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I have mixed feelings about this book. It started out pretty interesting and there are parts that I enjoyed, but at the same time it could have been so much better.
I liked the characters, the openness and the communication, it was actually nice reading about it. At the same time the first book of the series (didn't read the others yet) deals mostly with Noah and Tobias' relationship, the start of it, and I would have liked to find out more things about them individually. There are some, but not enough. I am pretty sure more will be revealed in the sequels and that's probably the only thing making me want to continue reading the series.
The book reads very easily. There are a few moments that stand out a bit, but overall I'd say it is pretty forgettable. It didn't stir anything, I couldn't fully get into it, I didn't feel strongly for the characters. I highly doubt this will change in the sequels, but I am curious.
As for the BDSM aspect of it, not bad, but not great either. The scenes are okay, but that's about it. I wouldn't say it is hot. I am not a big fan of the writing style, but as I said it reads easily.
Overall there's nothing spectacular about the first book of the series, I wouldn't necessarily recommend it, but eh, a lot of people seem to have really enjoyed it so maybe give it a try.
***4.5
From the age of eight and until very recently I always had dogs among my pets. A ragtag collection of mutts of different sizes very dear to me. Besides teaching them to stay, not bark like lunatics for no reason, and let me know when they “had to go” I never felt compelled to teach them any tricks of the roll-over-give-me-your-paw variety. Couldn't see the point of it ... I loved and enjoyed them without the extras but I do like to walk the talk so if formal BDSM gets your jollies going I want to understand on some level and so I read BDSM books. The ones with Doms and Masters and Subs wanting to be claimed. The ones with clubs, dungeons, St. Andrew's Crosses, scenes, safe words, people being called Master/Sir and others being called ‘boy' or ‘pet' being trained to ‘walk to heel', kneel, keep their eyes low, and do things like ‘present' etc. I get the Subs and love them. The Doms are another story. I waver between hating them for being sadistic a#%holes (no matter that the Subs enjoy the pain/humiliation/service) and wondering why someone would want the responsibility of being someone else's everything. Other D/s books, the informal “here's a belt, let's use this to tie you up” variety have my number on speed dial. This was research. That's my story.
I did the audio for “Submission”, the first in the Deviations Series, narrated by Maxx Power and while he didn't bowl me over I didn't hate it. As a narrator he's very good with precise and clear diction and well marked differentiation between character voices ... perhaps a little clinical in tone? I don't know. It works well for this type of BDSM story. My hiccup came with the voice he does for Noah when Noah is in his submissive role. To my ears he sounds almost a bit childish but a fake childish. Kind of like a faux innocent voice but then maybe I'm just being fastidious. I'd say give it a go. You'll be entertained because the story itself is good. I'd recommend it.
“Submission” is the first in a five book series which chronicles a BDSM relationship from its inception. It falls within what I've coined the FSOG progeny and I in no way mean that as a slur and I can confidently say that this book surpases FSOG by leaps and bounds. The writing is good and neither MCs is a shy innocent virgin or under 3o Master of The Universe. Still some of the conventions have been kept.
Noah is cop by day but submissive on nights and weekends. After some pretty bad experiences he's been coming to a certain BDSM club where everyone knows your name, think Cheers but with dungeons and adult playrooms, in the hopes of finding a Dom or Master to take him on and satisfy some deep-seated needs. What these needs are remains a bit vague apart from the general “let another shoulder all responsibility while controlling me for my own good” variety. I suppose more will be explored/revealed in future books and I'm pretty patient reader.
Dr. Tobias Vincent is a veterinarian, of the farm animal variety, by day and Dom extraordinaire during his off hours. It's almost like a super-hero with his civilian persona and of course he has money which allows for all the toys. And I mean ALL THE TOYS. Lets just say there's a former horse stable full of modified stalls.
Tobias and Noah are set up by Bradford, the manager of The Club, who also apparently functions as a matchmaker for BDSM couples, and they hit the ground running.
I liked it very much. I liked that though the authors don't do a primer per se for BDSM newbies you could be a total babe in the woods and understand what the the dynamics are. Primarily this is because Noah himself though a submissive seems to be confused as to what that is or why he needs it. Thankfully Master Tobias is here to pick up the slack and clarify:
“You know,” Tobias said easily, “I firmly believe that regular discipline lessens the need for punishment.” Another snap and the two lines were neatly connected. “But then, punishment is often a rewarding experience. What do you think?”
Noah hunched his shoulders and then flexed them. He puffed out air with a rough sound and cleared his throat. “Punishment is about learning from mistakes, discipline is about learning not to make them,” he said quickly. It was obviously a phrase he'd studied carefully at some point. He took two quick breaths, held them a moment, and when he exhaled he relaxed somewhat. “I'll accept the first, not the second.” Tobias laid a fourth stroke on Noah's back and stepped close, pressing one finger into him and slowly thrusting back and forth. Noah groaned. “Oh, God.” His head dropped forward. “Mistakes are allowed, made up for, and forgiven. Discipline lets you know yourself, lets you gain strength.”
Featured Series
5 primary books6 released booksDeviations is a 6-book series with 5 primary works first released in 2006 with contributions by Chris Owen and Jodi Payne.