Ten years on and we join the Backstreet boys camp as they go through Christmas and through to summer. Rian is back from the army and a surprise visit for Brian when a face from the past turns up.Donna is back for a visit!
When Brian falls off the ladder in 2031 he woke up back in 1998, after realising that he could rewrite his mistakes he took his chance. Falling in love all over again. Writing down everything he can remember he began to change things for the better, But will changing one thing be replaced by something else?
an alternate book, what would life had been like if James never died, where had he been for ten years? what are his new plans? follow James as he struggles with his ever worsening illness and the heartbreak that is on it's way.
A Backstreet boys Fan Fiction. the 10th in the series and we follow as Pippin finds an old book in the bottom of a box that transports us back to the past.
A year on and the Backstreet boys return to the stage, AJ makes a big decision that will change his life but things look up when a familiar face turns up. Brian meets a face from the past that may cause tension. There's more heartbreak in store that will rock the Backstreet boys family.
the 6th book in the series and we follow the backstreet boys through the eyes of the kids, one kids in particular a now 18 year old James Littrell. A secret is exposed that will leave everyone asking 'Who's the daddy?' and heartbreak is in store for one of the backstreet families.
In the postwar decades, sexual revolutions – first women's suffrage, flappers, Prohibition, and Mae West; later Alfred Kinsey, Hugh Hefner, and the pill – altered the lifestyles and desires of generations. Since the 1990s, the internet and its cataclysmic cultural and social technological shifts have unleashed a third sexual revolution, crystallized in the acts and rituals of confession that are a staple of our twenty-first-century lives. In I Confess!, a collection of thirty original essays, leading international scholars such as Ken Plummer, Susanna Paasonen, Tom Roach, and Shohini Ghosh explore the ideas of confession and sexuality in moving image arts and media, mostly in the Global North, over the last quarter century. Through self-referencing or autobiographical stories, testimonies, and performances, and through rigorously scrutinized case studies of "gay for pay," gaming, camming, YouTube uploads, and the films Tarnation and Nymph()maniac, the contributors describe a spectrum of identities, desires, and related representational practices. Together these desires and practices shape how we see, construct, and live our identities within this third sexual revolution, embodying both its ominous implications of surveillance and control and its utopian glimmers of community and liberation. Inspired by theorists from Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze to Gayle Rubin and José Esteban Muñoz, I Confess! reflects an extraordinary, paradigm-shifting proliferation of first-person voices and imagery produced during the third sexual revolution, from the eve of the internet to today.