Sophie Morgan’s book opens up with a prologue that many of us no doubt have witnessed before. A man and a woman are outside; the man tugs on her hair forcibly and we hear him call her a slut and whore. We look into her eyes and see fury behind them as she restrains herself and the man’s hand tangles...
Fifty Shades of Grey has really brought erotica to the mainstream. In all my years of reading books, I can't recall there ever being a time where people would sit around talking about D/s relationship. My own husband bought me the Fifty Shades trilogy and after I read them a time or two, I loaned ...
{Disclaimer: I have not read Fifty Shades of Grey, so I’m not sure how or if this affects the overall outcome of this review.}Diary of a Submissive is Sophie Morgan’s (a journalist) account of her life and how she became a submissive. The first chapter/s delve into her early life, letting you form a...
This is the first time I read a book like that. And I don't mean erotica/kink.This has basically been a monologue given by a submissive, and having been written in First person is not easy to read. At some point after a few chapters you forget about that, and are so into her self discovery and the w...
Interesting, still don't understand why you would want to be beat black and blue but that's me!
Whether it's real, who knows? It definitely reads like a non-fiction, and though I would not be surprised to hear that some parts were embellished, it could very well be entirely truthful.That said, this is not a romance novel. Not really. It's a journal of self-discovery and self-acceptance for ...
This is non-fiction, a memoir. The author goes on about how she's not ashamed of her lifestyle, etc, yet the publisher's website says "Sophie Morgan" is a pseudonym. If you're not ashamed, why the pseudonym?The prologue is effective, putting the reader in the spot of the voyeur. If you happened upon...