For fans of babes behaving badly comes six new male chastity and femdom stories about girls who enjoy treating their boyfriends mean to keep them keen.
Features six stories, including:
Special Whispers
Clark’s dreams come true when he finally gets together with Angel, his teenage sweetheart. However, she is controlling. She decides what he can wear, where he can go and when he can come. Her reasoning? His abstinance will keep the fiery passion of the honeymoon period alive forever. And she enforces it with a chastity cage. So when Clark gets a chance to escape his cage, he takes it and leaves her, but how long can his freedom last?
Plus five more tales for your entertainment. The Girl Next Door The Pool Boy Moving On, Moving In Straight To Gay Alpha Man
Violet Reigns writes unashamedly naughty stories that explore the darker side of erotic literature. Readers have described her sexy black comedies and steamy thrillers as “erotica meets The Twilight Zone.”
But Violet describes herself as a woman of simple pleasures and tastes. She lives on a small coastal property with her husband of many years, where they enjoy the beauty of nature and a peaceful lifestyle. Occasionally, however, she has to do practical research for her books.
I’m not sure mean comes close to describing the women in these six stories. It’s so psychological. They use their womanly wiles on poor hapless guys and genuinely f**k with their minds. I’m glad Author Reigns makes these books public so guys can prepare themselves for the pitfalls of relationship with certain gorgeous women.
In each of the stories, the guy is emasculated by their partners, or by themselves through their partner’s influence.
The seductions are just ssssooo smooth. From a guy’s perspective, Ms. Violet is a villainess extraordinaire. It’s amazing to read the silky smooth enchantments before horrified realizations come crashing in.
Guys - read at your peril, or in your own self defence, and be exceptionally aware if your partner is reading this book.
Rules for guys to live by, as taught by these six stories:
Special Whispers: Oh the things you learn After the wedding.
The Girl Next Door: Never, ever bet against women when it comes to s*x.
The Pool Boy: If a trophy wife is in a longterm relationship, there’s a reason.
Moving On, Moving In: If it seems too good to be true, it probably is 🤷, and being a good Samaritan doesn’t ensure you’ll be rewarded in this lifetime.
Straight to Gay: Oh, the steamy manipulations women deliver.
Alpha Man: One of the funniest stories I’ve read - filled with the worst Alpha cliches strung together in a very coherent narrative. How Author Reigns kept steady fingers on the keyboard while writing this tale is a mystery.
5 Shuddering Stars. I hate to think what Reigns is cooking up next. 🫣
If I had to review this book in one word, it would be ‘unapologetic’.
On the surface, it delivers on the promise with six stories about mean girlfriends. But the writing is intelligent, and the book has way more to offer than a series of quick thrills.
Story one, Special Whispers, is a study of the way some women control men. In particular, it looks at how some women use sex to control men, taking that idea to an extreme. Hard to say more without spoilers.
Next we get The Girl Next Door, which gives us a story about making generalisations and misjudgements, a theme continued throughout the book. The Pool Boy follows, also looking at this subject from a different angle, and there are severe consequences for each character making these generalisations and misjudgements.
Moving On, Moving In is a stark contrast to the first three stories in tone, style and subject. Superficially it’s a findom story, but it’s also a story about how love can derail someone’s life.
Straight To Gay continues the thread about how misinformation can get used to manipulate people. This continues into Alpha Man, a black comedy, where misinformation manipulates the characters, presented as coming from an authoritative source. In this case, how-to guides.
Is it erotica? Yes. Violet Reigns writes entertaining stories and isn’t heavy-handed with themes. But Mean Girlfriends is also a book with something to say about the age we live in, where misinformation, misjudgement and generalisations abound. It makes me wish there were real mean girlfriends waiting for the worst perpetrators of this insidious shift in world culture.