AUTHOR: ANNE RICE, writing as
A.N. Roquelaure
Pages: 256
Date: 17/08/2012
Grade: 4.5
Details: no. 2 Sleeping Beauty
Received from the
Penguin Group
Through NetGalley
Own
After Beauty has willfully caused her own expulsion from the Castle at the end of
“The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty” she finds herself with the irresistible
prince Tristan and other naked slaves on a cart heading towards the dreaded Village.
Once on the market square, Beauty, Tristan and the others are auctioned of to
the highest bidder, with Tristan being purchased by Master Nicolas, the Queen’s
chronicler and Beauty by Mistress Lockley, the owner of an inn. It soon becomes
clear to both of them that while they were used, ordered around and punished in
the Queens castle, their treatment there was child’s play compared to what they
are about to encounter in the Village. In the castle they were the playthings
of the Lords and Ladies, but here they truly are slaves. And although their
masters are still not allowed to do any real harm, there are no other
restrictions on the ways in which they may be used.
Tristan finds himself put to work as a human pony, complete with tail
and harness when he’s not being punished in a public spectacle while Beauty is
handed over the handsome Captain of the Guard for his pleasure as well as that
of his men.
Both slaves at first experience deep fear as well as humiliation but
neither can deny the pleasure even these feelings bring them. And slowly the
realisation dawns that this is the treatment they prefer. The submission they
are brought to under the cruel villagers brings them deeper satisfaction then
the games played in the castle ever did.
When Master Nicolas allows Tristan and Beauty to spend an unexpected
night together, what should have been a heavenly experience turns into a
nightmare and the start of a whole new, but not very different, experience.
It is hard to figure out what to say about this book.
A lot of people will say that they don’t mind, and even like, sexual
content in their books provided it is backed-up by a good story, and in general
I agree with that sentiment.
That of course does raise the question; what about books in which the
sexual content is the story? What
standard do you judge a book by if that is the case, as it is in Beauty’s
Punishment?
This is a story about discovering the pleasures of sex as well as the
truth about yourself. The characters discover that those things they are made
to do and endure, which they know are humiliating, are also the experiences
that bring them most pleasure. Everything they thought they knew about
themselves, their needs and their feelings turns out to be wrong. As they
discover what really brings them pleasure they have to overcome their old
believes and values as well as truly surrender both to their own feelings and
to those who bring those feelings to life inside them.
In many ways this book is as much a psychological examination of the
characters needs and true feelings and their acknowledgment of those as it is a
very explicit erotic fairy-tale.
And yes, this is very much a fairy-tale even if it is one that is aimed
only at adults. It takes a familiar theme to extreme heights, on to a level
that couldn’t be possible in the real world. And I found that because I was
constantly aware that I was reading a fairy-tale I had no problem accepting
what I encountered on the page. Nothing was too extreme or too unbelievable
because in a fairy-tale anything is possible and everything is acceptable.
Anne Rice is a good author who has a way with words and knows how to
draw her readers into her stories, and this book was no exception. I enjoyed my
visit with Beauty and was fascinated by the world created around her. It won’t
be long before I read the third and final part in this trilogy because I can’t
wait to find out what else Mrs. Rice has in store for her characters.
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