Sinfully Delicious
By Imari Wilson
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About this ebook
What happens when a group of housewives takes a game of truth and dare too far? A fallen angel falls for a vampire? Or a fantasy becomes a real-life encounter?
You can find out all of this and more within the pages of Sinfully Delicious complied of steamy experiences, taking lesbian erotica to a new level that is beyond your wildest imaginations.
Imari Wilson
Imari Wilson is a Brooklyn native who discovered her love for writing while living in Louisiana during her teenage years. She began writing short stories, poetry, and songs as an extension of her creative, yet eccentric imagination. Imari uses her life experiences to create captivating characters and vivid storylines. In 2017, Imari released her first self- published book, Obey Me, which features three short fictional erotic stories about submission. During her downtime, she likes to cook, travel, watch true crime television shows and classic martial arts movies.
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Sinfully Delicious - Imari Wilson
Preface
Sinfully Delicious, is a lesbian erotica book that caters to the woman that’s a little bi-curious
, the closet lesbian itching to live out her wildest fantasies, or the undercover bonafide freak who enjoy being intimate with women.
A woman named Sappho (600 B.C.), was the first documented lesbian in history. She was a famous Greek poet from Lesbos, hence the origin of the word, 'lesbian'. Ancient Greece was a patriarchal society that neglected women and female sexuality. Sappho was ahead of her time for women during that era; in writing erotica that detailed her love and admiration of women. Unfortunately, the majority of her work was destroyed or edited by religious fundamentalists and moralists to erase any indication of lesbianism in her work.
Fast forward to the Harlem Renaissance era, where blues music and lyrical melodies pulled at the strings of your heart, lesbian and bisexual artists flirted with scandal by singing songs that promoted or hinted at their lifestyle. The Mother of Blues herself, Ma Rainey sang, "It’s true I wear a collar and a tie...Talk to the gals just like any old man, in her 1928’s
Prove It on Me." In a genre that allowed singers the freedom to express their alternative sexual lifestyle; homosexuality in general was still looked at as taboo and scrutinized by fundamentalists and moralists, as well as being prosecuted for participating in same sex activity.
Many women have been taught from young to repress their sexual desires subconsciously and consciously, often feeling guilty about their inclinations to the point where women would rarely if ever talk about it. This mindset was taught to us by our mothers, who were taught the same from their mothers and so forth.
I know many women who repressed their sexual desires on a daily basis. I know women who are closeted lesbians, scared to come out in fear of what people and loved ones will think. I also know women who identified as straight but either have had fantasies or sexual encounters with women.
Nonetheless, over time, women have prevailed and become more vocal about their sexuality and more importantly, become unapologetic about it. We are no longer apologizing or feeling