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Bliss

por Lisa Henry

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302786,912 (3)Ninguno
They're always happy.Rory James has worked hard all his life to become a citizen of the idyllic city-state of Beulah. Like every other kid born in the neighboring country of Tophet, he's heard the stories: No crime or pollution. A house and food for everyone. It's perfect, and Rory is finally getting a piece of it.So is Tate Patterson. He's from Tophet, too, but he's not a legal immigrant; he snuck in as a thief. A city without crime seems like an easy score, until he crashes into Rory during a getaway and is arrested for assaulting a citizen. Instead of jail, Tate is enrolled in Beulah's Rehabilitation through Restitution program. By living with and serving his victim for seven years, Tate will learn the human face of his crimes.If it seems too good to be true, that's because it is. Tate is fitted with a behavior-modifying chip that leaves him unable to disobey orders--any orders, no matter how dehumanizing. Worse, the chip prevents him from telling Rory, the one man in all of Beulah who might care about him, the truth: in a country without prisons, Tate is locked inside his own mind.… (más)
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non-con, rape and sexual slavery + sexual violence and exploitation.
a lot of those scenes were hard, thankfully Rory isn't a total prick and he's not doing the worst of them: he doesn't know, and by the end he does stand up.
i really liked this because it's difference, premise and subjects and themes, but then...
like looking back there was no plot really to speak of.
why was the chip made to make them into sexual slaves? what was the purpose of it? why and where did it origin from? we don't know, I suspect because it'd bring down this story pretty hard.
i think this should be revisited but in a totally different way, instead of for the oh so extreme sex. it has potential to be good, for the background and world to really shine, but it's too inconsistent and not fleshed out properly.
tbh i expected more, since Lisa Henry has done some real good stories.
in the end i can't rate it a 4, i just don't think it stacks up.
but it's definitely unique in this sea of slice of life M/M, and we definitely need more titles that differ and branch out. not sure this was the branching out I wanted. ( )
  Criticalnes | Jul 8, 2018 |
Free review copy. Warning: A lot of non-con. Beulah is a perfect community, safe from the violence and privation of the outside world. Rory is an outsider whose application to join Beulah has, against all odds, been approved; Tate is an outsider who broke in to steal and ends up assaulting Rory on his way out. When Tate is caught, he accepts a sentence of performing restitutionary service to Rory, but he doesn’t know that the sentence comes with a chip that, when implanted, makes him a willing slave, desperate to please Rory. Okay, so this is kink of a sex pollen-ish variety: Rory doesn’t understand that Tate doesn’t have a choice, and thinks that Tate legitimately wants him (even as he recognizes the power imbalance). I couldn’t ultimately get into it because it fell into the kink uncanny valley for me: Rory got over his suspicions about how eager Tate was to please way too quickly. Given how Tate actually begged to be given orders, I wasn’t persuaded by Rory’s willing suspension of disbelief, though I think I could’ve gotten there with a few more tweaks—people are indeed eager to convince themselves of things that make them more comfortable. I also had trouble with Rory “falling in love” with Tate, because again, he had no idea who Tate was according to the rules established by the narrative about the chip. On the good side: once Rory twigs, he immediately understands that what he did was rape and works to fix it, letting Tate's reactions guide him. I do wonder to what extent narratives like this have a structural similarity to classic Hollywood film: we spend most of the storytime indulging in the kink/watching the evil woman get away with being evil, and then at the end moral order is restored; but what do we remember? What part really gave us pleasure, the setup or the resolution? (To be clear, I’m totally okay with it being the setup! Otherwise I wouldn’t have read this.) ( )
1 vota rivkat | Sep 24, 2014 |
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They're always happy.Rory James has worked hard all his life to become a citizen of the idyllic city-state of Beulah. Like every other kid born in the neighboring country of Tophet, he's heard the stories: No crime or pollution. A house and food for everyone. It's perfect, and Rory is finally getting a piece of it.So is Tate Patterson. He's from Tophet, too, but he's not a legal immigrant; he snuck in as a thief. A city without crime seems like an easy score, until he crashes into Rory during a getaway and is arrested for assaulting a citizen. Instead of jail, Tate is enrolled in Beulah's Rehabilitation through Restitution program. By living with and serving his victim for seven years, Tate will learn the human face of his crimes.If it seems too good to be true, that's because it is. Tate is fitted with a behavior-modifying chip that leaves him unable to disobey orders--any orders, no matter how dehumanizing. Worse, the chip prevents him from telling Rory, the one man in all of Beulah who might care about him, the truth: in a country without prisons, Tate is locked inside his own mind.

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