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Sunday, 31 January 2016
Saturday, 30 January 2016
REVIEW:- The Gentlemen’s Club by Emmanuelle de Maupassant
Rating
3 *** Star Reviews
This is a historical erotica novel, by Emmanuelle De Maupassant set in London in 1898. The book is based around Mademoiselle Noire and Lord MacCaulay. Its all about people exploring their sexuality in the 1890s.
About the book
On passing through a certain curtain and a certain door, pleasure, pain, humiliation and titillation could be enjoyed in the company of ladies who returned the virile salute of desire with the same enthusiasm in which it was given. They wielded power over men, whether in domination or submission, and embraced the exquisite surrender of being watched by many eyes.
Lord MacCaulay becomes obsessed with the mysterious Mademoiselle Noire, despite suffering the ultimate humiliation at her hands.
‘The Gentlemen’s Club’ explores the varying nature of desire, and the sexual empowerment of women. It features menage and exhibitionism, and darker paths.
I am a lover of sushi and Earl Grey tea, a lover of canines scruffy and nose-licky, a lover of words and of empty spaces, a lover of the wilderness and the squawk of living. Saucily wonky, I like to find the margins and the edges.
I'm currently writing volume two for the Noire series, set in Italy, and am soon to release a collection of erotic-horror folk tales, inspired by Slavonic mythology and superstitions.
I draw inspiration from everything I read and watch, but especially the words of Angela Carter, Sarah Waters, Michel Faber and Jeanette Winterson.
Extracts from this book, and other works by the author, may be sampled at http://emmanuelledemaupassant.com
3 *** Star Reviews
This is a historical erotica novel, by Emmanuelle De Maupassant set in London in 1898. The book is based around Mademoiselle Noire and Lord MacCaulay. Its all about people exploring their sexuality in the 1890s.
Lord MacCaulay is a rich and handsome, who is the nephew of Duke of Mornemouth. MacCaulay enjoys the fact that he hasn't got responsibilities and gets a good income.
Mademoiselle Noire name is Maud, she's the niece of Great Aunt Isabella. Mud herself is an avid reader and her first purchased book was a copy of Bram Stokers 'DRACULA'. Whilst she's reading her imagination takes her into all of the different worlds and realms she's reading about.
I enjoyed reading it and is worth reading. Please pick up a copy and join in. You'll love it if your into Erotic and Historical books.
Enjoy :) x
Mademoiselle Noire name is Maud, she's the niece of Great Aunt Isabella. Mud herself is an avid reader and her first purchased book was a copy of Bram Stokers 'DRACULA'. Whilst she's reading her imagination takes her into all of the different worlds and realms she's reading about.
I enjoyed reading it and is worth reading. Please pick up a copy and join in. You'll love it if your into Erotic and Historical books.
Enjoy :) x
About the book
On passing through a certain curtain and a certain door, pleasure, pain, humiliation and titillation could be enjoyed in the company of ladies who returned the virile salute of desire with the same enthusiasm in which it was given. They wielded power over men, whether in domination or submission, and embraced the exquisite surrender of being watched by many eyes.
Lord MacCaulay becomes obsessed with the mysterious Mademoiselle Noire, despite suffering the ultimate humiliation at her hands.
‘The Gentlemen’s Club’ explores the varying nature of desire, and the sexual empowerment of women. It features menage and exhibitionism, and darker paths.
We live in the wondrous here and now and it is here that our flesh must take its pleasure. Your body is yours and yours alone, but not for long, and never long enough. Take your seat. The curtain is rising. An erotic novella set in London, 1898.
****For sale on Amazon – 18+ only – due to scenes of a nature sexually explicit****
Foreword, Victorian London
The nineteenth century was perhaps the time of
greatest prudery and hypocrisy regarding women’s
sexual identity. Those who strayed from the path of
purity, engaging in sex outside of marriage, were
referred to as ‘fallen women’. While it was expected that
men would indulge their sexual impulses widely,
regardless of wedlock, it was unthinkable for a ‘genteel’
woman to admit to enjoyment of her marriage bed. For
her to express undue interest was a sign of wantonness.
In extreme cases, she might be referred to an asylum
for treatment of this perversion. By the turn of the century, London alone
boasted hundreds of thousands of women earning
money from prostitution. Although sheaths, made from animal gut, had
been in use for some time, the use of rubber caps (womb
veils) allowed women to gain greater control over
pregnancy, over their bodies, and, thereby, over some of
their choices.
Volume Two is currently under the pen. ****For sale on Amazon – 18+ only – due to scenes of a nature sexually explicit****
About the AuthorI am a lover of sushi and Earl Grey tea, a lover of canines scruffy and nose-licky, a lover of words and of empty spaces, a lover of the wilderness and the squawk of living. Saucily wonky, I like to find the margins and the edges.
I'm currently writing volume two for the Noire series, set in Italy, and am soon to release a collection of erotic-horror folk tales, inspired by Slavonic mythology and superstitions.
I draw inspiration from everything I read and watch, but especially the words of Angela Carter, Sarah Waters, Michel Faber and Jeanette Winterson.
Extracts from this book, and other works by the author, may be sampled at http://emmanuelledemaupassant.com
You can also find the author on Twitter, Pinterest and
Facebook
REVIEW:- Rarity from the Hollow by Robert Eggleton
Wow, this is one of those books you can't put down otherwise you will lose track where you are in the book. I lost track a few times and struggled to keep track on what the characters where doing. I struggled with who was narrating the book and which person it was being read in. In truth I was only able to read the first third. I just couldn't get into it.
This book isn't for everyone. But try because you might be one of the ones that love this book.
Please don't let the lowish rating put you of. This particular book just wasn't my personal 'CUP OF TEA'.
And if this book does really help prevent Child Abuse, then great I want all adults to read it. Maybe we can help more children by stopping Child Abuse before it even starts.
The Author of this book claims it will help prevent Child Abuse. Here is a link with his evidence.
http://iambookreviewing.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/how-and-why-rarity-from-hollow-helps-to.html
Enjoy :) x
Blurb
Lacy Dawn's father relives the Gulf War, her mother's teeth are rotting out, and her best friend is murdered by the meanest daddy on Earth. Life in The Hollow isn't great. But Lacy has one advantage -- she's been befriended by a semi-organic, semi-robot who works with her to cure her parents. He wants something in exchange, though. It's up to Lacy Dawn to save the Universe.
To prepare Lacy for her coming task, she is being schooled daily via direct downloads into her brain. Some of these courses tell her how to apply magic to resolve everyday problems much more pressing to her than a universe in big trouble, like those at home and at school. She doesn't mind saving the universe, but her own family and friends come first.
Will Lacy Dawn's predisposition, education, and magic be enough for her to save the Universe, Earth, and, most importantly, protect her own family?
Rarity from the Hollow is adult literary science fiction filled with tragedy, comedy and satire. It is a children's story for adults, not for the prudish, faint of heart, or easily offended.
About the Author
Robert Eggleton has served as a children's advocate in an
impoverished state for over forty years. He is best known for his investigative
reports about children’s programs, most of which were published by the West
Virginia Supreme Court where he worked from 1982 through 1997, and which also
included publication of models of serving disadvantaged and homeless children
in the community instead of in large institutions, research into foster care
drift involving children bouncing from one home to the next -- never finding a
permanent loving family, and statistical reports on the occurrence and
correlates of child abuse and delinquency. Today, he is a recently retired
children's psychotherapist from the mental health center in Charleston, West Virginia,
where he specialized in helping victims cope with and overcome physical and
sexual abuse, and other mental health concerns. Rarity from the Hollow is his
debut novel and its release followed publication of three short Lacy Dawn
Adventures in magazines: Wingspan Quarterly, Beyond Centauri, and Atomjack
Science Fiction. Author proceeds have been donated to a child abuse prevention
program operated by Children’s Home Society of West Virginia. http://www.childhswv.org/ Robert continues
to write fiction with new adventures based on a protagonist that is a composite
character of children that he met when delivering group therapy services. The
overall theme of his stories remains victimization to empowerment.
Purchase
links:
Author
Contacts:
How and Why Rarity from the Hollow Helps to Prevent Child Abuse
How and Why Rarity from the Hollow Helps to Prevent
Child Abuse
I AM Book Reviewing: Please give some more information about your idea behind Rarity from the Hollow – how and why it helps to prevent child abuse?
Robert: I’ve worked in the field of child advocacy for over forty years. A few months ago, I retired from my job as a children’s psychotherapist from an intensive mental health program. Many of the kids in the program had been abused, some sexually. Part of my job was to facilitate group therapy sessions.
One day in 2006 during a group therapy session, I was sitting around a table used for written therapeutic exercises, and a little girl with stringy, brown hair sat a few feet away. Instead of just disclosing the horrors of her abuse at the hands of the meanest daddy on Earth, she also spoke of her hopes and dreams for the future: finding a loving family who would love and protect her.
This girl was inspiring. She got me thinking again about my own hopes and dreams of writing fiction, an aspiration that I’d held in since I was twelve years old. My protagonist was born that day – an empowered victim who takes on the evils of the Universe, Lacy Dawn. I began to write fiction in the evenings and sometimes went to work the next day without enough sleep. Every time that I would feel discouraged, when I felt like giving up, I would imagine Lacy Dawn speaking honestly about the barriers that she faced in pursuit of her dream of finding a permanent home.
I got to the point where I needed more to sustain my drive. My wife and I talked it over. That’s when the idea of donating proceeds to the prevention of child abuse became a commitment that has sustained my discouragement to this day. Three short Lacy Dawn Adventures were subsequently published in magazines and Rarity from the Hollow is my debut novel.
At least half of author proceeds have been donated to Children’s Home Society of West Virginia, a nonprofit child welfare agency where I used to work in the early ‘80s. It was established in 1893 and now serves over 13 000 families and children each year and is located in an impoverished state in the U.S. with inadequate funding to deliver effective social services. childhswv.org.
During my career, many emotionally charged situations have tugged my heart strings so hard that child welfare became more than my job, more than a cause. It became a calling. Rarity from the Hollow fictionalized some of my true-life experiences and includes elements of poverty, domestic violence, child maltreatment, substance abuse and mental health problems. I wrote what I know best. My characters are more real than not, even though the backdrop of the story is science fiction.
I modeled the flow of the story after a mental health treatment episode involving a traumatized child: harsh and difficult to read scenes in the beginning of the story are similar to how, in treatment, therapeutic relationships must first be established before very difficult disclosures are made; cathartic and more relaxed scenes in middle chapters as detailed disclosures are less painful; and, increasingly satiric and comical toward the end through an understanding that it is “silly” to live in the past, that demons, no matter how scary, can be evicted, and that nothing controls our lives more so than the decisions that we make ourselves.
I know that it sounds weird, but I imagined victims benefiting from having read a science fiction story. Maybe I was trying to rationalize a balance between these two competing interests – writing fiction and my interests in child welfare. Even though I’d paid into the U.S. Social Security fund for over fifty-two years, I felt a little guilty about retiring from work. The decision to donate author proceeds to child abuse prevention helped resolve some of my guilty feelings, but my writing seems to have been affected, as well.
In hindsight, maybe my idea that victims of childhood
mistreatment could benefit from reading Rarity
from the Hollow wasn’t so off-base after all. Four book reviewers have
privately disclosed to me that they were victims of childhood maltreatment,
like me, and that they had benefited having read the story. Three of them wrote
glowing book reviews of the novel, one of whom publicly disclosed that she had
been a rape victim as part of her review http://mistralkdawn.blogspot.com/2015/12/interview-with-robert-eggleton.html?zx=b438ff3b4e310b53
, and the fourth reviewer promoted the novel on her blog and on a radio show
broadcast from the U.K. This book reviewer wants to interview Lacy Dawn, the
protagonist.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if a parent could read a book and actually become a better parent? In my experience, we typically parent the way that we were parented, even, sometimes, when we strive to do better. Unfortunately, there is a correlation between experiencing abuse in childhood and inflicting abuse as a parent.
Nevertheless, Rarity from the Hollow is a tribute to the concept of victimization to empowerment. Many abused kids demonstrate resilience that, for me, is amazing. Especially when abuse is related to the mental illness or substance abuse of or by the parent, guilt, in my opinion, rather than functioning as a motivator to address the problem can actually be detrimental. Parents who read my story may achieve insight that their children, more than anything in the world, want to love them, and that, while the damage done may not be forgotten or forgiven, that their children are strong and can not only survive, but can become empowered.
If you or one of your readers has experienced childhood
violence and your emotions are easily triggered, please exercise caution before
deciding whether or not to read Rarity
from the Hollow. While there is only one violent scene, the third, it is
intense and there are mature references in the story. Subsequent chapters
become increasingly satiric and comical and the novel won a Gold Medal from
Awesome Indies as a “…hillbilly version of Hitchhiker’s
Guide to the Galaxy” – a science fiction comedy. http://awesomeindies.net/ai-approved-review-of-rarity-from-the-holly-by-robert-eggleton/ My intent was for the early tragedy to
amplify the comedy that follows, so I do also recommend that readers who have
been victimized to stick with the story beyond the early chapter in order to
witness the empowerment.
Last week, a book reviewer from Bulgaria named Rarity from the Hollow as one of the five best reads of 2015. http://codices.info/2015/12/top-5-for-2015-ventsi/
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