Imagination is a very powerful thing!
The mind can make or break whole worlds, travel from one end of the known universe to the other within the span of a heartbeat and turn queens to slave girls or the reverse. It’s also why the pen is mightier than the sword. With the pen, words can paint pictures of futures that hold heavens with endless desire, pleasure and enjoyment or create the imagery of hells with torture, pain and suffering.
Between desire and fear and between pleasure and pain there lies a narrow realm of possibilities where I like to let my imagination roam. If you care to you may join me on my journeys...

Sunday 26 August 2012

Mating Season

Mating SeasonMating Season by Allie Ritch
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

In the introduction Allie Ritch writes: This is one for all the people who have ever struggled to fit in. It describes the main male character Koll well as he's a bear of a man towering over all others in his small village, but despite his stature he has a centre soft like that of a teddy bear.
His size intimidates the men and women around him, making it near impossible for him to find a mate and not just out of his village but also in the villages around his. On his way back from another failed visit to a neighbouring village he encounter an exhausted woman in the middle of the wilderness and takes her home with him to recover, but who is she and what were she doing there?

The Mating Season is an Erotic Sci-Fi book taking place on the frozen and inhospitable planet Jensen. The warmth in the story comes from the characters and their bonds.

What impressed me the most with the story is the strength of the female main character Shila that doesn't fold to the strength of Koll, but even challenge it and in particular during the sex scenes show her own hunger and initiative. It's refreshing to find a story that embraces and affirms the female sexuality. In most other erotic stories with a strong female she falls on her back and spreads her legs as soon as it comes to sex, but not here. in Mating Season they face each other on equal terms.

I would have liked to have seen the suspense/action part of the story expanded to a more full story, but understand that the scope was reduced to fit in with the short story format.

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Saturday 25 August 2012

The Baumgartners Plus One

The Baumgartners Plus One (Baumgartners, #0.5)The Baumgartners Plus One by Selena Kitt
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I liked the book, but it failed to woo me in the way Babysitting the Baumgartners did.
The book takes on the tough subject of an unsuccessful marriage and domestic abuse, but in my opinion doesn't make it dark enough to allow me to sympathise enough with Danielle.
(view spoiler)[
This despite that the author adds that they had a stillborn child.
When Dani drifts astray and ends up cheating on her husband (that has moved out of their home) I can't feel for her enough not to see her as an adulteress and subsequently the Baumgartners as home-wreckers.
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I acknowledge that Selena set up a very tough challenge to try and convince the readers that Dani's involvement with the Baumgartner was acceptable, but in my opinion failed to pull it off.

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