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Loading... Safeword: Quinacridoneby Candace Blevins
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. It is actually written very well and the issues Cara and Travis face with their fetish/pain both given and received is also looked at and examined in a way that I actually found very interesting. ( ) What a welcome surprise to find a bdsm novel where the female main character is not a trembling flower and is not and does not become submissive - at all. Artist Cara Jamieson likes her sex rough, so rough in fact that it has led her into dangerous situations over the years. Humongously rich computer geek entrepeneur Travis has distinct and extreme preferences of his own, which he has learned to channel through safe sane and consensual practice over the years. The novels explores sadism/masochism and objectification in what eventually develops into a loving and lasting relationship. Ms. Blevins has a good writing style. There are some elements that seem to remind of 'the novels that shall not be named' by EL James (humongously rich man, bdsm extremist vs bdsm newby, paparazzi problems), but it wasn't too bad a turnoff in that sense. And it certainly explores rather more extreme bdsm practices. What the novel also shows in detail, is the couple's everyday life and their preparations and conversations surrounding these practices. Recommended. By: Candace Blevins Published By Excessica Age Recommended: Adult Reviewed By: Arlena Dean Rating: 4 Book Blog For: GMTA Review: "Safeword Quinacridone" by Candace Blevins was a "NOVEL THAT SHOULD BE READ BY 18+, DUE TO LANGUAGE AND SEXUAL SCENES THAT ARE NOT SUITABLE FOR A YOUNGER AUDIENCE. THIS IS HARDCORE SEX, BDSM IN IT'S FINEST. PLEASE BE WARNED THAT THIS BOOK WILL HAVE CRUDE LANGUAGE AND SEX SCENES IN IT." Candace Blevins has done it again where she takes one into another world of BDSM that is very erotic. "Reading an exploration of objectification in it's extreme form was quite an eye-opener for me." Be ready for a very intense book that has been well research by this author. The two characters "Cara and Travis have established preferred kinks are well developed and portrayed throughout this love story." Be ready for some crazy and wild things that go on in the read. Now, if this is your kind of genre read then I would recommend this read to you. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to Series
What happens when an introverted artist who only likes sex when it's a one-night stand meets a computer-geek-extraordinaire with his own sexy secrets? Objectification, romance, pain, adoration, lots of kinky toys, and oodles and oodles of wonderfully imaginative sex.Join Cara and Travis on their journey to mesh their distinctive sexual tastes into a loving relationship with blow-your-mind kink.Ob*jec*ti*fi*ca*tion:1. Treating a person as an object for use, with no regard for a person's personality or sentience.2. Regarding someone as a commodity; considering them merely an instrument towards one's sexual pleasure.Examples of OBJECTIFICATION:1. A woman is on her back at the edge of a tall bed with hands and feet bound together and restrained above her head. A curtain drapes from a canopy above and puddles on the backs of her thighs. The man about to penetrate her sees only female genitals available for use.2. A woman is dressed in a full latex blow-up doll costume with durable latex 'pockets' stuffed into her orifices. She is bound into a position giving easy access to all three holes at a party. Her face is completely covered excepting nose and mouth. The men do not know who is in the costume.Safeword: Quinacridone is a stand-alone book. You do not need to have read the previous books in this series.Warning: This title contains graphic language, consensual BDSM, extreme objectification, bondage, watersports, chemical play, fisting, temporary body modification with saline injections, and the use of toys including clamps, canes, plugs, paddles, whips, floggers, and zip-ties. No library descriptions found. |
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