Digital Slave 1by Melissa DuVant Self-Published This book is written in English 



BDSM classed as Dubcon. Contains strong BDSM content. | No. words: 65636 Ebook Price: $4.99 Grab this book now! No membership needed. Download PDF, EPUB and MOBI straight after payment. 
- Average 3.0 from 1 ratings
| Style: Bondage /BDSM Enslavement, Submission/Slave Training of Female Published: 9 / 2020 Available Formats to Download: MOBI, EPUB, MS Word, PDF, MS Reader, RTF, HTM Available for members to read online in the Reading Room which is part of the member library

 | STORY DESCRIPTION Sophia used to be a stockbroker, wealthy and respected. Then she made a few mistakes, and had a drunken one-night stand. She wakes up in an apartment where everything is electronically activated... and not by her. Without her realising, she is going to be trained into obeyed increasingly degraded instructions, to better serve her distant and unknown master, her will getting corroded until she is nothing more than an empty toy. | Keywords related to this title - click on a keyword to find more, related stories Bondage BDSM latex chastity training piercings remote control Author information: Always interested in the darker side of sexuality, Melissa writes about the more twisted and controlling relationships, with a variety of devices employed on the subjects of her tales.
Find me on twitter @ https://twitter.com/MelissaDuvant Reviews The first half of the story is slow and mild but if you can get thru to this 2nd half it gets interesting. Over all I found too mild for my tastes. I had already purchased her second “Digital Slave II”, hope it is better otherwise I’ll have to give up on this author. 3 out of 5 (Stark47 ) External Reviews This book is very well-written, but I am not sure how much I could recommend it. It is, frankly, brutal at times, and the reader will encounter the most passive-aggressive character I have ever encountered, in fiction or out of it. This makes for some very uncomfortable reading at times. I even ended up having to skip about half of the last 20% of the book (the sensory-deprivation part) because it was so uncomfortable.
Having said that, the author is very disciplined in keeping the story squarely from the viewpoint of the protagonist, who becomes a less and less reliable narrator as time goes on, and that's an admirable skill in an author. This certainly is not a book the reader will soon forget. The story is so very realistic in the near-future sense that it almost counts as horror.
I can't say "if the author had only done X, it would have been a better book" because this is clearly the story the author wanted to tell, and nothing here is done in any way sloppily or out of line with what the story needed. I can't even complain that it has an unhappy ending, because I don't know how much of the protagonist's happiness at the end was feigned. All I can say is that the book delivers what it promises, whether I really wanted that or not.
So, I just can't give it five stars, but you might. (reader review) |