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Hoops

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Crane Lake is a sleepy little Indiana town. Basketball star Jimmy Ellis is the biggest thing ever in this tiny little basketball-obsessed community. At eight-teen, he already has a fancy car and his own entourage. When a bet with girls basketball team star Savannah Turner turns ugly, her friends spend the summer teaching him a lesson. Can he survive wearing dresses and dating his best friend; Kenny? How far will the girls take things?

Hoops is a 16,000+ word story of small town female domination, forced feminization, forced bisexuality, humiliation, bondage, and even a bit of good old fashioned romance.

50 pages, Kindle Edition

First published October 10, 2014

1 person is currently reading
7 people want to read

About the author

Kylie Gable

830 books159 followers
I have been more fortunate than most. When I was in college, I had a life changing experience that I'm only coming to terms with years later. I was forcibly feminized by one amazing girl and her friends. There are a lot of legitimate questions of any writer in the genre of forced feminization, but even more so for someone like me who purports to tell a true story.

The Welcome to College series is my attempt to explore what happened to me over four years of college. It is definitely fictionalized for entertainment's sake, but by writing it, I hope to remember and explore those feelings I had in those wild days of my youth when everything seemed out of my control.

I will also be writing other erotica on such topics as feminization, female domination, bondage, and humiliation. I have written books on much more mundane topics, but I find erotic writing to be quite addicting.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for S.B. (Beauty in Ruins).
2,675 reviews244 followers
January 4, 2015
While Kylie Gable can always be counted on for a solid, entertaining, well-plotted tale of forced feminization and humiliation, I do think Hoops may be her best yet. It has a great set-up, a legitimate agenda for the feminization, some exquisite detail in the feminization itself, and some really unexpected plot developments along the way.

It all begins with two high school basketball stars. Jimmy and Savannah used to be good friends, both on and off the court, but he's allowed success to go to his head, alienating many of those around him. A hallway confrontation leads to a challenge on the court - one that she wins, despite being knocked down with a bloody nose. When Jimmy decides he's too good to follow through on the consequences of their bed, Savannah and her friends concoct a blackmail scheme to make him their sissy bitch for the summer (and his best friend Kenny their bitch).

Like I said, the feminization itself is exquisite in its detail, from shopping to dressing, to the look and feel of the clothing, to the challenge of acting and talking like a girl. Savannah and her friends take their scheme all the way, going so far as to establish a social media backstory for Jimmy's new persona. Making him and Kenny act like teenage lovers in public may seem a little cliched, but it creates some of the best moments in the story. I'm not sure I'll ever be able to sit in a theater and share a bucket of popcorn again without thinking about what might be in it . . . and on it!

What brings it all together is the fact that Kylie Gable takes us beyond that summer, and follows up on its real-world consequences. We see characters evolve, personalities change, and justice catch up with those who deserve it, all leading up to one of her happiest endings yet.


As published on Bending the Bookshelf
Profile Image for CagedMitch.
115 reviews
October 15, 2014
Jimmy Ellis is an eighteen year old high school basketball star and a hometown hero in Crane Lake, Indiana. Success has gone to his head, and he and his friends like to throw their weight around while they bask in the adoration of the townsfolk. Savannah Turner is also a basketball star, having led the girl's team to win the state title. When Jimmy runs afoul of Savannah and her friends, he finds himself intimidated into betting on a one-on-one game against Savannah. If he loses, he'll have to be his friend Kenny's prom date, all made up and wearing a dress. When Savannah does better than expected, Jimmy cheats, elbowing Savannah and breaking her nose, but Savannah wins anyway. Jimmy and Kenny then welsh on the bet.

Savannah and her friends, Victoria and Gabby decide to exact revenge. With the help of Melissa, Jimmy's dumped ex-girlfriend, they uncover evidence that Jimmy illegally received a bribe from the Kentucky college that had recruited him (with some unwitting help from Kenny). Soon they have Jimmy (now known as Selena) right where they want him, in a dress and makeup, and on the arm of his best friend Kenny.

I especially liked the movie date scene, where the feminized Selena is forced to pleasure her best friend by sticking her hand in a popcorn bucket. It's resting on Kenny's lap, and there's a hole cut in the bottom of it. Selena and Kenny are forced to swallow the popcorn once they're finished.

I also enjoyed the character of Savannah's father, Sheriff Joe Turner, a widower who raised his daughter to stand up for herself.

Selena and Kenny are made to go steady, and a social media profile is created for Selena. Eventually, Selena is forced to enter the Fourth of July Queen competition, and the young women conspire to see her crowned.

This is a fun feminization tale about the humbling of an egotistical young man, and the empowerment of his female tormentors. The story contains feminization, femdom, humiliation, a bit of bondage, and some forced bi. As the victim, Jimmy Ellis seems particularly deserving of his eventual fate. I recommend this story to any fan of forced feminization stories.
37 reviews2 followers
June 20, 2021
Total emasculation

This is the best forced fem book I have read hands down. No one has got more emasculated than this. I could not recommend it more strongly.
77 reviews16 followers
January 17, 2015
This was disappointing, to say the least. There's a decent story here--small-town Indiana basketball star taught a lesson in humility by the star of the girl's basketball team. But Gable's handling of the story is paper thin. The characters lack any depth--and therefore any sense of realness. The plot line is rushed, which is probably for the best since the idea a star jock could make it through several weeks of school in panties and pantyhose without being discovered is suspect at best. When a situation is given some development, Gable still rushes the action, focused more on acts than emotions. (And even the acts lack any real attention or excitement.) The lack of emotional depth is doubly frustrating because you have the feeling that Savannah and Danny (who goes from being Serena to Sabrina in the final couple of chapters--yeah, that's the level of editing here) could have been richer, more realized characters. And Danny's best friend, who is "forced" to date Danny, has his only awakening that Gable hints at and then abandons. All in all, an unsatisfying read.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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