Comfort Food is a work of literary erotica/psychological thriller. This work is not romance. This work is not BDSM fiction . This work is not 50 Shades . This is dark literary erotica. Emphasis on the literary. It's not porn for a quick spank, and it's not romance with an HEA. Please don't read this work looking for that kind of book. If you aren't sure if this author's work is for you, please try some of her lighter fare first, like Blood Mate or Mafia Captive.
DESCRIPTION:
Emily Vargas has been taken captive. As part of his conditioning methods, her captor refuses to speak to her, knowing how much she craves human contact. He's far too beautiful to be a monster. Combined with his lack of violence toward her, this has her walking a fine line at the edge of sanity. Told in the first person from Emily's perspective, Comfort Food is a tale of erotic surrender that explores what happens when all expectations of pleasure and pain are turned upside down, as whips become comfort and chicken soup becomes punishment.
DISCLAIMER:
This book explores mature themes and is not suitable for those who can't handle them or minors.
REVIEWS:
. . . dark, provocative, and glaringly honest . . . H. Turley, Reader
Disturbing, twisted, and just plain weird . . . Amy, GoodReads Reviewer
. . . an intelligently written, well-researched and very erotic exploration of the extremity of power dynamics . . . It's refreshing to read someone brave enough to tackle erotic themes that are truly taboo and seldom published. - Remittance Girl, Reader and author of Gaijin and other works of erotica
They are a match made in a twisted sort of hell. I don't, as a rule, like erotica, but I'm likely to check out Ms. Thomas' future work just to see how far she can push the envelope. - A Taste For Ebooks, Review Blog
. . . beautifully written and exquisitely detailed . . . a brilliantly written book ló(