The Marketplace
by Laura Antoniou
Luster
Editions, Circlet Press, 2010
If
you had a friend who was interested in BDSM, but who didn't have much
experience, what fiction would you advise her to read? What books
belong to the BDSM canon? The Story of O, certainly. Maybe
A.N. Roquelaure's Beauty trilogy (although if the real author were
not Anne Rice, I wonder if those books would get as much attention as
they do). Perhaps Molly Weatherfield's Safe Word and
definitely a couple of Rachel Kramer Bussel's D/s-themed anthologies
such as He's on Top, She's on Top, Yes, Sir or
Yes, Ma'am.
One
book that would make almost everyone's list, I think, is Laura
Antoniou's The Marketplace and its sequels. I've been hearing
about these books for years – no, decades – ever since I joined
the ranks of BDSM readers and authors. Although I'm a devotee of D/s
fiction and to some extent practice, somehow I never got the
opportunity to read any of the series. One reason was the fact that
despite their acclaim they have received, the books keep going out of
print. The Marketplace was originally published by Masquerade
Books in 1993. A new edition was released by Mystic Rose Books (also
responsible for the wonderful primer Screw the Roses, Send Me the
Thorns) in 2000. Now Circlet Books, renowned for speculative and
scifi erotica, has created a new imprint call Luster Editions to
bring The Marketplace books back for today's readers. When I was
offered the opportunity to review the first volume, I jumped at the
chance.
The
Marketplace introduces a world where an elite cadre of dominants
train, sell and buy willing slaves. The secrets of the Marketplace
members are jealously guarded. In the everyday clubs and dungeons,
BDSM afficionados trade rumors about the shadowy cabal of slave
owners and their human property: the rigors the slaves must undergo,
the enormous sums of money exchanged, the contracts, the collars, the
decadent resorts, the beauty and the power of the masters and
mistresses.
The
Marketplace introduces Grendel and Alexandra, traders and
trainers of premium slaves. Both are expert dominants. The book is
deliberately vague about their relationship. Four would-be slaves
apply to undergo the Marketplace training regimen at the hands of
Grendel and Alex and their major domo Chris. None is a true amateur.
In fact, all four consider themselves to be accomplished submissives.
Almost immediately, the dominants strip the four of their illusions
and show them how far they are from being Marketplace material.
Brian
is a gay bottom who loves to be beaten and “forced” to suck cock.
Despite his claims to being submissive, he is manipulative,
sarcastic, cynical, rebellious and far too garrulous to be a good
slave.
Sharon
is used to holding men in thrall as she eagerly offers herself as a
sexual object. Like Brian, she believes that being a slave is all
about sex.
Robert
has been feminized by his former mistress to the point that he has no
self-confidence and hates his own penis. Although he is intelligent
and well-educated, he becomes helpless and incompetent under
pressure.
Finally,
shy, virginal Claudia can act the part of the sweet, submissive
French maid to absolute perfection, but that is the limits of her
repertoire. Her mistress offers her to Alex and Grendel out of
frustration and boredom, hoping that they can make her braver and
more sensual.
Grendel
and Alexandra devise customized lessons and trials for each of the
aspirants, seeking to teach them the reality of being a slave in the
Marketplace world. Sharon is assigned to muck out the stables and
study diction and opera. Brian is made to wear ribbons and bells and
deprived of sexual satisfaction. Robert studies martial arts and is
forbidden to shave his hated body hair. Shrinking violet Claudia is
required to take responsibility for the entire household while the
normal housekeeper is on vacation and to severely discipline the
other aspirants.
Although
many of the stereotypes in BDSM erotica may have started with The
Marketplace, the book itself is fresh, original and engrossing.
It considers the nature of D/s relationships with rare depth and
insight. In the Marketplace world, submission (and in fact,
dominance) is about far more than sex. For the first half of the
book, few of the lessons imposed on the would-be slaves involve sex
at all. They learn to obey without thinking, to take responsibility
for their successes and their mistakes, to trust their masters and
each other. Over the course of the novel, each one changes,
approaching the perfection required of Marketplace slaves – though
how that is defined will vary for each one.
I
loved this book. For one thing, despite its fantasy premise, it has a
realistic, down-to-earth feel. The characters are complex and their
interactions nuanced and believable. The Marketplace is the exact
opposite of the kinky fairy tale world of the Beauty books – even
though they share activities and physical elements.
I
also appreciated the recognition of the deep sense in which the
slaves' servitude is consensual. The aspirants' most cherished desire
is to be accepted as worthy by the Marketplace. The most terrible
punishment that can be threatened is for them to be sent away, to be
released from the training and set adrift in the shallow world of
BDSM “play”.
Finally,
I resonate with the view of D/s as something more than just a game,
as something that can transform one's soul. To quote one of my
favorite passages:
To
be thrilled by the touch of leather, aroused by harsh words, or
satisfied by the security of rigid bondage is the mark of a lover.
To
be thrilled at the opportunity to provide useful service, aroused by
a pleased nod, and satisfied by the proverbial job well done, is the
mark of a slave.
It
may sound severe. Almost anti-erotic. Until you see two people, owner
and owned, existing in a complementary relationship where each suits
the other like balances on a delicate scale. Until you feel the
energy of their rapport, you cannot understand how they fulfill each
other, take and give in ways no negotiation could possibly express.
Then
you will understand the singular intimacy that drives such people on
their search for perfection. It is beyond orgasm. Beyond love. It can
almost be called rapture.
If
these words speak to you the way they do to me, you must read this
book.
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