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Click here"I would think not too many."
"So, you feel better about our 'relationship'?"
"Yeah, I do."
"Good. 'Cause I'd hate to have to find a different mentor at this point."
"Trust me, I'm happy to be your mentor for this," I told her, relieved that was all she expected of me.
"Good. Think you can help me learn to deepthroat?"
To be continued...
I agree with Witton about the hymen, though.
It's amazing how many writers get this simple anatomical fact wrong.
Clearly a few guys have been hogging the virgins and limiting the other guys' education.
Tp all you female virgins out there - you have a duty to get out there and show the guys where the hymen is, while you've still got it. Okay, I know that technically you don't actually lose your hymen, it just gets torn or stretched, but you know what I mean.
The story line isn't exactly new, but the author develops the characters of the four major players extremely well; I missed any rationale the narrator had to justify cheating on his wife (or any guilt as a consequence) but that doesn't make a whole lot of difference.
The sex narratives are first rate stroke material - much better than the usual offerings in this genre - but suffers from my particular bête noire.
The narrator is delayed, as are must wannabe deflower-ers in erotic fiction, stymied by the virgin's hymen, which seems to be located two or more inches inside the entry of her vagina. In the first edition of Gray's Anatomy (1856) the hymen was described as [I paraphrase] "... a thin piece of mucosal tissue that surrounds or partially covers the external vaginal opening. It forms part of the vulva, or external genitalia." and the 41st edition (2015) has not changed the particulars one bit. As it was, as it is, as it shall always be ....
The imperforate hymen, which requires surgery to correct, has an estimated frequency of from 1 in 1000 to1 in 10,000, is not what the authors are subjecting there characters to.
So why is a first rate piece of writing cluttered up by such nonsense?