Three bestselling erotica authors join together to bring you a trio of hot stories in a sizzling anthology of sex! Selena Kitt’s “The Real Mother Goose” takes you on a wild fantasy ride of delicious BDSM pleasure in a setting that defies the imagination. In Carl East’s “Hell’s Gate,” Courtney’s psychic cleansing of an old house awakens not just a demon, but her own sexual appetite as well. And finally, Tawny Taylor’s “Claim Me” is a thrill ride of passion, intrigue, romance and dark, erotic hunger. This triad of tales is sure to bring you hours of reading pleasure, because these three authors play very well together!
Selena Kitt is a NEW YORK TIMES bestselling and award-winning author of erotic and romance fiction. She is one of the highest selling erotic writers in the business with over two million books sold!
Her writing embodies everything from the spicy to the scandalous, but watch out-this kitty also has sharp claws and her stories often include intriguing edges and twists that take readers to new, thought-provoking depths.
Her books EcoErotica (2009), The Real Mother Goose (2010) and Heidi and the Kaiser (2011) were all Epic Award Finalists. Her only gay male romance, Second Chance, won the Epic Award in Erotica in 2011. Her story, Connections, was one of the runners-up for the 2006 Rauxa Prize, given annually to an erotic short story of “exceptional literary quality.”
Not at all what I was expecting. The Real Mother Goose The first story was disjointed, but quirky and sexy with BDSM overtones, with some disturbing references to "girls" and "boys" but no mention of age. I liked the way it all ended up tying in, this was probably my favourite in the collection, but that isn't really saying much.
The Hell Gate WTF?! Seriously. This was a f*cked up orgy-fest with people The story was all over the place, including a couple of "and then they woke up" sequences, and the writing style was amateur. Not my cup of team. At. All.
Claim Me I had almost given up by the time I got to this story. The writing was again amateur-ish, but I could see where the story had pull and the style held promise.