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Fairy Tale Lust: Erotic Fantasies for Women
Unavailable
Fairy Tale Lust: Erotic Fantasies for Women
Unavailable
Fairy Tale Lust: Erotic Fantasies for Women
Ebook219 pages3 hours

Fairy Tale Lust: Erotic Fantasies for Women

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

Award-winning novelist and top erotica writer Kristina Wright goes over the river and through the woods to find the sexiest fairy tales ever written. Playfully seductive, supernaturally sensual, and darkly erotic, Fairy Tale Lust showcases clever twists to classic tales and introduces new stories inspired by the ever-popular genre. Here, a walk in the forest is likely to lead to an erotic encounter with a mysterious stranger and the silver light of a full moon might illuminate an orgy of sensual delights! Highly imaginative and downright stimulating, these stories take fairy tale erotica to the next level. Top erotica contributors deliver sizzling work, including Janine Ashbless, Rachel Kramer Bussel, Delilah Devlin, Shanna Germaine, and Saskia Walker.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherCleis Press
Release dateJun 7, 2010
ISBN9781573445481
Unavailable
Fairy Tale Lust: Erotic Fantasies for Women

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Reviews for Fairy Tale Lust

Rating: 3.6666666111111113 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I was pretty intrigued by the idea of this book...erotica meets fairy tales and I thought the two a pretty natural match. Unfortunately the tales are all far too short and leave the reader confused and the characters painfully underdeveloped. That would all be ok, if they were just short hot stories...but while I enjoyed some of them, most of them weren't all that hot either. No two stories were the same which is a positive thing so surely every reader can find one or two at least that they can enjoy. I liked "The Gingerbread Man", "Three Times", and "The Return" the most. I think "Big Bad Wolf" would have made an amazing story, but I was just left confused by the resolution. The stories as a whole feel entirely too rushed. You can have a good short story that is fulfilling and complete but this collection isn't an example of those. This wasn't a waste of time to read but its not something I would have been happy paying money for either. Not enough fairy tale nor enough lust.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    We see the words "fairy tale," and we automatically think of a frivolous, fluffy piece of fantasy. Scratch the surface, however, and we learn the fairy tale contains all the stuff our dreams and nightmares are made of, all the stuff of life: birth, death, love, lust, starvation, humiliation, triumph, victory and defeat. Like our cherished religious mythologies, fairy tales tell us who we are at our very centers and what we might need...or secretly desire. It's only appropriate, then, that fairy tales grow up with us, and make the transition to our adult bedtime stories. Cleis Press seems to be particularly talented in this field. First Cleis brought us Mitzi Szereto's 'In Sleeping Beauty's Bed,' a fun collection of naughty fairy tales set in a faraway land of a long time ago. 'Fairy Tale Lust' is something different. Yes, some of the tales are set in a faraway land of long, long ago, but there are also contemporary tales so realistically told they might be happening next door, right now. It's nearly impossible to pick a favorite from among this seductive collection of folkloric fantasies. "How the Little Mermaid Got Her Tail Back" is as beguiling as a siren. "Three Times" is breathtaking. "The Return" is a special kind of verbal enchantment, as is editor Kristina Wright's "In the Dark Woods," a modern-day morality play that plays out on a mattress. Cute comes into this fairy tale collection: see, for example, Jeremy Edwards' twist on Goldilocks and the Three Bears. More often than not, though, cute is merely an enticing cover for the hidden well of deep, dark human fantasy.