Threesomes, gang bangs, sadomasochism, gay porn, even sex shown from inside a woman’s vagina using a special camera. However, somewhat old-fashioned erotic literature finds its admirers: after all, the human imagination is the best director; immersed in the author’s erotic scenes, the reader’s imagination adds those details that add maximum emotion.
In addition to short pornographic stories presented on specialized websites, you can also find full-length works with a coherent plot and character structure online. Some of them aim to depict all sorts of explicit scenes and settings, with the characters and plot playing a secondary role, while others simply add spice to the action with erotic descriptions.“Justine” by the Marquis de Sade
Published in 1771, this novel is striking in its frankness. The plot revolves around Justine, a young orphan seeking a way to support herself in unwelcoming Paris. Expelled from the convent where she was raised, Justine seeks help from a priest, but he, inflamed by her beauty, begins to grope her buttocks. The girl is chaste and adheres to Catholic morality, but almost everyone she encounters seeks to corrupt her. It’s hardly accidental that the author emphasizes the girl’s innocence in every erotic scene—it’s bound to be arousing, and her resistance inflames the reader’s sensual fantasies rather than provokes pity.
The owner of the hotel where Justine is staying, Madame Desroches, facilitates her introduction to the depraved Madame Delmons. Delmons attempts to coerce Justine into lesbian sex and also initiates a threesome: the girl is present during Delmons’s intercourse with her young lover, and the depraved woman forces Justine to guide the young man’s penis into her vagina.
While Justine’s adventures are generally quite gripping in themselves—she ends up in prison, in a gang of thieves, and in the clutches of depraved monks who commit sodomy—the main action centers around the description of numerous orgies. The author depicts every conceivable perversion—anal licking after going to the toilet, rape, and even coprophagia.“Blind Fury” by Howard Hines
The novel was written in the wake of the 1994 film of the same name and, like the film, tells the story of blind Vietnam War hero Nick Parker, who, upon returning to his homeland, engages in a battle with a criminal gang. The book, unlike the film, is simply crammed with pornographic scenes. The very beginning of the novel describes a steamy sex scene between a young mulatto woman and four men. And although Nick dreams of it all, it’s described in considerable detail—from the large penises to the woman’s passionate moans.
Nick works at a mental health service and often overhears his partner’s conversations with dissatisfied women; Essentially, his colleague is having phone sex. The book includes depictions of Nick’s passionate intimate relationship with a local girl in Vietnam, descriptions of the heroine’s fantasies about sex with Parker, after which she has to change her wet panties, and a detailed scene of losing her virginity.
All the scenes in the novel are conveyed in a rather harsh, masculine style: a penis, for example, is compared to a mixer, and a mulatto woman, after being raped by four men, realizes that she liked it and wants more.“Slave Mountain” by John Norman
John Norman’s 1977 novel “The Slave Girl of Gor” has become somewhat of a cult classic. The book describes the relationship between an Earth girl and a man from the planet Gor, where a caste system reigns, and she becomes the property of one of the locals. As a slave, she is forced to wear a collar, wear a short robe, and sexually service her master and other men. The slaves participate in a game: the girl eludes her pursuers while draped in bells. The one who captures her rapes her in front of a crowd. The girl receives food only from her master’s hand, and she must kiss the cup of drink before serving it to her master or his friends.
Overall, the book describes a classic relationship between a submissive and a dominant, and BDSM culture has eagerly embraced the book’s concept. Entire communities have sprung up, reenacting scenes from the novel, much like Tolkienists do.“The Story of O” by Dominique Aury, 1954
Another opus on the theme of thematic relationships: the author depicts the secluded world of a castle in Roissy, France, where invited guests indulge in unbridled debauchery in a BDSM setting. The girls in the castle are required to wear special skirts that instantly grant access to all the charms, so that any man can instantly satisfy his passion. O, the girl brought to the castle by her lover, unquestioningly accepts the rules of this community: she does not disobey the men, accepts any bedroom play, and receives daily spankings from a servant.
The novel also appealed to BDSM communities: O’s lover places an iron ring with a triskelion on her—these are now sold on BDSM websites and custom-made by craftsmen for those involved, and the triskelion has become a secret symbol of belonging to the dark side.“Dark Alleys” by Ivan Bunin (1937-1944)
In the minds of ordinary people, “Dark Alleys” has become ingrained as stories of love, even though the author’s contemporaries criticized the collection for being excessively pornographic. Of course, it doesn’t contain such explicit descriptions of intimacy as de Sade’s “Justine,” but the work simply exudes sensuality.
The story “The Fool” tells the story of a seminarian who, waking up in his parents’ house with an erection and erotic thoughts, goes to spy on naked girls bathing and, intoxicated by the magic of the female body, corrupts a young cook.
“Visiting Cards” describes in considerable detail the naked body of the heroine, who has a casual encounter with a fellow passenger on a steamship; “Zoika and Valeria” is filled with an atmosphere of sensual language, and the scene where the hero kisses the buttocks of a schoolgirl complaining of being bitten by an insect makes it particularly tangible.
“Dark Alleys” is imbued with a spirit of eroticism, though it doesn’t descend into vulgarity or outright debauchery. The carnal, sensual element reigns supreme, while romantic connections take a backseat.
Readers with a taste for explicit scenes might also want to check out de Sade’s other works, including “The Hundred Days of Sodom” and “Juliette.” BDSM enthusiasts will likely enjoy “The Piano Teacher” by Elfriede Jelinek, while young women will likely enjoy the pornographic novel “Slave of Passion” by Beatrice Small.

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