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Showing posts with label House of Pleasure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label House of Pleasure. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

'Simply Sinful' House of Pleasure #2 by Kate PEARCE

From the BLURB:

Forced to wed at a young age, Abigail Beecham is tired of living in a sexless marriage. She longs to succumb to the delicious pleasures of pure carnal lust that she has only read about. And if her husband can't satisfy her erotic needs, she's ready to find a man who can...Peter Howard is accustomed to unusual sexual requests. His ten years as a slave in a Turkish brothel left him skilled in sensual delights. But there is little that actually arouses him-- - until he meets Abigail. Now he longs to tease and torment her until she cries out with pleasure. Maybe then he'll finally experience that exquisite feeling of bliss he so desperately desires...

This is the second book in Kate Pearce’s ‘House of Pleasure’ erotica series.

‘Simply Sinful’ is the story of Peter Howard, who we met in ‘Simply Sexual’. Peter was imprisoned in a Turkish brothel with his friend Valentin Sokorvsky. During his time in the brothel Peter became addicted to sex and opium; ten years later he has managed to kick the drug addiction, but is unable to slacken his sexual appetites. Peter enjoys sex with men and women, a dangerous predilection in 18th century England where ‘unnatural’ sex can see you take a short drop and a sudden stop.
But since his good friend (and occasional bed partner) Valentin has settled happily into married life, Peter is feeling the lack of his own constant companion. He is under no impression that he could be anyone’s husband, but he is sick of being a pity fuck or bit of frivolous fun. And then he is approached by the wealthy James Beecham.... James and Peter share a steamy night together, both men half infatuated after their tryst. But there is more to James’s interest... he wants Peter to help him impregnate his wife.

James was forced to married Abigail Beecham, his young cousin and childhood friend, when the girl was just sixteen and James’s father had just discovered his son’s preference for men. James and Abigail are fond of one another, with sibling affection, but in the 15 years of their marriage they have never enjoyed sex with each other. Abigail knows and understands James’s love of men, and is content to live in peace in their country home while James cads about town. But now Abigail wants a child, and James owes it to her to give her one... which is where Peter will step in. James knows of Peter’s affection for men and women, he has seen firsthand Peter’s sensuous threesomes, and he is willing to try anything to reconcile his marriage bed.

Having read ‘Simply Sexual’ I know Kate Pearce likes to write tricky plots in her romances. The storyline is complicated ten-fold in this second novel. However, whereas I thought Pearce admirably reconciled all of the difficulties in Valentin’s story... I don’t think she quite managed to do the same for Peter’s HEA.

Reading this book I just felt sad for Abigail. She was forced into marriage at 16 to prevent her family’s disgrace. She has spent her formative years shying away in her country home while knowing her husband seeks male bed-partners in London. She asks but one thing of James, to give her a child, and his response is to bring his current lover to their marriage bed.
Abigail spends most of the novel never sure whether James or Peter genuinely likes her in their bed, or if she is simply in the way of their romance. Likewise, as a reader I got the impression that they were just tolerating her (James especially). I felt sad for Abigail’s predicament, but I also sympathized with James’s position – being gay in stuffy ton society.
And then I also felt a twinge of pain for Peter – who has been everyone’s bed partner, but nobody’s love.
All around it’s a triumvirate of sadness, and I don’t think Kate Pearce ever reconciles any of the character’s pain.

Above all I wanted Abigail to be happy. At one point Peter tells her she should have her own love affair, and I couldn’t help but agree. I never thought that Abigail would find happiness in between Peter and James, never sure if they cared for her or tolerated her – I really wanted Abigail to find her own romance with someone else.

I think Kate Pearce was really forcing the triangle, desperate to make this threesome come across as a romantic match. But it just wasn’t. It was sad. Nobody really got what they wanted out of the arrangement. Peter was acting as a sort of sexual plaything, bought into James and Abigail’s marriage bed for his outlandish appetites, despite the fact that at the beginning of the book he was hinting of a growing disdain for his flippant couplings. James clearly wanted more from Peter, to maintain a relationship with him without his wife between them. And then of course there was Abigail, I found her saddest of all. Abigail maintains that the reason she is willing to debauch herself between her husband and his lover is that she wants a child.... she hints that the main reason is to provide James with an heir and get her mother-in-law off her back. But it was clear to me that Abigail was desperate for someone to love her unconditionally – the love between a mother and child, the type of unbreakable bond that Abigail never found romantically. Abigail never articulates this need, but I thought it was blindingly obvious... but, then again, maybe I’m reading between lines that just aren’t there?

Becuase of all of the above, I could never turn my mind off and enjoy the sex scenes. I kept wondering at Abigail’s feelings, and if she felt ‘in the way’ between Peter and James. I know if I was Abigail I would be convinced that both men were merely abiding me in their bed... waiting for the time when they could be alone together.
James gripped the back of his chair, his expression serious. "No, not tonight." His fingers caressed the satin brocade. "I hope she comes back. For the first time I can see her as a woman as well as my friend." He smiled at Peter. "Thank you for giving me that."
Peter shrugged. "If I said that pleasure was entirely mine, would you call me out?"
James's answering smile was slightly crooked. "Only if you both decided I had become irrelevant."
One of my biggest complaints about this novel was how Kate Pearce wrecked ‘Simply Sexual’ for me. Valentin and Sara make important appearances in this second novel, but their side-story only worked to unravel the ‘happily ever after’ reached in ‘Simply Sexual’. Valentin admits to Peter that he won’t be satisfied with just Sara in his bed, and that he *needs* Peter to join in their marriage... the implication being that if not Peter, then he may just seek additional bed partners. How sad. Here I was thinking that Valentin had found a sexual equal in Sara and someone he truly loved... turns out it all meant nothing without Peter as a third wheel. Now I was feeling sad for Abigail AND Sara, two women who crave trust and commitment but have fallen in love with men who seem incapable of providing either?

Despite my grumblings I must say that Pearce kept me reading. I was drawn into the character’s complicated lives and sexual forays. Pearce never lost my interest, and in fact I do wonder if I would have enjoyed the book more if I’d treated it (and the characters) more flippantly? If I hadn’t been so caught-up in Abigail’s predicament and just enjoyed this as a good bit of erotica?

I don’t know how I feel about this series now. I absolutely adored ‘Simply Sexual’ and was thrilled at the prospect of sinking my teeth into an erotica series that is five-books-deep... but things sort of fell apart for me in this second book. I will probably keep going with the series, but I hope not all of the books revolve around Kate Pearce trying to force love triangles and threesomes onto her characters... sometimes monogamy works too, even in erotica novels.

2/5

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

'Simply Sexual' House of Pleasure #1 by Kate PEARCE

From the BLURB:

Sexual Satisfaction

Ten years as a sex slave in a Turkish brothel left Lord Valentin Sokorvsky with an insatiable appetite for sex. Now the time has come for him to marry, but finding a woman who can satisfy his lustful desires proves a challenge...until he meets Sara and all he can think about is having her lie under his rock-hard body, begging him to taste and touch her...

Sensual Seduction

Sara Harrison knows she should be shocked and scandalized by Lord Sokorvsky's bold advances, but instead she is secretly aroused by this sensual, seductive man. For beneath her calm and composed manner is a wanton woman who longs for a man's intimate caress. She is most willing to be educated in the art of sensuality, to receive and give pleasure and to succumb to the wild desire that knows no limits.

This is the first book in Kate Pearce’s ‘House of Pleasure’ erotica series.

Lord Valentin Sokorvsky and his friend Peter Howard are infamous in London. When the boys were only 11-years-old and travelling with Valentin’s father they were abducted and held captive in a Turkish brothel... where they remained for 7 long years. Valentin and Peter were rescued by fellow Englishman, Mr. Harrison, and now ten years later Valentin sees fit to repay his debt to Harrison, by marrying one of his daughters’s and saving him from financial ruin. The daughter in question is Sara Harrison, a twenty six-year-old spinster who was too clever and stubborn for a ton marriage. Valentin chooses Sara out of the three Harrison girls to be his bride, because something about her fiery indignation at his rakish behaviour sets him alight. Valentin is also drawn to Sara’s innocence... a stark contrast to his own dark sexual appetites.

By the end of the opening chapter of ‘Simply Sexual’ I thought Ms. Pearce had set herself an impossible task for this erotic romance. To begin with, the opening scene involves Sara spying on Valentin as he roots her maid. That’s not exactly the most romantic introduction between a book’s protagonists.
Within the next few pages Pearce also sets up Valentin’s sordid and sad back-story of having been a sex slave in a Turkish brothel. Valentin makes it very clear that he and his fellow-captive, Peter, were not made to perform sexual acts until they were old enough to get an erection (about sixteen), but the sexual abuse and enslavement is likewise an uncomfortable storyline to swallow in this ‘romance’.
I really didn’t know how Pearce would handle Valentin’s character and his uncomfortable history.... but I came away pleasantly surprised and a little bit impressed with Kate Pearce.

‘Simply Sexual’ is the dark chocolate of erotica – it’s a rich and heady read, not to be attempted by novice erotica readers. The sex scenes are explicit and blush-worthy, inventive and frequent. Kate Pearce is certainly adept at writing sensual smut, and though there is sex in just about every chapter, I was never bored or tempted to skim-read. The sex is heightened by a lot of it takeing place in London’s ‘House of Pleasure’ (which the series is loosely based around). The House is owned by Madame Helene and is a dark den of antiquity and sensuality – there are different rooms of different eras, a little something for everyone. If you feel like playing a sacrificial virgin, step into the Egyptian room complete with stone-slab and oiling slave-men. Or you can watch aerobatic karma sutra being performed in the Harem room.
Valentin and Peter discovered London’s House of Pleasure upon their arrival back in London, when both men found that they needed their sexual appetites sated.

The story about Valentin and Peter being former sex-slaves is a touchy one, but also rather interesting. In the blurb it sounds ridiculous and seedy, but Pearce actually treats the back-story with a great deal of care and ingenuity. Their time spent in the Turkish brothel, pleasing men and women alike, scarred Peter and Valentin forever. They were subjected to the worst forms of sexual abuse and performance during their formidable teen years, and their time in the brothel has impacted them greatly... especially where both men’s sexual appetites are concerned. Both Peter and Valentin have high sex-drives, leading them to think that monogamy would be impossible for them. Their appetites also run to the dark side, and the men are concerned about what would happen to them if their preferences were made public.

Everything changes for Valentin when he marries Sara. He finds that his appetites can only be satisfied by his wife, and for the first time since returning from Turkey he wants to try and be faithful to one woman.
I was thinking about your breasts.” He glanced at her averted profile. “If I might be even more specific, I spent several hours wondering what colour your nipples are. Some women’s nipples match the colour of their lips, others are a surprise. Now, your lips are a deep rose pink. Are your nipples the same shade?”
Valentin and Sara had a lot of obstacles before them, not least of which were Valentin’s psychological and emotional scars. It made for a fascinating coupling, and it was a case of ‘warts and all’ between these two. I hate when, in historical romances, a male character is touted as being the rakiest of rakes, but upon falling in love he easily reforms his rakish ways. That wasn’t the case in ‘Simply Sexual’ – and actually Valentin and Sara have to become quite inventive and flexible in their marriage. As much as I hate an easily reformed rake, an ‘open relationship’ happy ending never sits well with me either. I don’t want to give anything away.... but Pearce writes around these problems with aplomb and delicacy, and I was pleasantly surprised and satisfied by the resolutions reached, even though they were never neatly tied up. I will warn that some people won’t be happy with the ambiguous, somewhat open-ended resolutions that Valentin and Sara reach.... but like I said, this is not an erotica novel for novices.

Kate Pearce sets herself up for a lot of tricky and sometimes uncomfortable storylines in ‘Simply Sexual’. But it all comes together to make for a delightful and darkly sensual read. I will definitely be picking up the rest of the books in her ‘House of Pleasure’ series (currently with 5 books, a 6th to be released in 2011).

4/5



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