Further Amusing Links:

Alt Sex Stories Text Repository - The adult story website, free and user-supported.  You probably already know about this site, since they are hosting this one – thank you, folks - but if not, go there and check them out. And then, it the mood takes you, give them some money. Hey – why not?


Other free ASSTR hosted sites:

The Kristen Archives - an extensive collection of erotica.

The Erotic Mind-Control Archive - Simon bar Sinister's self-explanatory story site.

The vulcanized-girl thing in my ‘Club Latex’ comes from a story on EMCSA called ‘Latex Clad Lovelies’ , by Robotunit8 . I took the liberty of borrowing her fetish club locale & threw in fragments of imagery drawn from some of Tang’s tales on the same site. There’s also a nod to S.S. Crompton’s Demi character. That last link shows the original Demi entangled in some tentacle porn – perhaps there are elements of that in the whole over-the-top trouser-snake thing.

Another fine source of free stories is Literotica.

More generally, and slightly more mainstream:

Christopher Moore’s books all involve transformation and/or mythology (in a modern setting) – just to get the plot rolling, to paraphrase the author. Very funny, & sexy. They feature recurring characters: such as Kendra, Warrior Babe of the Outland; Jody Stroud (AKA Bloodsucking Fiend) & her sometime goth minion, Abby Normal; and the Emperor of San Francisco. On the other hand, the only two-foot cocks belong to porpoise people. (Did I mention these books are a little different?) Highly recommended.

'Dunyazad' has another source – indirectly, at least. I’d been re-reading George MacDonald Fraser’s Flashman books. I love his combination of humour and history ( with heavy doses of poltroonery, plus some sex). Hence my story’s Victorian theme & a background occasionally based in fact. (For instance, it seems Pope Boniface VIII really was accused by his enemies of keeping a small tame demon in his ring for his depraved amusement - although probably he didn't. And Sir Richard Burton himself wrote of his youthful brothel creeping in Naples – although he was notorious for lying just for the shock value.)

'Cinderella' was already an old story when Charles Perrault added the pumpkin in 1697. (See Andrew Lang’s 1889 translation here.) His version spares the stepsisters – whereas in the German one collected by the Brothers Grimm (here) their eyes are pecked out. Ugg.

CS 

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