Pink
Flamingo Publications, 2008
I've
often observed, both in my stories and in real life, that the most
erotic moments derive from complementary fantasies. Exhibitionist and
voyeur. Sheik and harem girl. Strict schoolmarm and naughty
schoolboy. And of course, Dom and sub. You want to do something. Your
partner wants to see/feel/taste/touch you as you do it. Each
participant is aware of the other's desires. That awareness sets up
an erotic circuit, each person's excitement amplifying the other's
arousal.
Anneke
Jacob's remarkable novel As She's
Told presents an extreme case of
this sort of reciprocity. Her heroine, Maia, craves complete
submission. She wants to be owned—the life of a slave with no
choice at all. She has harbored these desires since childhood,
struggling to make her way in the world, pretending to be a "normal"
person, but knowing that only this total relinquishment of her will
can make her feel whole and safe.
Anders
is Maia's complement, a dominant who finds the games and play parties
of the BDSM scene silly and frustrating. He wants complete control
over a woman—the freedom to do anything at all to his slave, to
require any service, to experiment with any sort of pain or bondage
that appeals to him. He wants a woman to be his belonging, his
chattel,"his own thing". When the story opens, though, he
has almost given up hope of ever satisfying his deep-seated desire
for total control.
Anders
first encounters Maia in a BDSM chat room, where she asks, in
response to a discussion about negotiation: "but doesn't that
spoil it?" and later adds: "I mean if a sub chooses that
means control. Contradiction in terms." Anders hardly dares to
believe that he might have finally found his counterpart, but when
they meet in person at a "munch", mutual understanding and
mutual attraction are both immediate.
The
early chapters, when Maia and Anders first realize that their dreams
may have come true, left me breathless. Despite their lightning
attraction, Anders forces them to go slowly. Step by step, he leads
Maia into a new world of unquestioning obedience. All does not go
smoothly. Although she is desperate to please, Maia is also sloppy,
irresponsible and occasionally rebellious. In addition, she is
unrelentingly horny, and Anders rarely allows her any release for her
sexual tension.
In
each chapter, Anders introduces new torments or requires new
adjustments. A waist chain is replaced by a tight corset, then labial
piercings, then a chastity belt, then a bit and bridle and leather
mitts that turn Maia into a dumb animal. In the early stages, he
regularly checks with his would-be slave to make sure that she has
not changed her mind. By the time they have been together for a year,
however, she is truly his, and he stops asking her to describe her
feelings or give him feedback.
Anders
is a perfectionist, a construction contractor with a passion for
detail. As She's Told
is almost obsessive in its descriptions of the equipment he designs
to decorate, test and torture his slave. The book includes all the
familiar trappings from the BDSM canon: the slave suspended and
whipped; the slave plugged with dildos and vibrators but not allowed
to come; the slave used as furniture; the slave eating out of a dog
bowl; the slave harnessed to a cart and forced to trot and gallop.
(Ms. Jacobs also dreams up some more unusual and imaginative kinks,
but I won't spoil the impact by describing them here.)
We've
seen all these notions before, in Carrie's
Story, in the Beauty Trilogy, in The
Story of O. The difference is that
in As She's Told,
these are not treated as fantasy. Ms. Jacob is convincingly realistic
in her depictions of what Anders does and how Maia feels. At some
level, this book is still a fantasy, a thought experiment exploring
how an extreme Master/slave relationship might develop, but the tone
demands that the reader take the whole process seriously.
In
fact, parts of this book are sufficiently extreme that they may be
difficult for some readers. I found that I could not read more than a
few chapters at a sitting because, despite my long-time fascination
with BDSM, they made me uncomfortable.
This
is not (despite some horrified reviews on Amazon.com) a story of
abuse. Anders does not negotiate, but he cares for his slave and
makes sure that she will not be seriously injured. When he offers
his brother, cousin and several women friends free use of Maia's
body, he makes sure that they use condoms, even for oral sex. He is
giving Maia what she wants, and she is suitably grateful. Still, I
wouldn't want Anders for my Master. He's too interested in stripping
away Maia's pretensions of being human. He delights in turning her
into an animal or even an inanimate object. Toward the end of the
novel, Maia spends eight weeks without the use of her hands, sleeping
in a stall, forbidden to speak, and worst of all, banished from her
Master's bed. I can scarcely imagine this—it sounds too horrible to
be endured (far worse than being forbidden to or unable to come). But
then, I'm not Maia. Ms. Jacobs managed to make me believe that Maia
could and would endure it, in order to please Anders.
As
She's Told is not without its
faults. It is a long book without much plot. Each chapter pushes new
limits, but there's no climax and very little conflict. I kept
waiting for the other shoe to drop, for Maia to rebel or for someone
to be hurt or killed, for some revelation or resolution, but in fact
nothing much happens. We're led to believe that this relationship
will continue, satisfying both of the participants, as they live out
their complementary fantasies together. I think that this is Ms.
Jacob's point, to suggest that such a relationship could actually
exist and that it could be healthy and mutually fulfilling.
I
don't know whether I am completely convinced. People change. Maia is
very young (she graduates from college in the course of the book) and
Anders not much older. Furthermore, it seems that there must be an
objective limit to the escalation Anders practices on Maia. My Master
and I have debated the question of escalation, the continued pushing
of limits. Clearly there must be some point when you can't push any
further without doing serious physical harm. What happens then? Do
the participants get bored or jaded? Or is it the case that a truly
imaginative dominant will never run out of things to do with his
slave?
The
very fact that I'm thinking about these issues, though, is a tribute
to Ms. Jacob's skill.As She's Told is a rare item, a serious novel about BDSM relationships that does
not sacrifice realism for titillation. I found it exciting,
disturbing and challenging. I just bought a copy for my Master.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Let me know your thoughts! (And if you're having trouble commenting, try enabling third-party cookies in your browser...)