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Sarali

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At the age of 33, Sara meets Elena, a lesbian scientist from Los Angeles that leads her to a self-empowering path of lust and sexual pleasure. Sara has a fearless soul and a one million orgasms plan but before her life becomes sweet as honey, she needs to rescue her body before it's too late!
Sarali is the labyrinth to the core of existence, the story of a woman that starts to blossom without permission after leaving behind a past that no longer wants to exist.
Get ready to be part of the extraordinary journey of a woman unleashing the most powerful and timeless weapon of seduction: Authenticity.
You will not be the same again after meeting Sarali. Don´t go back to sleep and listen because she has secrets to tell you...

295 pages, ebook

Published June 22, 2019

2 people want to read

About the author

Susana Gino

2 books2 followers

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
Profile Image for Darlene.
1,981 reviews220 followers
October 3, 2019
Sometimes I read a book and feel raw from the length of the read. Granted, this was a Kindle ARC, so I'm sure a lot of the story will improve with the reviews.

The technical problem that has probably been addressed by now, but it took me out of the story every time, the author and/or the title and page number (?) pop up often and are inserted into the tale being told. I suppose if I were strictly reading it, my eyes would skip it, but since I read via text-to-speech, it is all very jarring.

Overall, the story was interesting, though the main character seemed in her head most of the time. The erotic scenes were almost too much while sorting through her growing maturity. And though the main character, who calls herself either Sara or Sarali according to whether she was involved in a sexual pursuit or her own enlightenment.

Though the main character seeks to learn of her sexuality and help others through their experiences with her, a sort of prostitution, that wasn't my main problem with the main character. She seeks to be with her daughter out of love, and the relationship does grow. But her daughter's safety ought to be her chief thought. A man who has such little control of himself as to rape a young woman and force her into marriage and having the resulting child, should not be trusted with that same child to raise on his own. What could he be doing to that child? It seems to me that should have been the character's aim, not worry about what falsehoods he may speak. It is true, Sara needed to do some growing herself, but not once in her mental ravings about how unfair it was to her, did she mention what might be happening to her daughter.

My last problem with the book is how repetitive it was. I found myself wanting to find another book to read. Still, I think in a future edit or two that would be taken care of, and the newer readings will find an interesting read. As a seeming autobiography, the story reflects the way all our brains work in circular ways coming back to the trauma and trying to overcome it all. Worth the read.
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