That first wild night in Shanghai had been an accident, a case of seriously mistaken identity. Melissa Zhang was a good Chinese girl from San Francisco. She’d never intended to be mistaken for Shanghai Candy.But tonight isn't going to be an accident. Melissa knows that if she keeps her word, this time there won’t be any case of mistaken identity. This time, she’ll be going clubbing knowing exactly what her boyfriend Dave enjoys, knowing what he wants from her, knowing that he wants her to be Shanghai Candy. She’s nervous. She’s scared.She can’t wait.Shanghai Candy by Chloe Tzang continues the Three Nights In Shanghai trilogy, a blistering work of contemporary erotica. Expect unrestrained, unprotected sex as Melissa indulges all her secret fantasies with a string of other men. Melissa will return in The Final Night.
Chloe is half Vietnamese-Chinese, half Polish and lives with her Significant Other somewhere in the vastness of Big Sky Country, USA, which she loves. Chloe started writing seriously in 2015 and she brings her love of her Chinese heritage to her erotica as well as immersing herself inside the heads and hearts of her heroines. Already an award-winning author on Literotica, Chloe's other interests besides her writing are Taekwondo, Hapkido and shooting and her partner, whom she loves and adores and who in turn loves her stories and the weird turns her mind takes when she's writing.
This is the second book in the series in which the reader follows the corruption of Melissa Zhang by who boyfriend, Dave. Dave convinces Melissa to dress and behave like “Shanghai Candy” and go to a nightclub to attract a guy to service. What results is a breathtakingly erotic adventure that pushes Melissa’s belief about who she is as a “good Chinese woman.” The story is an immediate continuation of the first and continues with its high quality descriptions and erotic scenes. Melissa is a believable character and the reader sympathizes with her as she moves beyond the identity she is expected to have as defined by her upbringing. As Melissa begins to embrace this new side of herself, the reader is left wondering how far she’ll go in the next leg of her journey and how her experiences in Shanghai, the desire of her boyfriend to see her with other men, and her newly awakened longings will shape the future of their relationship back home.
As with the first book in the series, the author uses related phrases, which distracts from the story. I interpreted the repetition as the internal narrative and thoughts of Melissa, but less would still have been better. The recap of the initial book was well crafted, but could have been substantially shorter.