





A new collection of erotic short stories has arrived at just the right time to get swept up in the Twilight/True Blood vampire frenzy. The difference between Edward Cullen and the vampires and other horrors you’ll find in Bitten (edited by Susie Bright) is that the latter are not afraid to bare their teeth. Here’s a quote from the review in the Sacramento News & Review:
For some readers, for example, the exquisitely detailed Victorian flogging scene in Cate Robertson’s “Half-crown Doxy†or the voyeurism described in Donna George Storey’s “The Legacy†could be considered the height of risqué. For anyone lightly versed in the sketchier corners of certain bookstores, though, they don’t even register on the radar, particularly because those elements are the only parts of the stories that could be considered “dark.†In a compilation that advertises itself as being full of “sexy-spooky, ethereal carnality,†they get lost in the shuffle.
On the other hand, when that perfect stomach-roiling blend of the bizarre and the carnal is achieved, what emerges is spectacular. The authors have chosen their words carefully, rendering erotic acts in such precise language that it makes reading Bitten on public transportation the tiniest bit awkward, but in a good way. Sera Gamble’s “The Devil’s Invisible Scissors†is one of these great selections, mixing a snappy, interesting narrative with blatant exhibitionism, along with just a smidge of commentary on the classic definitions of good and evil. In the same vein, Anne Tourney’s “The Resurrection Rose†offers a mini-exploration of sexual taboos from the time of the French Revolution to the present, starring a vampire-aristocrat-carnivorous-flower threesome.
Strange? Yes. Incredibly hot? Absolutely.
Read more here. If you’re looking for some of the best erotica on the web, for free, check out the Lusty Library — and don’t be shy about telling them Maddy sent you.






Lithuania’s first erotic museum has opened its doors in the country’s second city Kaunas.
The museum is located in the centre of the city in the cellar of the once famous ‘Metropolis’ restaurant.
The owner Vidas Kontrimavicius started collecting erotic material about five years ago.
Inspired by museums in other countries Kontrimavicius decided to share his enjoyment of erotica with his countrymen.
‘The idea to establish the first public erotic museum in Lithuania came to me when I saw similar museums in other countries.
‘Visitors can see how the naked human body has been reflected in art and in various items.
‘And, I suppose, they will understand that erotica is nice,’ said the museum owner.
Around 300 items are exhibited in the museum.
They include ten dolls dressed in lingerie, examples of old erotic pictures and photos, books on the subject and even bags in the shape of women’s bodies.
For one visitor the museum has the capacity to be educational as well as titillating.
‘This museum is fairly educational, especially for the peoples who are afraid of such things. As it’s just opened it is quite good, I like it,’ said visitor Justinas.
It was the erotic images that most caught the eye of another visitor.
‘For me the most impressive thing was the old photos, because I have not seen such images before. Maybe some people do have these images, men for example, but they are not normally shown in public.
It’s very interesting indeed, because I have not seen anything similar before,’ said Jurga.



Here’s an article that was sent to me this morning. Equality through public nudity? Hmm. Well, I guess this is one way to go about it! Fun for the exhibitionists, that’s for sure… and for the voyeurs…
For far too long, there has been a double standard for women. While enjoying recreational activities, men have the freedom to go topless, splaying their manboobs to anybody within site. While women are forced to hide their magnificent mammaries under bras, bikinis, and the titillating yet ultimately disappointing; wet t-shirt.
Now is the time for women across the globe to break free from the shackles of double standards, and let their wonderful breasts be free!
In honor of Women’s Equality Day, it has been declared that Sunday August 23rd shall forever be known at NATIONAL GO TOPLESS DAY!
This year is the 2nd anniversary of the festivities with events planned in Miami, Portland, Venice Beach, Chicago, New York, and Maui.
Women, make sure to mark your calendar and let freedom ring!
gotopless.org for more info.



NASHVILLE, Tenn. — from www.wsmv.com – Tennessee’s first male strip club is open in Nashville and, so far, owners say the controversial club is a success.
Arrow Nashville opened over the weekend. Since then, co-owner Cole Walker said, hundreds of guests have come through the doors on Fifth Avenue downtown.
The club is legally licensed to feature nude men and is open for both men and women.
The club stirred some controversy before opening, but the club’s attorney said it’s been smooth sailing.
Club owners said they have already had more than 40 mid-state men apply to be dancers. So far, the club has employed 20 men.
The club has a grand opening scheduled for later this month.



Amy VIP is a beautiful blonde who looks stunning in her red corset and black stockings. I couldn’t resist showing you a pic of her in the process of stripping, because there’s just something irresistibly erotic about the moment a girl’s tits are revealed for the first time. You do get to see a bit more of her if you click the pics!



If you like Suicide Girls, Gods Girls, and other alt porn girls, then you HAVE to check out Sybian Punks: Jenna And Mia. These two sexy alt girls fondle and play with each other while riding the fabulous fucking machine known as the Sybian. Have you ridden one yet? I still haven’t gotten the chance to try it, but I will one of these days. Maybe I’ll even tell you all about it.



from www.thefrisky.com – We love the idea, in theory, of a porn magazine for women. Unfortunately, Filament, a British for-women-by-women porn mag, is having a lot of troubles. First, the above-the-waist photos of “feminine†male models, which Filament‘s editors said academic research proved women are attracted to, were not pornographic enough for us. Sorry, but Rufus Wainwright clones don’t make us hot. Fortunately, the mag listened to the complaints and is trying to, um, fluff their content by including guys with erections in the next issue. But now Filament‘s publisher has stated it will not allow them to print pictures of aroused men. [Guardian UK]
According to an entry on Filament‘s LiveJournal, after the magazine stated its intention to do a series of photos depicting men with erections, their printer wrote them to say:
“I can now herein formally confirm that we would NOT want to print material of this nature, which although likely to perhaps only cause offense to a small number of actual staff, may unfortunately create much bigger and more serious far reaching problems for us with other clients—particularly those in the women’s/religious sectors, who could potentially withdraw their own work in protest as a result.â€
The editors of Filament added that they cannot change publishers because this particular printer is 30 percent cheaper than the others. So, we guess there’ll be no peen for us girls. Rats!
We understand that losing other customers is a legitimate problem for a printing business to be concerned about. But we can’t help but be cynical and wonder if the publisher would have had the same problem if Filament was a (far more common) porn mag for men with pics of naked women? Is the problem just that Filament is porn, which, presumably the publisher knew when it took the magazine on as a client? Or is the problem that some people just can’t handle the idea of chicks being as sexually ravenous as dudes?



It all started innocently enough with a book called Eros vinyls, put together by Mathieu Flory.
His book presents a collection of 400 LP record covers whose unifying theme is the “eroticâ€. This was all Paris’s Erotica Museum needed to select 120 covers, pop them on one floor of its multi-storey building and invite visitors to look back at how record-sleeve artists have worked with the idea of eroticism over the last six decades.
The whole thing is organised into musical genres – French, Jazz’n’Blues, Cabaret, Rap & Hip-Hop etc. – but also into what curator Alain Plumey calls “topicsâ€. A topic, it seems, can be anything from “Stockings†to “Tie Me Upâ€.
The tasteometer plunges right down with many of the covers, which can involve women drenched in honey, or toting automatic weapons. As they do. You’re left wondering what people thought they were designing, particularly in the 1970s. But you are often forced to acknowledge their ingenuity.
The exhibition lives up to its promise to move through all the decades and includes covers from artists like Julie London, Betty Page, Brigitte Bardot and Jane Birkin. Hard-core rap could hardly be left out (and who better than 2 Live Crew?) but the collection is sufficiently well-balanced that they’re the sole representative and a few steps away you’re examining the sleeve for a recording of Offenbach’s Vie Parisienne.
One visitor at the exhibition says that it’s only when you see the albums collected in this way that you think of them as deliberately erotic. “I was surprised to see them because I really didn’t perceive most of them as erotic or overly sexual,†the young woman says. “I just think it’s marketing and promotion and selling something. But it was interestingâ€. Visitors to the exhibition, says Plumey, tend to be young. This is not for want of risqué pictures, but because of the newfound interest in vinyl LPs.
Assembling a collection like this is much easier than it used to be, says Plumey, since you can find anything on the internet. A copy of the Village People’s 1979 Sleazy or Ice-T’s 1988 Power is probably out there somewhere on the web – for a price.
There’s always that elusive album-sleeve however, and Plumey searches for the name of the one he wasn’t able to hang in the exhibit. “Jimi Hendrix with nude girls,†he says. “It’s one cover, famous one, really rare and expensiveâ€.
This then would be the scandal-starting, epoch-making Electric Ladyland and while Hendrix might not be on the wall of the exhibit, plenty of other big names are.
If it’s too early in the day to navigate the Erotica Museum, you can take yourself off to 25 years of the Mac at Paris’s Computer Museum.



Nielsen measures use of the internet just as it gauges the popularity of TV shows, and it has found that one in three visitors to porn websites is female. One such site user spoke to WTVJ for this article, quoted:
“I think women are more open with their sexuality,” she says. “I watch it alone. It gives you different positions and lets you be more creative with your loved one, helps keep the relationship spiced up.”
Adult film used to be accessible only to men, especially in the 1920s when it all got started. We’ve talked before about women becoming more avid fans of porn, but the article gets a little more interesting when sexologist Marilyn Volker likens women’s relatively newfound access to porn to other equal rights:
“Part of this, in women’s history, is just like the right to vote. Many women are saying ‘I want to be able to watch’,” she claims.
I don’t know about you, but I’m all for equality in porn just as in everything else in life.
Although Dr. Volker isn’t trying to pretend that all porn is sex-positive from a woman’s point of view, she thinks that there is plenty of adult film that can be great for women’s sexuality. And I’ve definitely noticed more porn for women by women, such as just about anything Nica Noelle ever does, especially her Sweet Sinner imprint (and I can safely say that I think a lot of my female friends would love it).



North Carolina native Sabrina Luna began writing erotica in the late 1990s, before the erotic romance genre hit it big with readers. Sabina’s writing is always changing and improving. She writes all kinds of stories but has found much success writing paranormal erotic romance.
You can find her stories on such publishers’ websites as Whiskey Creek, Phaze, Aspen Mountain Press , Amira Press and also various other e-publishers online.
Sabrina enjoys honing her craft and testing the limits to her imagination. When I asked about her writing paranormal erotic romance she explained what she likes the most about this kind of writing is being able to bend the rules of traditional love stories and make the ordinary extra-ordinary. Fortunately for her readers she does this very well.
Besides being a full time author, Sabrina is also a professional psychic reader and certified life coach.
Sabrina currently lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. When she’s not writing you can find her in bookstores, or watching entertaining movies & DVDs. She also boast of being a creative coffee drinker who loves to meet her friends for coffee.
Check out the interview below to learn more about her…
N.B: I’d like to take this opportunity to thank you for interviewing with me. Can you tell our readers about your background and how did you become an erotic author?
Sabrina Luna: Oh, you’re welcome! I’m a creative coffee drinker, an author, certified life coach and professional psychic reader.
I began writing erotica in the late 1990s, before the erotic romance genre had hit it big with readers. I enjoyed (and still do) reading erotica and erotic romance. I began to write erotic poems, which led to short stories and novellas.
N.B: What was the name of the first story that you wrote and what was it about?
Sabrina Luna: Hmm …that’s a tough one. I remember the first story I submitted to an online contest. I won first place in its category (erotic romance) and that’s when I decided to submit my writings for publication. It was a story set in Egypt in the 1930s about a sexy archeologist and his smart assistant who become erotically “enchanted†while digging up an ancient temple.
N. B: How would you describe your writing style? And what can our readers expect from your work?
Sabrina Luna: Well, I learn a lot about the craft of writing with each story I write, so I believe my style is continuously changing and improving. I love stories which are adventurous, humorous and sexy. I hope readers will enjoy reading my stories as much as I do writing them!
N.B: What is it that you like about paranormal erotic romance as compared to traditional erotic romance stories?
Sabrina Luna: To me, paranormal erotic romances bend the rules of traditional love stories and make the ordinary extra-ordinary. I enjoy reading them as well as writing them!
N.B: What projects are you currently working on?
Sabrina Luna: Well, I’ve currently submitted a short story for Halloween to one of my e-publishers, which is a paranormal erotic romance. I’ve also been promoting and teaching classes in psychic development based on my non-fiction book, MAGICKAL INTUITION, which is currently available in ebook and print. And, I’m busy plotting and planning my next round of writing projects.
N.B: If you could be any of the characters you’ve wrote about so far which would it be? And why?
Sabrina Luna: LOL! Well, let’s say I’d like to be any of my heroines (and a couple of heroes), because the male leads in my stories are certainly wonderful, sexy men with hearts of gold!
N.B: Do you imagine your characters first then write the story or write the story first then let the characters flow?
Sabrina Luna: Oh, tough question! I usually start with (believe it or not) a title and genre, then it progresses to a story idea. As the story idea grows, the right characters begin to appear …and then they take over.
N.B: I understand that besides being a best selling author you are also a professional psychic reader and tarot reader. Do you believe that tarot reading helps you with writing your characters? If so how?
Sabrina Luna: Definitely! The major cards of the Tarot deck are based on archetypes, which are the building blocks of storytelling. The Tarot helps give me ideas on how to develop the basis of my characters, and then creativity kicks in and helps to flesh out them out.
N.B: When you’re not writing, what type of things do you like to do?
Sabrina Luna: I love to meet friends for coffee, haunt bookstores and watch entertaining movies & DVDs. I also love attending Sci-Fi Fantasy conventions and meeting others who share similar interests.
N.B: You are a full time author living in the Carolinas. Are you from the area? If not, why have you made the Carolinas your home?
Sabrina Luna: I’m a Carolina gal –born and raised.
N.B: Where would you like to see your writing career in the next five years or so?
Sabrina Luna: In the next five years, I plan to explore a few more genres in fiction, plus continue to write and teach in areas like psychic development. So, yes, I plan to stay busy!
For more info: read more about Sabrina Luna on her website.



OK, maybe it’s not a machine gun but I couldn’t help thing of the song. Scar is one of my favourite goth/alt/fetish models and she’s almost hotter than ever here, in her fishnet stockings, fuck-me boots, and packing some serious fire power. Her legs are unbelievable.



Maybe it’s just because I’ve looked at too many naked ladies today (oh, poor me!), but I think Violet Erotica looks a little bit like Mandy Moore in that second photo. I know Mandy Moore is a good girl who would never do anything like stripping and showing off her body on the internet, so it’s a good thing Violet is so inclined!







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