“A bit creepy, a bit odd, a lot hot. Definitely recommend if you like sexy things that are also complicated and push boundaries…” Emma, 5 Star Amazon review
While I’m finishing up these two novels, I decided to put out a new collection of short stories and a novella! It’s called The Ortolan Hunters and Other Disturbing Tales and it’s just that. It has three short stories and a novella called The Day The Lights Went Out. It’s not exactly erotica, but there is a ton of sex, much of it somewhat creepy and disturbing.
The Ortolan Hunters, which you may have heard at Dirty Boys, is about a couple fighting over the little birds. When the narrator is finally convinced to procure the exotic, and illegal dish, he decides he needs to teach his partner a lesson. It’s intense, delicious, and fairly twisted, to say the least.
The Elevator follows another couple acting out a horrible fantasy with a stranger. It’s a disturbing story of someone flipping the scales when it comes to consent, and you should be warned that it’s pretty fucked up.
The Unicorn is the funny break in the middle, and follows the narrator as he heads over to be the third to some friends who have never had a threesome before. It’s safe to say, nothing goes exactly as planned. I read this one at Dirty Boys as well, but this is the first time it’s been in print.
And finally, The Day The Lights Went out takes place in a NYC Hotel during a blackout. Two strangers meet for a one-night-stand, but get interrupted when the place goes dark. Instead of just getting busy they decide to test each other with stories of their past, each trying to prove how horrible they are. In between each story they discuss sexuality, consent, fetish, guilt, and kink, arguing about feminism and masculinity all the while trying to out do each other. Their stories are filthy and border on the edge of acceptable, often falling off the wrong side. But how much are they making up and how much is true? And more importantly, does it matter?
I hope you’ll take a look and maybe get a digital copy over on Amazon. And, of course, if you like it, nothing says thank you like a nice Amazon review.