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Barbary Slavemaster

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The fantastic story of renegade Englishman Rory Fitzgerald, serving in North Africa with the Turkish Janissaries in the latter days of the Barbary Corsairs. An extremely erotic, though oft times disturbing story of young European girls kidnapped for slavery, girls whom their Moslem owners delight in abusing in the most cruel ways and - even more shocking and degrading for the previously sheltered Christian girls - using them as breeding stock! ...

192 pages

First published July 22, 2010

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About the author

Allan Aldiss

57 books33 followers

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5 stars
8 (40%)
4 stars
3 (15%)
3 stars
1 (5%)
2 stars
6 (30%)
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2 (10%)
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Kyra.
32 reviews23 followers
May 17, 2013
I'm a big Allan Aldiss fan, but this book was just plain boring. Page after page of harem slaves being put through their paces, details of how they were tied in a coffle, chained here and there, made to eat off the ground ... You get the idea.

Very little real erotica, unless you're so into bondage that you want to know every miniscule detail of someone's fastening to the girl next to her.

I thought this would, at least, be a good story about the Barbary pirates, their involvement with England and France, how the rulers of the Barbary states maintained their powerbase, etc. But it got so bogged down in the details of how the slaves were posed, chained, and exercised that the plot was [almost] lost in the uninteresting trivia.
11 reviews1 follower
November 20, 2014
This is one of the greats of erotic fiction. Aldiss creates a very believable scenario, entirely plausible, set in the early 19th centurey. His villain is a likeable rogue - (reminiscent of George MacDonald Fraser's 'Flashman'). This villain is obliged to flee England and seek sanctuary in North Africa, then under Ottoman rule, where he finds he rather enjoys owning slave girls, often captured European women, captured in raids on Italy or Greece, or from plundered ships. What makes the books so enjoyable is that you can empathise both with the villain, or anti hero, and with the girls themselves. The characters are true-to-life.
Profile Image for Jo * Smut-Dickted *.
2,038 reviews519 followers
April 23, 2012
Just not for me. The language was a difficult read and was done as if in period. It read a bit more like a historical that was trying to accurately reflect the language of the time period of the book. That is fine but it is not my thing - I was looking for a fun smutty book. Even sans smut - I just don't enjoy reading books where it takes required effort to understand what is going on. I was also confused about who was who, what was exactly happening, etc. I only got to 65% and I just cannot continue. That is pretty rare for me. YMMV.
Profile Image for Vivian.
2,919 reviews485 followers
April 23, 2012
Unemotional in a male POV porn sorta way. If you ever had practical questions about the how-tos of non-Golden Triangle slave trade, whys, etc. it is intriguing from that angle. Not my cup of tea, but the writing is decent and it has a plot. I just don't care for books that read like everyone's had an emotional lobotomy.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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