"Fun, interesting, wild sex on another planet in another dimension"
From the first page of the book: 'Warning: The following
material contains strong sexual content meant for mature
readers. [It] has been rated NC-17, erotic . . .' They're
not kidding, gentle reader. If you are not interested in an
off-the-charts level of sizzle/sex/erotic
writing/sensuality, whatever you want to call it, then stop
here. This book is about sex -- fun, interesting, wild sex
on another planet in another dimension. Lots of voyeurism,
exhibitionism, group sex, sex with all the in-laws, sex at
the dinner table. Luckily for my tastes, there is NO
bondage or S&M or male/male sex -- all things that turn me
off. (Be aware that there are a few short female/female
scenes.) This is definitely women's Erotica with a capital
E. This story is a combination of romance, erotica, futuristic
fantasy, science fiction, a bit of mystery, and a LOT of
humor. You have to view the whole thing as an outrageous
romp, and don't expect it to fall neatly into the rules for
any particular genre. Synopsis: Normal, middle-class accountant Kyra Summers and
her best friend Geris Jackson are just leaving a weeklong
meditation retreat, where Kyra was trying to reduce the
stress in her life and come to terms with her sister's
mysterious disappearance a year ago. In the parking lot,
they are approached by two huge, gorgeous, barbaric-looking
men -- seven-and-a-half feet tall, massive muscles, eerily
glowing blue eyes. Kyra is overcome by chilling sensations
and feels one of the men take control of her body and mind.
She awakens on his gastrolight space cruiser to discover
that she is the fated Sacred Mate of Zor Q'an Tal, "High
King of Tryston, Emperor of Trek Mi Q'an galaxy, Guardian
of the Sacred Sands, and the most feared man in six hundred
galaxies and seven dimensions". Quite a lifestyle change;
no one seems to pay any attention to whether she WANTS to
be the Queen/Empress and live on another planet and never
see Earth again. However, due to the pre-ordained
emotional 'recognition' and 'joining', Kyra does come
fairly quickly to accept and love Zor. What she has a harder time accepting is the very different
Trystoni culture. Taking a mate from outside their race or
planet is not unusual. There are ten times as many warriors
(adult free males) as there are women in Tryston. Women are
highly prized, treated like treasured toys or pets, and not
expected to do anything except pleasure their mate and
breed heirs. This is a theme that I usually hate. But I
found it bearable in this book, I think because it becomes
clear that a mated warrior finds himself totally attached
to and emotionally dependent on his mate -- whether he
expected or planned to feel that way or not. So the women
end up with a lot of influence, even though they don't hold
jobs or have any official positions in government. And
although it isn't developed much in this book, Kyra has
some definite thoughts on how a feminist movement could
improve Trystoni society. A lot of the story deals with Kyra's adjustment to the
nuances of her new life as a Trystoni woman and the Queen --
plus constant, continual sex in many variations. Women's
clothing is completely transparent, and they aren't
permitted to wear anything at all when alone with their
mate. Consummation feasts takes a bit of getting used to --
think completely wild and over-the-top bachelor parties
involving both sexes and lots of sex. Many of the 'women'
who provide intimate services to the males are actually not
real people -- they are constructed of magical sand and
have no real emotions or thoughts. There is an absolutely hysterical scene where Kyra escapes
the palace and visits a low-class bar in a nasty part of
the city. When the palace guards find her, they are totally
confused by the incomprehensible 'primitive dancing rite'
involving chanting and body contortions: Kyra is swigging
moonshine and teaching a group of vicious-looking space
pirates the lyrics and dance motions to the Village
People's 'YMCA'. The Trystonis have to do as much adjusting
to Kyra as she does to them. There are several subplots that keep the action moving:
Zor's brother Dak decides that Kyra's Earth friend Geris
might just be his own Sacred Mate; several other royal
brothers show up with their own problems; there is a
rebellion going on and someone in the palace is conspiring
with the bad guys. I adored the romance between Zor and Kyra. It is a real
love relationship, not just sex! (To me, that is the line
between erotica and porn -- is there emotion beyond the
physical connection.) Zor is infatuated with his mate and
willing to do almost anything to make her happy. When Kyra
refuses to see or speak to him for three days after a
Trystoni ritual that she finds particularly offensive to
her Earth sensibilities, he is incredibly miserable and
depressed, torn between wanting to please her and needing
to help her understand that he cannot change the whole
culture for her. When he mistakenly thinks that she has
made love with another man, he is grief-stricken and
jealous, but his response is NOT anger at her -- instead,
he makes passionate love to her in order to reinforce their
bond and remind her how much they love each other. The science fiction and fantasy elements of the book have
to be taken with a grain of salt. We get glimpses of this
alien world and culture, but it is not fully developed.
There is not the in-depth 'world building' that one would
expect within a true science fiction novel -- this is pure
fantasy romance. Some things don't make a lot of sense. For
example, once Kyra is on Zor's planet, her body in some
unexplained way starts to function like a Trystoni rather
than an Earthling -- she ages at one-tenth the Earth rate,
and she 'hatches' babies after a pregnancy only a few weeks
in length.
Reviewed by Raelene Gorlinsky
Courtesy Sensual Romance
Posted July 1, 2001
Also available in paperback (ISBN 0972437703).
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