Daddy's Big Black Stack


Book Description

Ten stories of BRATS getting the BBC they crave. Stories included: Brat's First BBC, Brat submits to the BBC, Brats wants BBC, Dark Alley BBC, Big Black Rocks, Big Black Daddy, Big Black Steel, Big Blackmail, Big Black Share, Daddy's BBC needs Warmth Dubcon, Dubious Consent, Taboo, Forced Submission Sex, Hardcore, Rough Sex, Gangbang, Ganged, Group Sex, Gang Bang, menage, threesome, interracial sex stories, Black Man White Woman sex, Big Black, Size Queen Erotica, BBC sex, BMWW, Age Difference, Older Man Younger Woman sex, age gap love, forbidden romance, virgin, first time sex, daddy kink, stepdad erotica, stepdaughter sex, erotica short stories, erotica box set, short sex stories




Daddy's Big Black Stack 3


Book Description

10 more hot stories of white BRATs getting the BBC they crave. Stories included: My Black Master Dark Chocolate All Night Daddy's Big Black Thing Chloe's Awakening Brat's First Menage Big Black Invasion Audition for Big Black 2 Brats for Big Black Belong to Black Black & White Dubcon, Dubious Consent, Taboo, Hardcore, Interracial Sex, BBC Erotica, Big Black, Black Man White Woman Sex, BMWW Erotica, Gangbang, Ganged, Gang Bang, Group Sex, Menage, Threesome, Erotica Box Set, Erotica Bundle, Erotica Collection, Erotica Anthology, Short Sex Stories, Erotica Short Stories, Older Man Younger Woman Sex, First Time Sex, Age Gap, Age Difference Erotica, Stepdad sex, Stepdaughter erotica, Forbidden




Mama, Me And 'Em


Book Description




The Bush Kids


Book Description

It was 1967 when the Clark family left their comfortable home in Oregon to start a homestead in the bush of Alaska. Five kids turn into seven as the whole family adjusts to the long harsh winters and living life off the grid near the small town of Talkeetna. But the emerald-green fields, birch forest, and endless waters situated in the shadow of the great Denali capture their hearts forever. The Clark kids survive wild animals, frostbite, and raging fires, learning the way of the woods.




The Autobiography of Earnest Sims


Book Description

The autobiography of Earnest Sims is about the childhood of Earnest Sims, an African-American rising from the cotton picking era to write.




10 Days in January


Book Description

Little Eleanor is given two dolls in anticipation of the twins her mother will soon give birth to. What happens next shapes Eleanor's view of her self, her family, her spiritual journey, and begins her search for healthy relationships with her father, brothers, husband sons. Like a puzzle, Eleanor fits together bright and dark portraits of her family and relationships. Like stepping stones, detailed description bring the reader from early childhood, through marriage, parenting, soul-searching and the empty nest.--back cover.




Cherokee Dad


Book Description

Discovering his missing girlfriend, Heather Richmond, on his doorstep with a baby was a shock for Michael Elk. The stunning blonde had sent his tortured heart to hell when she'd vanished eighteen months ago. Now she was suddenly asking him to claim her brother's baby as his own.... In order to protect her nephew, Heather had to depend on the only man she'd ever loved...and betrayed. But sharing a roof with irresistibly magnetic Michael Elk soon had her yearning to share his bed. Could they become a family for real, or would Heather's dark secret destroy their love once and for all?




Continent


Book Description




Zora Neale Hurston


Book Description

Collected plays of the African-American writer Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960).




The Neighborhood


Book Description

Childhood is the very foundation of adulthood. The ideals and expressions of life we hold in our adulthood have their origins and rudiments in the ideals and expressions of life we encounter and gather and live out in our youth. Be they feelings of worth or worthlessness, the vigor and hope of making something of ourselves, or an acquiescence to the belief that things of consequence are beyond our reach, or the lens of optimism or of doubt with which we view our own existence, all have their budding and beginnings in the experiences, or lack of experiences, of our childhood. And growing up in the 1950s and 1960s was at a very unique convergence of circumstances of combined societal, economical, political, spiritual, and cultural seismic shifting perhaps unlike any other era. We were a nation barely emerging from decades of world-wide wars and economic ruin and social survival, trying now to find our footing and our own stride and our equilibrium and our very identity. Never were we more communally encased and even secure in, and at the same time struggling to break out of, our traditions, our superstitions, our ignorance, our fears, our limitations, and our collective innocence.