - which is that she and her father have had an incestuous relationship. Now our hero is in big trouble ...
Moll is so good at disguising her true identity that some confusion is inevitable. On a trip to Virginia she falls for and marries a lusty young man who turns out to be her son - one of several children she has dropped off along the way. She claims to be appalled, but doesn’t let it depress her for long.
This was intended to be Shelley’s magnum opus: a huge narrative poem about political and sexual emancipation. The original version was named after a brother and sister whose revolutionary fervour led them into taboo-shattering passion. However, he decided that the incest would distract more hidebound readers and published a safer version, The Revolt of Islam, in which they were no longer siblings.
Another of Nabokov’s amoral fables. Van Veen writes his memoirs in old age, telling of his lifelong love for Ada. Having met as children, they believe themselves cousins and guiltlessly become lovers. However, the narrator tells how he later finds that he and Ada have the same father. Does this worry him? Not very much.
A story of forced incest that turns out to be something different. Celie, the heroine of Walker’s novel, writes letters to God telling her story of suffering. Aged 14, she is repeatedly raped by her “father”, Alphonso. After many misadventures, however, she discovers that he was in fact her step-father. She is liberated, and inherits his land.
The adolescent Jack tells his very peculiar family story. When his mother dies soon after his father, he and his siblings keep the fact a secret. With mum’s body under cement, they spend a hot London summer indulging their fantasies. For Jack and his sister Julie, this means taking their intimacy to its logical consummation. Fun while it lasts.
Plot synopsis can hardly do justice to this rambling, variously comic and tragic saga, which tells of the fortunes of the hotel-owning Berry family. One of the five children is John, the narrator, who loves his sister Franny with a special intensity. Their union is described in peculiar detail.
Historian Claudia Hampton is dying and the novel is her attempt to tell the story of her life. She reaches back to her childhood with her brother Gordon, who was to become her confidante, competitor and - eventually - her lover too. In retrospect, the narrator has to forgive herself.
The headline on this article was amended on 25 January 2021 for clarity.

AT REST TOGETHER Queen to be laid to rest beside her husband Prince Philip
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MARK OF RESPECT Harry & Meg's touching tribute to Queen as Royals make sweet gesture online
rOYAL SEND OFF Here's what the 10 days of national mourning for the Queen means
Incest is illegal, controversial and morally objectionable - but after embarking on a secret relationship with her brother, Cristina Shy is campaigning on behalf of incestuous couples around the world
TO all their neighbours, Cristina and her boyfriend were like any other regular couple - they enjoyed date nights together, were wildly attracted to each other and seemed, from the outside, like the perfect match .
But they were hiding a huge secret - not only were they lovers, they were brother and sister.
Reunited as adults after being adopted as babies, Cristina and her brother - who are keeping their identities secret for fear of prosecution - fell for each other.
Incest is illegal in the US, the UK, and throughout almost the entire world - but some states have harsher penalties than others, such as Montana, Nevada, Michigan and Idaho, where incestuous couples could face life in prison.
It also poses huge genetic risks to those conceived by blood relatives, with studies suggesting that as many as 40 per cent of children whose parents are immediate blood relatives are born with serious medical conditions.
To hide their controversial love, Cristina and her brother moved across America and settled in a state where nobody knew they were related, although they don't personally see any trouble with incestuous sexual relationships.
In an exclusive interview with Sun Online, Cristina, 36, says: "As long as everybody is a consenting adult, they should be able to do whatever they want to do in their own bedrooms - it's up to them how they want to live their lives.
"Lots of people believe incest is wrong but it's only wrong because it is illegal, but there are lots of things that are illegal now that won't be in a few years."
Since she started dating her brother, legal secretary Cristina has been campaigning to help people around the world who are in sexual relationships with their blood relatives - including a double murderer who had a baby with his biological daughter.
She also believes that related couples should be allowed to have babies, despite numerous studies showing that children of incest are significantly more likely to be born with deformities or disabilities.
Cristina has had to change her name, and asked not to be pictured because she fears that she and her brother could be jailed under incest laws.
However, she doesn't agree with these laws, saying: "You can't say something is wrong just because it is illegal - because laws change all the time.
"There are already laws to protect children and vulnerable people: there are rape and sexual battery laws and I don't think incest should be included in that."
Cristina said it wasn't an instant attraction when she first met her long-lost brother after being reunited as adults, but over the weeks that followed she started to develop feelings for him.
"It took a few weeks - it was like getting to know any other stranger," she revealed. "I remember feeling really confused at first - like why am I feeling like this towards my brother?
"Then he began dropping little hints about liking me and I caught on.
"I told him it's best to be honest and assured him nothing would change and then he just kind of blurted it out. And I told him, 'I've been feeling it too'."
Cristina claims that the many physical similarities between her and her brother made them more attracted to each other, saying: "I did begin to notice how much we looked alike. We had the same everything; same eyes, hair colour, cheekbones, lips, nose – even the same hands and same feet."
Cristina is unapologetic about her love, saying many people in incestuous relationships describe their partner as their "soulmate".
"I think there's definitely more of an emotional connection than a regular couple," she says.
"You have the family dynamic and also the adult dynamic - the attraction - so it just makes it different."
Cristina says she has helped high several high profile incestuous couples come to terms with their feelings.
The people she's offered support to include Steven Pladl, 45, who married his biological daughter Katie, 20, and had a baby with her, before shooting them both in a horrific murder-suicide earlier this year.
Katie, who had been adopted as a baby, went to live with her biological parents in 2016 after tracking them down on social media.
But when Pladl separated from Katie's mother, he started a sexual relationship with Katie. The pair married in secret and had a baby together, before eventually being arrested and forced to live apart.
Just two months later, Pladl suffocated his seven-month-old baby at his home, drove to Connecticut where he shot Katie and her adoptive father and then drove to New York where he turned the gun on himself. 
But Cristina claims that the devastating murder-suicide could have been prevented if people had been more understanding towards the eventual killer, Steven Pladl.
Cristina says that Pladl was "smeared" by society, and that she "felt horrible" for him and his daughter and wife, Katie. 
“I’m not making excuses for him but it’s a real shame it got to the point where he did what he did," she says.
Cristina also helped organise legal representation for a mother and son couple who were arrested last year in New Mexico on incest charges.
As with many incest cases, Monica Mares, 38, and son Caleb Peterson, 21, were reunited as adults after he had been adopted as a baby.
The pair fell “madly in love” and lived together before they were both arrested on incest charges and faced 18 months in prison back in 2016.
In interviews at the time, mum-of-nine Monica told how Caleb was the “love of her life” and how nothing could come between them - even jail.
Cristina says these cases, and her own incestuous relationship, were caused by a condition known as Genetic Sexual Attraction or GSA.
GSA is the term for an overwhelming sexual attraction which develops between close blood relatives who were separated at a young age and then meet each for the first time as adults. 
Studies have shown that up to 50 per cent of reunions between immediate relatives who were separated at birth result in obsessive emotions.
“We know from studies that the majority of people are attracted to people who have similar features to themselves," Cristina adds.
“So when you think about how siblings who did not grow up together meet and they look similar, have similar interests, have similar dislikes - of course it’s likely they’ll be attracted to each other.
“They have so much in common - it’s what everybody dreams of - this is their perfect match.
“There is no 'ew factor' - the feeling of ‘that's my family member I don't want to even think about that'."
Cristina believes that incestuous couples should be allowed to get legally married and enjoy the same legal rights as non-related couples.
She says she and her brother - who have now split up for “typical” reasons that were nothing to do with being related - missed out on many of the things other couples take for granted such as having a wedding.
Cristina even thinks that she should have been allowed to have children with her brother if she'd have wanted, despite the serious and well-established dangers to the baby's well being.
However there are huge risks for any children the pair might have had.
Dr Carol Cooper tells Sun Online: “The main problem with blood relatives having children is that it vastly increases the risk of serious genetic conditions, including cystic fibrosis and rare but life threatening diseases like Niemann-Pick and Tay-Sachs disease.
“The latter two have recessive inheritance, meaning that carriers don’t have any symptoms and they don’t know they’re carrying the disease.
“However, when two carriers conceive a baby together, the child has a high chance of contracting the disease. You often find that some of the more serious diseases are recessively inherited, which is why it’s not a good idea for cousins to conceive children together.”
Cristina, who is now in a relationship with a man who isn’t a family member, runs a website called Lily's Gardener and a support forum which offers emotional and practical support for incest couples.
She says the forum has hundreds of members from all over the world - including the UK.
Cristina, who lives on the east coast of America, also believes that with the increase of sperm donors the issue of GSA and incestuous relationships will only grow - and she hopes society will become more understanding of GSA.
"I'm not saying these people need to go shout it from the rooftops but they should be able to live without fear of prosecution,” she says.
"There's plenty of things that I know don't like the thought of - for example I would never do anal sex. I think it's the most disgusting concept in the world. But just because I don't want to do it doesn't mean that I'm going to say, 'Oh, you shouldn't do it either.' If you like it, I love it, it's your life, whatever you enjoy.
"Just because I like something I'm not going to force you to like it. But you don't need to report me to the police just because you don't like what I'm doing. 
“Is this the kind of world that you would leave in or want to live in? Because that's the kind of world you are forcing us to live in.”
Will schools close? Major update as nation mourns the Queen
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