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Wild Space

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It’s inevitable; humanity will eventually reach beyond our solar system. But to get there, we will need intrepid explorers and ambitious men, people like Aric Donovan. He and the crew of Ranger 3 will go into suspended animation and travel to Tau Ceti. They will set foot on an alien world and demonstrate what humans can accomplish. Of course, when the Ranger 3 crew board their ship, they understand that they will leave everything behind. Their journey will take many decades. Granted, they never imagined how much Earth could change while they’re gone. Wars. Untold destruction. Near annihilation. And a rebirth. Humanity nearly destroys itself in the Water Wars, but we survive and the people of Earth rebuild with one key women have now assumed control. Chauvinism and male control over virtually every aspect of society nearly led to extinction. As such, women seize control, and men are relegated to the status of property. Once women take command, science and technology begin to advance once again. Better still, huge leaps are made, and a new starship is ready to venture out into the void. Unlike the slow vessels from the Ranger Initiative, this vessel will reach Tau Ceti in just five years. Along the way, they’ll find the antiquated Ranger 3 and its vulnerable crew. Once the women on board the ship discover wild males from a bygone era, they will have to decide what to do. Let them sleep, oblivious to the changes? Wake them up and retrain them? Have some fun? These women might be bored and require some entertainments as they make their way to a new star. When Aric Donovan climbed into that cryo-tube, he thought he would be the first person to set foot on an alien planet. He never imagined women from the future might instead decide to slip a collar around his neck and claim him as a plaything. But at least he has one crew member who might be able to save Corporal Cara Dare, the single woman on board the Ranger 3. She can save him and the rest of their crew…but this is her decision, and she won’t have to listen to her commanding officer, not anymore… This 70,000 word novel features female domination, a futuristic gynarchy, extensive bondage, elements of medical play, pony play, CFNM, male humiliation, spanking, and hypnosis. All characters are consenting adults over the age of 18. This novel was written as a commission.

276 pages, Kindle Edition

Published April 1, 2021

8 people are currently reading
10 people want to read

About the author

Anna Ritter

175 books103 followers

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
278 reviews6 followers
April 25, 2021
No

The premise is always provocative. Women subjugated and abused for centuries rise up and turn the tables on men. I was pretty sure we discovered that enslaving others against their will is wrong and generally comes back to bite. Now we get drones and collars that shock which ensure obedience or pain. Doesn't seem very erotic. Women are suppose to do it better than men which is all a part of the premise that makes so enticing!
I'm sorry to criticize but you did a great job of subjugation the body but left the mind out entirely. The mind, after all, is where the struggle must be won. The male ego must be deflated to a point where servitude is the logical outcome! Or it could be that I'm entirely wrong!
239 reviews5 followers
April 18, 2021
A true work of art. An incredible story and so creative. Anna Ritter designed a fantasy world of female dominance with a man from the past who must be broken and trained. The future is female and men only exist to serve and tend to their every desire. Once you start reading you won't want to put it down!
1 review1 follower
May 8, 2022
Excellent read

As a man, and as a "switch" who prefers to play more on the "bottom" (look up the terms if you're unfamiliar with them, but only if you're open minded enough not to judge), I always find her works intriguing, thoughtful and, of course, titillating and erotic. That the men are going to willingly submit end up under women (many times LITERALLY...give me a moment...) is always done in a way which seems plausible; she genuinely seems to love men, although she strikes me as a woman who sees men for what they are: simple and violent creatures who must be calmed and tamed by the guiding hand of women; sometimes that hand provides pleasure, sometimes it provides pain, sometimes LOTS of pain, but that hand is always in control.

The reason I AM a "switch" is that I find some women like to take as WELL as give (also, I've never found anyone who could brainwash me to follow her commands mindlessly...must be all that counterintelligence training I received in the military). I compose music, I'm writing a book on the First World War, I love to travel the world (partly because I have wanderlust, and partly because traveling gives me new perspective on musical instruments and sounds from different cultures). Why am I telling you all this? Well, if I have a problem with this book, and with many other authors of the genre, it's that the women become the creators, the thinkers, the doers, and the men...are just slaves. They're taught from an early age to work in the household, to work in the brothels, to clean the floors, to say they're happy with their lot in life, and any dissent is put down harshly. They're considered to be fluff-headed bimbos at best, and incapable of thought at worst. I get why she, and other authors in the genre, does/do it, but it really strikes me as a bit...lazy.

Why suppress the creative and inventive energies (carefully supervised, of course) of half your population? We have a historical precedent of the disaster that occurs when this happens; look up Heddy Lemar and her patent on the frequency-hopping torpedo which could have shortened our war with the Japanese in WWII. Years later, it was rediscovered and became the basis for frequency hopping capability making Bluetooth possible, and makes tower-to-tower transmission for cellular data possible as well; this was just ONE of her patents. She was unbelievably brilliant, but she was "just" a woman...so, tragedy.

I do believe men CAN do great things, but they need strong women (and I don't mean most of the girls - yes, there is a distinction - of today...they strike me as of the man-hating variety, who want dominance and control but without the responsibility for the massive damage they've caused, and will continue to cause); after all, doesn't the saying go, "Behind every great man there is a great woman?" How many of them forced those men to drop to their knees to kiss their feet when they entered a room, or employed the hairbrush, strap, or cane on bare bottoms behind closed doors? We will never know...but it's fun to speculate about.

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841 reviews22 followers
April 27, 2022
It's a Science Fiction Take on Femdom Erotica. And much like every other Sci-Fi story, Anna has taken enough liberty to create a kind imaginary but impossible scenario. Problem, however, is that there are way too many loopholes in that scenario, which are neglected to answer in the story. There is too much blabbering about what happened in the past, which bores the reader a lot, instead of telling in details what's exactly happening nowadays in Terra (Earth). A few punchlines are chosen about that details of current happening, and that keeps repeating throughout the book, which is entirely boring. But we are not given the true details of the lifestyle in Terra. Like, what about the current lifestyle in this new world where men are treated as slaves. Don't they have mothers and sisters who would hate their loved-ones to be treated this way? What is their reaction to all this (good, evil, accepting, or whatever.) And such. But even bigger problem with the scenario is how the story is told. Much like other stories of Anna, numerous scenes are forced into the story because she wanted to include those scenes in this book, rather than the scenes were the requirement of the story. There were just too many characters, and none of them were built properly. Not even the main characters, on whom there were just too much excessive wording was spent. Climax of the drama between Aric and Cara was so obvious that we already knew it from the beginning of the book. We were neither connected emotionally too Aric, nor Cara. We simply didn't care about anything. Anyone who would even enjoy this story would be due to a few good scenes the story contains. But overall its a poorly written long story.
65 reviews
July 20, 2025
A captivating Gynarchy Femdom Erotica ... In places the it felt kind of stupid and the sexual element is very minimal but still worth reading .....
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65 reviews4 followers
June 18, 2024
Anna Ritter's writing skills truly shine in longer works, and Wild Space does not fail to impress. This is an excellent work of science-fiction, great world and character building, story line, and the female domination is top-notch as well. This work satisfied me on multiple levels, sexually, intellectually, and emotionally.
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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