Carrie's Story: An Erotic S/M Novel Molly Weatherfield
Publisher: Cleis Press
Female fantasies are still mostly hidden in our society, and so I applaud women who express their desires and create erotica and porn from a female perspective in books and films. No slavery contracts, no selling people on an international sexual slave market (see Carrie's Story: An Erotic S/M Novel for such “shocking” things) and no extreme behaviour. I've been writing short stories for some time, as my oldest readers know. What power women had could be minimized or enlarged Last week I attended a reading by Pam Rosenthal of the re-release of her BDSM classic, Carrie's Story (published initially under the name Molly Weatherfield in 1995). Recently, I've been enamored with Molly Weatherfield's erotic s/m novel, Carrie's Story. The danger in this book does not lie in its pretty tame SM scenarios, but in its old-fashioned, stereotypical gender roles: Anastasia Steele is a young, innocent woman who gifts her virginity to Christian Grey, an older, immensely . The book's unflinching look at taboo fantasies are not for the faint-hearted, but Kristina deftly navigates the subject matter to deliver a story that is erotic and thought-provoking. Germany's energy transition is already a success story. Pride and Prejudice, the book that so many identify as the preeminent romance novel, contemplates the importance of making a good marriage from its first to its last sentence. Throughout that time, I've written all sorts of genres and dabbled in one that continues to elude my horrific sensibility. I'm already seeing a positive That said, since I'm wonky and cerebral by nature — as is my intrepid heroine Carrie — the books do provide opportunities for playful, even humorous, speculation about the mysteries of bent eroticism. Lately, I have been reading a lot of books on erotica, especially when I rest, after painting for long hours, indulging in my long, hot baths. Do you think the popularity of the 50 Shades of Grey books will have a positive impact on erotica and erotic romance, or do you feel this book going mainstream dilutes or homogenizes what we do somehow? Pushes the envelope with her edgy eroticism.