|
Why should you play hard to get when you can play with fire? The forbidden has never been so appealing as it is in Alison Tyler's latest collection. In these incendiary stories that explore the taboo side of erotica, couples go about setting their boundaries aflame. Committed to each other without question, they play out their naughtiest fantasies, pushing the limits of sex, lust, and the imagination as far as they can to please each other. Playing it a bit riskier and playing it a bit more daring will send readers and their partners steaming towards the next step in sexual exploration. Featuring new work from ADR Forte, Jolene Hui, Sommer Marsden, Shanna Germain, and others, Playing With Fire delivers enough heat to inspire readers to burn their own erotic bridges.
Playing With Fire: Taboo Erotica
Related Articles:
- Erotic Comics 2: A Graphic History from the Liberated '70s to the Internet...
For over four decades, erotic comics have flourished around the world. Erotic Comics 2 examines how this budding art form exploded from the California comix scene to become an international publishing phenomenon.
Beginning
with an exploration of newly liberated American artists in the '70s,
this overview examines the gay and lesbian comics scene, current
artists and publishers in Europe, and Japanese erotica. After delving
into the sexual mores of Japanese Hentai: from tentacle sex to Yaoi,
the book looks to the future, where erotic comic creators are
sidestepping legal issues by producing work solely for the Internet.
- K Is for Kinky (Erotic Alphabet)...
Get wild, get hot, don't stop to think, and just embrace your inner
kinky in these explicit tales of sex. A seductive Halloween party
costume is mercilessly shredded by a young passionate couple in lust in
their haste to have sex in Wings and All by Emerald. In Sign Your
Name by Saskia Walker a man and woman re-write the rules on foreplay
by giving new meaning to taking notes with this delicious ink-on-skin
fantasy come to fruition.
- C Is for Co-eds (Erotic Alphabet)...
"This series of alphabetically themed anthologies is already proving to
be a success. The stories are cleverly written and Alison Tyler
deserves full credit for picking the best writers to provide the most
powerful stories. And, with its college-centred focus, C is for Co-eds
certainly puts the cum into summa cum laude."--Ashley Lister -- Erotica Revealed Online, August 2007
- J Is for Jealousy (Erotic Alphabet)...
As with all Alison Tyler's anthologies the quality of writing is
constantly superb. The blend of styles and approaches tackles the
overriding theme of jealousy from every possible erotic angle. If you
enjoy your summer reading serious, sexy and smouldering- J is for Jealousy will satisfy every enviable need you're likely to have this year. -- Ashley Lister-Erotica Readers and Writers Association
- D Is for Dress-Up (Erotic Alphabet)...
A Is For Amour, B Is For Bondage, C Is For Co-Eds and D Is For Dress-Up
kick off a new series from Alison Tyler and Cleis Press. From Amour to
Zippers, this alphabetical extravaganza of erotic delights features 26
hot volumes of explicit, playful stories.
The couples in these
stories love to put on a costume and try out a new persona for some
playful, amorous fun. Rachel Kramer Bussel shows what happens when a
modern girl becomes Dorothy for the Day, while Bryn Haniver’s
narrator makes short work of an old prom dress in Rags to Riches.
- A Is for Amour (Erotic Alphabet)...
A Is For Amour, B Is For Bondage, C Is For Co-Eds and D Is For Dress-Up
kick off a new series from Alison Tyler and Cleis Press. From Amour to
Zippers, this alphabetical extravaganza of erotic delights features 26
hot volumes of explicit, playful stories.
A Is For Amour
begins the series with arousing tales of desire from writers such as
Saskia Walker and R. Gay. From Tsaurah Litzky’s “Sharing the Love,”
about a risqué three-way between two partners and their long-time
friend, to Le Petit Déjeuner by Jeremy Edwards, where love is blind
enough to make Cleveland seem like Paris, these writers show why love
makes the world go ’round.
- Édouard-Henri Avril...
Avril illustrated such works as Gustave Flaubert's Salammbô, Gautier's Le Roi Caundale, John Cleland's Fanny Hill, Jean Baptiste Louvet de Couvray's Adventures of the Chevalier de Faublas, Mario Uchard's Mon Oncle Barbassou (scenes in a harem), Jules Michelet's The Madam, Hector France's Musk, Hashish and Blood, the writings of Pietro Aretino, and the anonymous lesbian novel Gamiani. His major work was designs for De Figuris Veneris: A Manual of Classical Erotica by the German scholar Friedrich Karl Forberg.
- B Is for Bondage (Erotic Alphabet)...
"a delightful collection." -- Erotica Readers and Writers.com
"a must read for true purveyors of pleasure through pain and I command you to read it." -- UK Forum Online
- Girls On Top: Explicit Erotica For Women...
Violet Blue is an editor very much in tune with her audience. She knows
what readers want from an erotic anthology, and she knows how to
deliver it. In her latest offering, she explores the theme of women on
the verge of sexual awakening. From wild sexual adventures to pushing
the limits to taking chances and having them pay off, the women in
these very realistic, very explicit, and very contemporary fantasies
throw off their inhibitions, succumbing to sexual pleasure in all its
myriad forms. Along the way, they also begin to learn a little bit
about themselves and what their bodies are capable of in their
never-ending search for carnal satisfaction. Featuring work from Saskia
Walker, Angela Caperton, Tamara Rogers, Nan Andrews, Noel Burch and
others, these “girls on top” are breaking all the rules — and loving
every minute of it.
- X: The Erotic Treasury...
If you could only have one book of erotica on your bedside table,
'this' is it. From grand dame of erotica and editor of "The Best
American Erotica" series, Susie Bright, this compelling collection
features 40 of the best and most relished contemporary erotic short
stories to date. Designed and packaged in a 'gotta-touch-it' slipcover,
the package cultivates the quality, rarity, and taboo satisfaction that
goes into the stories themselves. Looks so good, you'll leave it out on
your nightstand.
|