This book is purely a work of fiction and derives solely from the imagination of the author. It is based solely on popular fictional archetypal characters. There is no relation whatsoever to any real person, group or other identifier in the modern world. A Futanari as described in this book is purely an invention of imagination as I have defined the characteristics of the characters in this story. The book is designed for erotic enjoyment with characters that live only in the mind and imagination of the reader. *** The story begins with Angelica and Erica, two new college students at freshman orientation who meet by accident and decide to explore becoming roommates. Erica is a bisexual girl whose predilection skews toward girls, and Angelica is a girl from a small community up in the mountains toward Lake Tahoe. The girls hit it off, but is it just a friendly attraction or something else? As the girls discover more about each other and Angelica’s friends and family in and around the Bay area, Erica begins to meet and seduce the women and couples living in their condominium building. Erica soon discovers some amazing differences in physiology, and though an amazing elixir, discovers her propensity for physical change. As the women and couples in the building discover more about each other, and they explore their erotic worlds together, some aspects conventional, others far from it. Erica begins to experience change, the kind born of her new status as a converso, and the power and confidence that comes from her transition from a regular to a futa. She has never experienced such power, freedom and dominion over others, and her singular drive to gather women and couples around her to experience her own joy. The experiences and new lifestyle are not without their own challenges, and the futa world, the futanari world, is highly structured and hierarchical, something against which Erica rebels and the injustices it has historically caused. The caste system is wrong to her, and she eventually finds a powerful ally who sees the world as she does. Along the way in Book One of the Futanari series, you will meet new characters all of whom share this mythical world of a race we can only imagine. The futas are aggressive, larger than life and very promiscuous. If you enjoy erotica, sit back and enjoy Volume One of The Futanari series paranormal erotica at its finest. COMING SOON from Kelly Kali: Eidolon Futanari: The History
Written over a period of more than two decades, Colour Matters is a collection of essays that shows how race informs the aspirational pursuits of Black youth in the Greater Toronto Area.
2023 John Leo & Dana Heller Award for Best Single Work, Anthology, Multi-Authored, or Edited Book in LGBTQ Studies, Popular and American Culture Association (PACA) / Popular Culture Association (PCA) 2023 Honorable Mention, Harry Shaw and Katrina Hazzard-Donald Award for Outstanding Work in African-American Popular Culture Studies, Popular and American Culture Association (PACA) / Popular Culture Association (PCA) A celebration of the distinctive and politically defiant art of Black queer, cis-, and transfemmes, from the work of Janelle Monáe and Janet Mock to that of Indya Moore and Kelsey Lu. The Color Pynk is a passionate exploration of Black femme poetics of survival. Sidelined by liberal feminists and invisible to mainstream civil rights movements, Black femmes spent the Trump years doing what they so often do best: creating politically engaged art, entertainment, and ideas. In the first full-length study of Black queer, cis-, and trans-femininity, Omise’eke Natasha Tinsley argues that this creative work offers a distinctive challenge to power structures that limit how we color, gender, and explore freedom. Tinsley engages 2017–2020 Black femme cultural production that colorfully and provocatively imagines freedom in the stark white face of its impossibility. Looking to the music of Janelle Monáe and Kelsey Lu, Janet Mock’s writing for the television show Pose, the fashion of Indya Moore and (F)empower, and the films of Tourmaline and Juliana Huxtable, as well as poetry and novels, The Color Pynk conceptualizes Black femme as a set of consciously, continually rescripted cultural and aesthetic practices that disrupts conventional meanings of race, gender, and sexuality. There is an exuberant defiance in queer Black femininity, Tinsley finds—so that Black femmes continue to love themselves wildly in a world that resists their joy.
What if an oh-so shiny device (or a sweet potion) could help you fulfill your wildest wishes? For a host of shy, strange guys, dreams really do come true! But will a pop idol, a cheer captain, and a student government rep get caught up in their kinky fantasies, too? Girl Play breaks the rules with a bevy of gorgeous, gender-bending babes! Can the flick of a switch ignite burning desire that lasts... and lasts? What mega-mischief will go down when circuits fry and the skimpy clothes start to fly?
When the average Japanese salaryman is suddenly thrown into in a world wracked with warfare and hardship by a supernatural power, they might first think to hide or run away. But not Tanya Degurechaff. A calculating and utilitarian man has been reborn as a child soldier. This young girl will do anything to rise in rank and find a way to live a life of comfort, and woe to any king, country, or god who stands in her way.