For each button click, the STORY
FINDER prepares a search string for Google, using Google's SITE: and
INURL: search modifiers. The string is on average 600 characters long, and
has about 25 terms, most of them URLs. Here's a short example:
party
OR cock OR nipples site:spirk.cosmicduckling.com/roseandgold OR
site:geocities.com/ladymay99_99 OR site:kardasi.com/SBS OR
site:geocities.com/cc_ssd OR site:spockandchristine.com OR
site:spockandsaavik.com OR site:geocities.com/toshtrr OR
site:geocities.com/trektales OR site:trekiverse.org OR
site:ponilla.org/Vulcan OR inurl:"squidge.org/~peja/startrek"
This is not a search string anyone would type in; a typical typed search would be: "InuYasha Kikyo erotic story". A string like that is good for finding web sites; what the STORY
FINDER tries to do is return a Google page where the entries take you directly to stories. The page that Google returns has hits like this:
... Bashir could feel
Garak's cock straining against the covers, ... Bashir
crooned against Garak's lips as he rolled him forward
and centered his cock. ...
...
going to be thwarted, but finally the party began to ... As he'd
noted earlier, Kirk's cock was a little
... his other hand to pinch the man's hard nipples, until Kirk
...
... "Tuvok Shakur" <tuvok.rm@yahoooooo.com>
wrote in message ...
... I had a look around for
various third party software / patches / hacks, but .
I call these evocative
micro-stories "search engine couplets." They make it possible to recognize at
a glance whether each page Google has found is an erotic story or not, and also if it is a story you want to read.
Using a search engine to go direct to the story, rather than the
archive which contains it, makes it possible to scan a great many
archives for the story you want. Once you have the
story, it may well be worthwhile to check out the archive it is
in. Google takes you to the page, not the site - it can sometimes be hard to find the home
page of the archive from the story page. The links in the blue box go to boxes for the archive sets; from there, there
is a link to each archive home page.
Search hints: The STORY FINDER
tries to put itself to the far left of the screen. Then the Google window
opens an inch to the right, leaving "page++," "random," and "next
archive set" buttons visible. When I click on a story link
in Google, I like to put the window that opens, with the story in it, to the far right of my screen, leaving some of the
Google window visible. Then I can scan down the Google page trying one story after another, and when I'm done with that page I can
hit "page++", "random", or "next archive set" to get another Google page. I estimate about a million erotic stories are indexed.
If you enter search words that are rare, you probably want to hit the "major" button. For example "gomen nasai" produced no hits
at all in most archive sets, but 19 from "major," all from the vast
asstr.org archive. But "gomen nasai" produced 429 hits from the button "anime (1)", as you might expect.
Some things to do by entering words in the searchbox :
- find stories set in a particular place - Bangkok ;
- or setting - tropical sands ;
- or historical setting - plantation slave ;
- or with a fetish - nipple clamp ;
- or some activity - spin bottle ;
- or look for a story with a certain name - Katherine ;
- or from a particular fandom - Heero Duo.
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