Fox Furry Eileen Glass 9781520867458 Books
Download As PDF : Fox Furry Eileen Glass 9781520867458 Books
Excerpt
I wanted what she offered. A handsome man, she said, who I’d be the companion to for the rest of my life. And now I remember what she’d asked me. You like a man, right? Like she was taking and fulfilling my order.
But I didn’t consent to be caged and collared.
Or maybe I did?
I remember the phrase temporary discomfort for a life of wealth and happiness from her mouth as she summarized the terms.
Did I consent to this? Did I sign to let her turn me into whatever I am? A tailed, long-eared thing with too much hair. A mutant, basically. A Fox Furry.
Collin is about to be homeless. He was desperately looking for job, but now, thanks to a crazy gypsy lady who wants to sell him in her petshop, he has ears and a tail. He doesn’t look bad. In fact, he kind of likes the black-tipped ears and his silky fur. But he can’t go back to Earth. His transformation is physical, not magical, and that means permanent.
He’s technically a pet by the laws of Pangea. All he can hope for is that Sean, the handsome cop detective who rescued him, will want to keep him.
Fox Furry Eileen Glass 9781520867458 Books
** May have spoilers **It's overall a satisfying read, with a cluster of magic and fantasy. The part where I wasn't very into was how consent was portrayed (Crone got her answers in a very shady way and didn't disclose fully what would happen) and how the 'bad guys' essentially win. It's kind of like a dystopian in that human trafficking essentially becomes 'legal', and it rubs me the wrong way with how 'they're happy in the end' reason somehow made it okay for abuse and loss of freedom.
Not that I didn't enjoy it, I did, especially the parts where Collen and Sean were able to bond and cuddle, Sean and his coworkers being reasonably sensible, Collen fighting Vander and his plight to return back to Sean. The representation of society, consent, and morality are somewhat controversial which can make mixed feelings.
Product details
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Tags : Fox Furry [Eileen Glass] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. <u>Excerpt</u> I wanted what she offered. A handsome man, </i> she said, who I’d be the companion to for the rest of my life. And now I remember what she’d asked me. You like a man,Eileen Glass,Fox Furry,Independently published,152086745X,Fiction Romance Fantasy,Fiction Romance Gay
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Fox Furry Eileen Glass 9781520867458 Books Reviews
this hit my good spot. yaoi, furry and a pretty good seme. i dont mind the whole slavery thing. lol id sign up for transforming and being a hot guys pet.
It was a fun book. Not too thrilled how it just ends though
First, to be clear, this is erotica...NOT sci fi, not even romance. The blurb made me think it might be a comedy and the free sample made me think it might be fantasy adventure.
The core premise is the sad sack protagonist lost his job, and responds to a "Help Wanted" Sign. He is then drugged (or affected by a spell?) and in this altered state accepts an offer he doesn't fully understand. He then is transported to another planet and goes through an excruciating process that turns him into a fox person custom made to fit some rich guy's fetish. He finds himself in a cage until the cops rescue him. On his new world he has few legal rights, and his legal status is ambiguous because he is not precisely human or a member of any recognized sentient species. The best part of the book was the "bureaucracy" segment where he was shopped around to various agencies all of whom though he wasn't their department. This was the best part of the book...it gave us a hint of a more realized world.
Unfortunately, the book degenerated into indulging the author's fetishes...which happen not to be ones I share. There were a lot of problematic issues...despite the fact it was VERY clear what was done to the protagonist was awful, he treats it as ambiguous. The flashback scene in our world show the author clear has never met a gay guy, and is basing things on stereotypes. And as the book goes on it becomes increasingly clear the protagonist is being written as a women. This is quite common with gay men written by women...but they seldom are this blatant about it.
I was hoping for an ending were the sex trafficking ring was broken up ad the hero''s legal issues were resolved, but that didn't really happen. The book just kind of abruptly stopped. (As this author's books tend to...)
A romance involving a down-on-his-luck, abducted, very short gay man who signs a contract with a witch for a life as a companion to a sexy man, only to discover the contract includes physically altering him into a new species--a fox furry. I thought it was an interesting idea, but had a few issues with the way it unfolded.
The book is from the POV of Collin, the man turned furry. He has severe anxiety, but no treatment is ever mentioned. His thoughts are also very problematic because it makes it seem like, because he signed a contact while under the influence of a weird truth serum with dupious side effects, that it meant he consented to being abducted for body modification and slavery.
So, he's abducted, surgically modified, stripped of his rights of personhood and turned into a pet, then put into a cage where a shock collar will torture him if he does anything wrong. But the end of the book, he's happy for it because he likes being a furry and pampered, so long as the guy who owns him is of his choosing. And that's considered acceptable...why? Where are the repercussions of being tortured? Where is the PTSD? Why was his anxiety mentioned but never treated?
There's a lot of triggers here with no resolution and that bothered me.
I also thought that Collin didn't ask enough questions. He sort of just accepted his lot in life and went with it, which is so weird to me I can't even tell you.
I liked the cop, though. Sean was awesome. Sort of too awesome, actually--I mean, he could do no wrong, and so that's not all that great for character development, but perfectly acceptable for a romance where half the fun is in Prince Charming saving the day and being sexy.
The world building had a lot of unexplored potential, so I hope, if there is ever a sequel, more on the culture will be explored.
Overall, though, I wasn't very impressed.
** May have spoilers **
It's overall a satisfying read, with a cluster of magic and fantasy. The part where I wasn't very into was how consent was portrayed (Crone got her answers in a very shady way and didn't disclose fully what would happen) and how the 'bad guys' essentially win. It's kind of like a dystopian in that human trafficking essentially becomes 'legal', and it rubs me the wrong way with how 'they're happy in the end' reason somehow made it okay for abuse and loss of freedom.
Not that I didn't enjoy it, I did, especially the parts where Collen and Sean were able to bond and cuddle, Sean and his coworkers being reasonably sensible, Collen fighting Vander and his plight to return back to Sean. The representation of society, consent, and morality are somewhat controversial which can make mixed feelings.
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