Porn star Kayden Kross has a stimulating literary life going on, too

Aug 20, 2012
Industry People
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Someone on the set has been stealing books from Kayden Kross. She suspects her makeup artist. But whoever it is has caused a great inconvenience, because shooting adult films is mostly a boring affair.
Kross needs her books.

“I have tons of time” between sex scenes, Kross says, and she spends spare moments reading, whether its the novels of David Foster Wallace or the short stories of Amy Hempel.

“We’re not retarded,” Kross says of her porn pals. Then she lists some of her favorite writers: the Southern master Barry Hannah, the writer-editor Gordon Lish and Gary Lutz, who, in her words, “makes me hate mediocrity.”

Kross is speaking from Los Angeles, where she is shooting a porn flick that she says is tentatively titled “Code of Honor.” At 26, the Sacramento, Calif., native is one of the rising stars of the industry. Last year she won three Adult Video News Awards (Best All-Girl Sex Scene, Wildest Sex Scene, Female Acting Performance of the Year) for “Body Heat.”

But books, not sex, are what Kross wants to talk about as she navigates the Southern California traffic. As of earlier this summer, she is a published author. Her short story, “Plank,” appeared in “Forty Stories,” an e-book of short fiction by promising young writers.

“Plank” fits well with the others. Hers is an experimental, somewhat stream-of-consciousness narrative told in a second-person voice, one more concerned with philosophical musing than plot. “You shock yourself now with the way that you are,” the narrator says at one point. And all this has nothing to do with porn.

Kross came to the attention of Harper Perennial editor Cal Morgan when, earlier this year, the literary journal McSweeney’s published a conversation between Kross and the writer Adam Levin. His book, “The Instructions,” is a thousand-page experimental novel in the style of Thomas Pynchon.

Kross showed she wasn’t intimidated during her conversation with Levin, telling him at one point, “Your book is literally open on my lap right this moment. Is that awkward? It’s always awkward for me when people say the same about my work.”

While searching for Kross on the Internet brings up plenty of videos and images of her pornographic work, her blog, unkrossed.blogspot.com, is full of her writing. There’s everything from short fiction (“Plank” appeared here first) to wry musings on the adult-film business, which she generally treats, in both writing and conversation, with an ironic distance.

Commenters leave notes like this: “Maybe you’d like [Judith] Butler’s ‘Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of Sex.’ It’s kind of psychoanalytic and so ’90s.”

“I have fans who don’t watch my movies,” she says. “ ‘I don’t want to see your nipple, I want to see what you wrote,’” Kross says, describing her readers’ take on her work.

Of course, many people still want to see her naked and having sex. She knows that, too, and is unabashed about it.

“I really like the industry,” Kross says, noting that it gives her time to pursue her other passions, which include literature, travel and auditing classes at local colleges.

Born Kimberly Nicole Rathkamp, she was discovered by Vivid Video while a student California State University in Sacramento in 2006. She still takes classes at local colleges around Los Angeles today, and the proud “book nerd” stresses her attraction to the collegiate lifestyle.

“I love sitting in lecture,” she says, citing recent classes she has taken in political science.

Her latest venture is an autobiographical book about the porn industry, one that she says will treat the industry with neither moralizing horror nor condescending derision.

“You can’t possibly understand” the adult film business, she says, but hopes that people reading her book will do just that. Her own mother was not entirely supportive of her decision to enter pornography, and the book will likely cover that, too, and how “people want to be reassured” that doing porn brings no lasting harm — even if there is evidence to the contrary.

Morgan, the Harper Perennial editor, is now reading the first 200 pages of Kross’ book, though he declined to comment for this article.

Kross does have one huge fan in Stoya, another porn star with literary proclivities. Kross and Stoya starred in a web video called “Stoya’s Book Club,” in which they discussed Chad Kultgen’s new novel, “Men, Women and Children.”

Stoya raves about Kross’ efforts, calling her “super-literary,” before adding, jokingly, “The fiction, honestly, goes way over my head. She kind of loses me.”

For her part, Kross shares the aspirations of every artist. “I would like to do better,” she says, talking about her work — the literary kind.

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crunkleshwitz
crunkleshwitz
11 years ago

I wondered who that was in the teaser pic in the Sunday Daily News. They have the best sport section in the eastern US. Mike Lupica is a douchie lil runt though. Fair weather friend too, as he greatly distanced himself from Imus until the “nappy headed ho” controversy died out.

You would think it is easy to have a great sport section with 9 major sports franchises in the area, but the NY Post shows us every day that it isn’t.

Carrie
11 years ago

I love Kayden Kross, she seems very intelligent.

nvm
nvm
11 years ago

So she’s smart because reads books and writes? Oh please, not another pseudo-intellectual pornstar cast in the same mold as Sasha Grey. A true intellectual like Sarah Vowell would run circles around Kayden Kross.

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