attractive women. Upon meeting the ravishing redhead Jessica Kendricks, he is immediately attracted to her, although she’s exceedingly formal and somewhat distant. This confuses and arouses him, and Carter is determined to conquer her.
Later, Jessica informs him that she is sexually dominant, and she only gets involved with men who submit to her. Carter anticipates enjoying some kinky sex, only to learn that she’ll require him to wear a chastity device all the time. Curiosity gets the better of him, and he agrees to her terms.
After his first week in chastity, Jessica informs him that she plans to keep him in such a state for months. She sees it as a privilege to be allowed to serve her, but Carter is unsure if he can comply. While she’ll release him if he wants, he will not be permitted to serve her ever again. The question is, can Carter be the submissive man Jessica requires?
Except from Chaste Carter:
He made a quick call to his assistant, asking her to ensure that he would not be bothered for the next 15-20 minutes, before locking his door as added insurance. Removing his pants and underwear, he went to work securing the harness. The belt around his waist was easy, but he found squatting and aligning the tip of the plug with his anus to be more of a chore than he expected. He pressed the smooth, rounded tip to the opening, but each time it slipped away, frustrating Carter and making him think this was going to be an impossible task.
Only the threat of being unable to see Jessica compelled him to continue. Finally, after too many attempts to count, his eyes widened when the conical top of the plug forced its way inside of him, growing wider with each centimeter. Every muscle in his midsection tensed in fear at this rather unwelcome development. He tried to ignore the involuntary resistance and continued to push, knowing the consequences of failure. He let out a small, involuntary squeak of distress as his rear opened wider and wider to admit the invader. How big is a ‘rather small butt plug’ anyway?
Finally, with great relief, the pressure changed as his sphincter closed around the plug where it narrowed dramatically at the base. The sensation was new and amazing. He took several deep breaths, hoping that would help him relax and dull the ache that came in waves as his muscles responded to the unfamiliar feelings. It worked, at least to some degree, but it remained uncomfortable.
Author
Jamie Sterling
I’ve been writing something since I was about five years old. I can remember hand-writing stories in a spiral notebook and bringing them to my parents to get their opinions. I took every creative writing class I could in high school and college, wrote for my school and local newspapers, and wrote whatever creative thoughts popped into my head. In 8th grade, I spend my free time in and after school composing a short novel (handwritten) that was some sort of combination of all of my interests at the time woven into a crime thriller. I no longer have that notebook, but I can remember the story almost verbatim (but I won’t recite it unless I’ve had way too many drinks)!
I’m a fairly practical type of person so, while my heart wanted to be a novelist, I entered first into the world of journalism, and then technical writing. It paid the bills but I warn you, if you do it five days a week and you don’t manage to exercise your creative writing muscles in some way with relative frequency, you might lose it. I nearly did – in my late 20s and early 30s, everything I wrote was about the latest software feature of my company, executive marketing material, or directions to perform this task or that task. I still had good ideas, but it seemed to get harder and harder to follow through and complete the works I started.
I didn’t realize it at the time, but I was suffocating that creative muscle.
As often happens, sometimes bad news turned out to be good news. I got fired from a job that took up all of my time, and I was devastated, thinking my career had been ruined. In order to keep food on the table, I took a long-term contract position as a technical writer with a major, to remain unnamed US corporation. Well, they may have had a requirement to have someone in this position, but they certainly didn’t have much work to go along with it. I had a couple of weekly tasks and, when a document came through, I had to review and edit it, but that added up to about 10 hours of work each week. The rest of the time was kind of boring, and I figured that my growth in the corporate world was over.
To my surprise, my boss literally took vacation from the day before Thanksgiving to the day after New Year’s. There was no development work permitted during this period, leaving me with absolutely nothing to do and no one to care. One day, I pulled out my personal laptop and starting writing. Eight hours a day, five days a week, I worked my way through the early chapters, doing everything I could to make believable characters and an engaging story. Even when my boss came back, he didn’t bother me very much, so I continued to sit in my little cubicle in the corner and pound away on the keyboard.
As usual, after about 25,000 words, I began to run out of steam. My characters became two- dimensional, quashing any conflict that might have driven the story, and I knew that this book would join all of the other ones in the “Books in Progress” folder on my laptop. Without having much else to do, I continued to plug away stubbornly, writing forced scenes that really didn’t work.
One day, I was reading a terrible passage in the book and wondering if I could ever make it work when I had an epiphany. Envisioning the scene as a movie in my head (which I always do when writing or reviewing any creative work), my heroine character turned toward me, anger etched all over her facial features, and yelled, “Why the hell would I not get mad about this?!”
This had never happened to me before. My character had become her own person and was speaking to me without any conscious direction on my part! Unsure whether I was having a breakdown, I entered her mind (or she entered mine, I’m still not sure) and the story just flowed. It might sound overly dramatic, but my fingers flew and I entered that zone where everything works. I couldn’t type her thoughts fast enough. And, once her part was over and it was the hero’s turn to respond, I asked him what he thought and allowed him to tell me. That’s the day I became a writer. I finished the book in the next four weeks, and that book is Captured Hunter, my first novel.
Now I’m still working a full-time position (with actual work!) and writing during my hour- long train commute to and from the office. My time to write is much more limited than those oddly-glorious days, but that has helped me to better focus my time and energy, improving my writing. Whether I publish one more book or 20 more books, I now know that I’ll be writing for the rest of my life.
Social Media and Contact information
Website
http://www.authorjamiesterling.com/
Social Media
• Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/JamieSterlingRomance/
• Twitter: @JamieSterling70
Writing Organizations
• Hudson Valley Romance Writers of America: http://www.hudsonvalleyrwa.org
Contact Information
Interview with Siren Publishing
Q: What made you decide to write BDSM romance?
A: While it’s become more acceptable in mainstream culture, there are still a lot of misconceptions about bondage and domination/submission among the general public. I wanted to spread the message that people can be very normal and mainstream, mentally healthy, yet still be into varying levels of kink. Anyone you run into during your day could go home and tie up or be tied up by their partner.
Q: When do you find time to write?
A: My commute is very long (about 75 minutes) but I take the train, so it’s pretty easy to sit down, open up my tiny little laptop which doesn’t even have a web browser, and spend the trip to and from work writing.
Q: How do you develop your plot and your characters? Do you draw a story outline, or write a bio about the individuals, or something else?
A: I used to make these enormous and highly-detailed outlines from start to finish, and I never once finished a book that originated from these outlines. As the type of person who likes everything in its place and all loose ends tied up neatly, I found that an outline took the human element – that is, our penchant to screw up, do selfish things, behave boorishly, or any other of a thousand character flaws – and made for stories with robots who never made bad decisions. One I learned to let my characters tell me what they wanted to do based on their personalities and backgrounds, I became a much better writer.
Q: What is the hardest part of writing?
A: Well, it’s several things, but they all come back to finding the time to write. I still work a full-time job and have to take care of a household, so exhaustion is a big one. Sometimes I’m just too tired to form the words. I’ll try very hard – I’ll force myself to sit in front of the computer, but soon my mind will drift and I’ll be totally out of the story. Or, if I had a really bad day at the office and I’m angry, my characters will shift into a very dark, evil mode, one that doesn’t really fit the person or the scene.
By
Jamie Sterling
Review
By
Heidi Lynn’s Book Reviews
First, I want to thank Jamie Sterling for providing me with this book so I could bring you this review.
Oh ladies Jamie Sterling has just written a book all for us in Chaste Carter!! Yes, finally a lead female character who is fully dominant in every way! It is about time someone writes an erotica book for us!!!
Jessica not only educates Carter but the readers in all things BDSM. Yes, from the meaning to the equipment, to the behavior, etc we actually get educated!
It was fun to read about a man being submissive when usually in books I read them being dominant. I liked seeing how weak and needy he was for release.
There was a very fun scene in a gentleman’s club where it ended up being Carter watching Jessica and a stripper get it on.
The book was a very short, fun, steamy read. It was full with a lot of sexual tension as well.
Jamie should explore more with this concept and write more within this genre. Jamie has a gift with this.
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