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TSR : Web boards : M/s D/s O&P : "The story of 0" 1 2 3 4 5
The story of 0 (41)
This post is on the M/s D/s O&P web board.
15 Jun 09, 5:25 AM porcelaine 5 yrs  |
OrionStorm wrote:
There is a paradox "a woman is never truly free, until she is enslaved." When a woman surrenders to her submissive need, and she is enslaved, she becomes free. she is free to be who she is within her heart and soul. she has one goal, and one purpose, to serve and please her Master. My slave would quickly tell you that she is far more free now and happy now than at any point in her life.
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It is clear that with O she required a guide, a conduit of sorts to direct and extract what was inside of her. However, can the same occur without enslavement at all? Or is slavery the only method for freedom and finding oneself?
In addition, what of the slave that has already reached this point or has done much of the groundwork outside of this schism? Where does this leave the Master?
porcelaine "You linger over what you've acquired, and contemplate her, and penetrate her, and live with her beneath the fire in which she crepitates, yields, moans, giving in to your flesh or to more remote, more inscrutable qualities." ~Homero Aridjis
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15 Jun 09, 5:41 AM AnonMoos US, 5 yrs
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kitty_miaow wrote: I thought it was a good book, I just found the ending a bit rushed to be honest... I almost felt it was like Reage was trying to finish it as soon as she possibly could  |
I think it was probably less haste then aimlessness -- she was undecided where else to go with the book, or how to wrap things up in something like a real ending, so after the owl-mask party chapter, she tacked on a perfunctory minimalist non-ending...
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19 Jun 09, 11:20 PM 558-214-000 4 yrs |
what i didn't like about the story
the story was hazy, would skip a lot. like it would mention something and never reference it again so you couldn't draw a conclusion to see if it happened. the worst part was that, after having marked her with the iron brand and the rings, Stephen abandons her in a few short months??? i guess i am a romantic. i thought if he loved her, even as a slave, he would keep and protect her, even if just as a possession. and he did love her.
what i liked about the story
i saw a lot of myself in O. like she would prefer the decisions be made for her. she did not like to be whipped while she was being whipped but liked it after it was done and over with. i learned i was not the only one that felt that way. it makes me feel my own submissiveness and humbleness. it shows Who is in charge.
MasterBLUspet
Written with permission of MasterBLU
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20 Jun 09, 1:47 AM 957-909-675 US(PA), 3 yrs 
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have you tried reading Anne Rices 'Beauty Trilogy'? that might be more your taste... my Master and i love reading that together ... its so hott!
~*~ lil squirrel ~*~ |
21 Jun 09, 1:34 PM Squeak US(TX), 3 yrs
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I have read most of Ms. Anne Rices books and the story of O, and almost all of the books of Gor. My favorite Gor book was Kajira of Gor.. Most of them are tear jerkers to Me any way. Submission is the most beautiful expression of love.
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22 Jun 09, 1:44 AM 558-214-000 4 yrs |
957-909-675 wrote:
have you tried reading Anne Rices 'Beauty Trilogy'? that might be more your taste... my Master and i love reading that together ... its so hott!
~*~ lil squirrel ~*~
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no, i haven't but maybe my Master will allow me to purchase it. It sounds hot..lol
MasterBLUspet Written with permission of MasterBLU
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22 Jun 09, 5:59 PM Strict_Daddy US(VA), 3 yrs Y! |
little_miss_naughty wrote:
The story of 0
i got a copy of the story of 0 for xmas and i cant even think anyone could endure what she had to even though i know its fiction it is an inhuman story what that poor girl endured for the love of her boyfriend i do not beleive for one min he loved her the same way
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I personally enjoyed the Sleeping Beauty trilogy by Ann Rice ... what was even hotter was the 2nd and 3rd audio books which was narrated by Elizabeth Montgomry(TV-Bewitched) Edited 22 Jun 09, 6:00 PM by Strict_Daddy
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23 Jun 09, 7:05 AM AnonMoos US, 5 yrs
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Master_BLUs_pet wrote: the worst part was that, after having marked her with the iron brand and the rings, Stephen abandons her in a few short months??? i guess i am a romantic. i thought if he loved her, even as a slave, he would keep and protect her, even if just as a possession. |
The whole Sir Stephen thing does very little for the book, in my opinion -- after the Sir Stephen character appears, the psychodrama connected with the complex step-brother relationship between René and Sir Stephen weighs things down for me. Maybe it makes the book better as pure litterature, but it does very little for the development of the distinctive themes of the book. Most of the book is taken up with training (Roissy, Samois, in part Sir Stephen) outside of her relationship with René, and there's very little on the pride and joy of individual ownership / being owned (which is one area where the Gor books, despite many unrealistic aspects, are better).
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23 Jun 09, 7:13 AM AnonMoos US, 5 yrs
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SherryP wrote: I have read most of Ms. Anne Rices books and the story of O, and almost all of the books of Gor. My favorite Gor book was Kajira of Gor.. Most of them are tear jerkers to Me any way. |
That's the first time I've heard a Gor book described as a "tear-jerker"... It's not that the characters don't have emotions, but Norman has a somewhat dry writing style, with sometimes convoluted sentence structures or narrative structures, and a tendency to go off into abstract expository tangents. It's a long way from what would usually be considered appeals to raw emotionalism...
P.S. I agree that "Kajira" is the best of the female-viewpoint Gor novels...
Edited 23 Jun 09, 7:31 AM by AnonMoos
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23 Jun 09, 10:40 PM Squeak US(TX), 3 yrs
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AnonMoos wrote:
SherryP wrote: I have read most of Ms. Anne Rices books and the story of O, and almost all of the books of Gor. My favorite Gor book was Kajira of Gor.. Most of them are tear jerkers to Me any way. |
That's the first time I've heard a Gor book described as a "tear-jerker"... It's not that the characters don't have emotions, but Norman has a somewhat dry writing style, with sometimes convoluted sentence structures or narrative structures, and a tendency to go off into abstract expository tangents. It's a long way from what would usually be considered appeals to raw emotionalism...
P.S. I agree that "Kajira" is the best of the female-viewpoint Gor novels...
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(Giggels.) Ms always said I was a airhead, I have no trouble fowling Mr. Morman's writing as My mind often drifts this way and that. But I would get deeply wrapped up in the lives of the caters. I would sometimes find My self saying out loud silly girl is going to be punished.
Submission is the most beautiful expression of love.
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