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One might believe that the term "emotional prostitute" relates a provocative act. In reality, emotional prostitutes seek an emotional exchange in love, affection, or recognition. While the pursued may be victim for a while, the pursuer is often a lifetime victim of their own circumstances. The novel depicts how abandonment and addiction can lead to emotional prostitution in young women. McClearn's inspiration is mixed with stories of abandonment from former students, and McClearn's former addiction to love. Story Synopsis:Delilah Hutchens was an ordinary girl, whose only struggle was determining if God was real. But after her mother's sudden abandonment and her father's love affair with alcohol, Delilah's ordinary home turned upside down; forcing her to denounce God and turn to emotional prostitution. Her first victim was her first love, J.B. but when he doesn't seek the same kind of fulfillment, her emotional rampage spins out of control. Delilah's story strips fairytales we've been fed of "happily ever after." Readers can connect intimately with Delilah as she uses diary entries to develop her message. By the end of the novel, you will discover one of two facts: 1) You KNOW an emotional prostitute; or2) You ARE an emotional prostitute.
As an ex-prostitute, the author penned a collection of letters addressed to johns and other significant figures in her life from start-to-finish as a trafficked victim, confronting each individual with words on a page. "It required me to tell myself the truth and then get to a place where I could tell others as well. It was a journey through shame, through anger, through grief. Writing these letters made me push through just simply being "mad" at someone... It made me truly discover why. This book has been the foundation of my recovery." Though non a memoir, the book reads more like a collection of short stories of true crime, collectively taking you through one woman's eleven year journey in the sex trade, written by a survivor of human trafficking. The author's intent is to bring awareness to the role of demand on those entrapped and enslaved in the sex trade.
In her memoir series Diary of a Middle-Age Sex Goddess, Elizabeth J. Winters Waite explores the complexities of life for a single mother in her sexual prime. Bridging the gap between Sex and the City and The Golden Girls, her stories detail raising three boys, running a successful all-female accounting firm, and pursuing passions that grow her soul, all while trying to get laid—or trying not to get laid, whichever the case may be— while on the never-ending quest for true love. In Fragile Flower, the first volume in the series, Waite’s youngest son turns ten and, for his birthday, asks for a stepfather. Being a dutiful mother, Waite enrolls in three different dating sites and goes on fifty-three first dates—all in one year! But jumping back into the dating game after so many years isn’t easy. What are The Rules for being forty-something and back on the scene? How does a middle-age sex goddess protect her heart, her hearth and her family of three young sons while looking for love? Is it still considered “kissing frogs” when she can find something to like about everyone she goes out with?
I AM A PROFESSIONAL. Expert. Lover. Daughter. Friend. Listener. Worker. Pleasure is my business. This diary is my truth. It's soaked in my blood and sweat. Nina, based in Goa, values her freedom and her loved ones more than anything else. Most men love to talk to her about their fears, passions, dark secrets, pain,grief and suffering. Like a seasoned therapist she holds on to their dark secrets while counselling them and mothering them. A young IPS Officer, the daring encounter specialist, haunted by her mother’s gruesome murder and the obsession to solve it finds solace in Nina. A most wanted killer for hire, secretly in love with a girl, seeks Nina's help and advice for his love life and romance. A mentally challenge boy discovering his sexuality finds guidance and a friend for life in Nina. Three young fanatic students blinded by fundamentalism, and dogma, find their life upside down as Nina opens their eyes to the many possibilities of life. A serial killer targets young girls in Goa. The police are under immense pressure to solve the case and they turn the mentally challenged boy into a scapegoat, the serial killer. Nina takes it upon herself to prove that the boy is innocent. To prove his innocence she will have to catch the serial killer. She teams up with her group of friends and goes on the wildest and the most dangerous chase of her life. She will have to make her way through Russian mafia, drug traffickers and arms dealers to solve the riddle and nab the psychopath. WARNING: This diary will capture your heart and blow your mind. Twisty. Sublime. Original. Hypnotic. Un-settling. Prepare to be obsessed.
In the tradition of The Vagina Monologues and PostSecret, this provocative collection takes a peek behind bedroom doors?satisfying our insatiable desires to look into the private lives of ordinary people Arianne Cohen spent four years collecting 1,500 Sex Diaries and in this book she takes us on a tantalizing tour of American bedrooms through the all-new, provocative, often moving, sometimes shocking, always entertaining real diaries of forty Sex Diarists. From the Madly-In-Love 17-Year-Old Who Might be Pregnant to the Cheating Father of Three and the Grandma Who Is Perfectly Happy Alone, these tales of love, lust, longing and leaving will shock, titillate, and educate. Cohen serves as tour guide, drawing on her deep database of Sex Diaries for her incisive and illuminating commentary. Cohen was the first editor of the Sex Diaries column, a popular feature in New York magazine, editing it from 2007 to 2010. Her work regularly appears in Marie Claire and the New York Times and she is a contributing editor at Woman's Day. She is executive producing a TV reality series based on this book. Presents a groundbreaking portrait of relationships in America?including myriad options beyond single, dating, and married Includes Sex Diaries of straight, gay, bi, single, married, young, and older Sex Diarists, published here for the first time Gives readers tips on how to evaluate their own relationships and sex lives Sex is everywhere in our culture?yet how people best connect and disconnect is largely a mystery. The Sex Diaries Project turns the lights on to reveal the secrets that lie behind closed bedroom doors.
Miss Bangkok is a vivid, powerful and moving memoir of a life spent in prostitution in Thailand. Poor and uneducated, Bua Boonmee escaped an abusive marriage only to end up in the go-go bars of Patpong. There, in the notorious red-light district of Bangkok, she succumbed to prostitution in an effort to support her family. Bua’s story is one of resilience and courage in the face of abuse and poverty. Her confessions will make you laugh and cry, cringe and applaud. She will change your perception of prostitution forever.
Warning – The Scarlett series is erotica. If you have a problem with hot, steamy sex, then this short story isn't for you! Book 1-When Scarlett's sister gives her a diary for Christmas, Scarlett decides New Year's Day is the best time to start logging her sexual experiences. Scarlett loves her job and records all the dirty details into this diary. What happens, though, when one of Scarlett's clients begins to step over the professional boundary, leaving Scarlett questioning the very job she loves? Book 2-In book two, Scarlett continues to recount her steamy encounters in her diary, revealing just how much fun her job is. We follow her through the month of February and find out exactly what a high class prostitute does for Valentine's Day. Scarlett also decides to take a chance with Jake. Will she be able to let him into her life and maintain the profession she loves so much? Book 3-Going to work on Valentine's Day seemed like a drag at first until Scarlett receives the surprise of a lifetime from a special someone. Scarlett crosses a professional boundary, leaving her with conflicting emotions. As Scarlett writes in her diary, she tries to figure out her feelings for two men. Meanwhile, trouble is brewing at home, and Scarlett may be too late to help. Book 4- With her sister missing and a dangerous ex-boyfriend out to hurt her, Scarlett's life just got a little crazier. However, Scarlett insists on continuing the job she loves. After a couple of rather interesting clients, Scarlett is realizing more and more how much James means to her. Is the life of a high class prostitute becoming boring and tedious? Book 5- May rolls around, and Scarlett is going about business as usual. She finds herself dreading the job she always loved and is missing James more than she would ever have imagined. It becomes clear to Scarlett what she really wants in life, but will it be too late?
After the death of her father, Rose Zarelli struggles to contol her feelings and manage her life as a freshman in high school.
In her examination of neglected diaristic texts, Anne-Marie Millim expands the field of Victorian diary criticism by complicating the conventional notion of diaries as mainly private sources of biographical information. She argues that for Elizabeth Rigby Eastlake, Henry Crabb Robinson, George Eliot, George Gissing, John Ruskin, Edith Simcox and Gerard Manley Hopkins, the exposure or publication of their diaries was a real possibility that they either coveted or feared. Millim locates the diary at the intersection of the public and private spheres to show that well-known writers and public figures of both sexes exploited the diary's self-reflexive, diurnal structure in order to enhance their creativity and establish themselves as authors. Their object was to manage, rather than to indulge or repress, their emotions for the purposes of perfecting their observational and critical skills. Reading these diaries as literary works in their own right, Millim analyses their crucial role in the construction of authorship. By relating these Victorian writers' diaries to their publications and to contemporary works of cultural criticism, Millim shows the multifarious ways in which diaristic practices, emotional management and professional output corresponded to experiences of the literary marketplace and to nineteenth-century codes of propriety.
The witty, sexy sequel to Tracy Quan’s best selling ‘Diary of a Manhattan Call Girl’. Another hot story from Mischief Books.