Musings on Romance

Tag: BDSM (Page 5 of 5)

The Submission Gift by Solace Ames

TheSubmissionGiftWhy I read it:  I was provided with a review copy by the author.

What it’s about: (from Goodreads)  Newlyweds Jay and Adriana had a happy marriage and a spectacular sex life—until tragedy struck. Wounded in a car accident, Jay spent a year recuperating while Adriana worked overtime as a chef to pay their bills. Though he’s made nearly a full recovery, some aspects of their intimate play will never be the same. It’s a small price to pay, all things considered.

But when a long struggle with the insurance company results in an overdue payout, Jay has a plan. He’ll take some of it and hire a high-end rent boy who specializes in sexual dominance. Not for him, but as a gift for Adriana, for taking care of him for the past twelve months.

Paul is the handsome stranger they choose…and the one who changes everything. What starts out as a onetime session to fulfill a fantasy turns into something bigger than all of them. But when the money runs out and Paul’s dangerous past resurfaces, the sacrifices required to stay together may end up tearing them apart…

What worked for me (and what didn’t):  This book had a very strong start for me. I enjoyed the love and acceptance between Adriana and Jay.  I liked how they each wanted the other to have everything they wanted sexually but could not necessarily personally fulfil.  I liked it even though in real life that would threaten me so much I’d just hide in the corner forever.  But these characters are not me and that was very clear in the book.  Because, for them, it worked.  For them, it was right and good and healthy.

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The Dom Project by Heloise Belleau & Solace Ames

TheDomProjectWhy I read it:  Jane from Dear Author recommended this one on Twitter so I bought it.

What it’s about: (from Goodreads)  By day, Robin Lessing has a successful career as a university archivist. By night, she blogs about her less-than-successful search for Mr. Tall, Dark and Dominant. Living up to her handle “The Picky Submissive,” she’s on the verge of giving up and settling for vanilla with a side of fuzzy handcuffs when she discovers her best friend and colleague has a kinky side, too.

Sexy, tattooed techie John Sun is an experienced Dom who never lacks for playmates, male or female. If he can’t satisfy Robin’s cravings, maybe no one can—after all, he knows her better than anyone. So he offers to help her master the art of submission for one month.

Robin eagerly agrees to John’s terms, even the pesky little rule forbidding any friendship-ruining sex. But rules are made to be broken, and once they begin their stimulating sessions, it’s not long before she’s ready to beg him for more—much more…

What worked for me (and what didn’t):  There was a lot to like about this book but I confess it wasn’t until Robin and John’s relationship turned sexual (just over halfway through the book) that it really hooked me.  It’s not as bad as it sounds. At the same time they started having sex, their emotions  were also more actively involved. The emotional component had been deliberately constrained when the “project” was more of an experiment.  It makes sense when you think about it. I was interested and entertained but it didn’t become a real page-turner for me until the emotions were all out there and messy – at least out there to the reader.  When the characters allowed their connection to mean more than just research, that’s when I was truly won over.

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Safeword by AJ Rose

SafewordWhy I read it:  I read the first book, Power Exchange,  a little while ago and really enjoyed it.  I bought both books at the same time but wanted to wait before reading the sequel.  After the somewhat disappointing experience of reading Aftermath, I picked up Safeword because I felt sure I could get the tension and the angst I had been looking for here.  Also, I like books about established couples – after the HEA is a fascination to me.

What it’s about: (from Goodreads)  Everywhere Detective Gavin DeGrassi looks he’s reminded of his attack by the Breath Play Killer. It’s in the house he lives in with his partner and Dom, Ben Haverson. It’s in the sympathetic yet pitying looks he receives from his fellow detectives when he returns to the force after a year-long hiatus. It’s in the suffocating coddling of his entire family, and the relentless reporter demanding an exclusive of his ordeal.

Most of all, it’s in his lack of submission to Ben, who isn’t convinced Gavin’s recovered enough to trust the power exchange between them.

The miraculous recovery of two teen boys from a twisted kidnapper gives him heart, and Gavin’s determined to prove he can handle anything despite increasing strain between him and Ben, painful nightmares, and panic when anyone touches him.

But his next case is too close for comfort: a friend and colleague found raped and murdered in a fate chillingly similar to what could have been his own, and this killer isn’t stopping with one cop. As the body count rises and taunting souvenirs are being hand-delivered to Gavin, he faces a frustrating lack of leads, a crushing need to prove himself, and a sinking suspicion the imprisoned kidnapper’s reach is further than originally thought. A miasma of uncertainty and fear threaten to suffocate him when he asks a question with which he’s overwhelmingly familiar: what happens when a victim is pushed too far?

What worked for me (and what didn’t):  Safeword had a bit of a slowish start for me.  I found myself taking some time to settle into the BDSM theme whereas I don’t recall having that problem in the first book.  It doesn’t really make sense and it’s not really fair, but I found myself being irritated by the capitalisation of Dom and feeling my feathers becoming ruffled by the power exchange aspects at the start of the story.  Which is ridiculous because I knew what I was getting when I opened the book.  And, while it appears I am not a “natural submissive” even remotely, I have had no problem enjoying books with these themes before.  So, I can’t really put my finger on what was bothering me at first.  I found myself thinking the beginning of the story was a little… clunky (?). Perhaps it was something in the writing – perhaps it was merely that I was feeling out of sorts.  Perhaps it had something to do with that Ben seemed to be unaffected by the events of the first book and it was only Gavin that seemed to struggle (this doesn’t continue – it becomes clear that Ben has his own demons to tame and, that’s one of the things which increased my satisfaction.).  But.

But, not too long after I was too engrossed in the story to think anything other than “what’s next?” and that which bothered me right at the start, snapped into it’s groove (or perhaps, I did) and the story flowed smoothly from there.

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