The Virtual Reality Regression (Nappy Version)


Book Description

AEVITERNITY: The midpoint between time and eternity. A brilliant ABDL sci-fi novel. If you could escape to another world: a world of spectacular beauty, a world without danger or war... would you do it? What if it was as simple as putting on a virtual reality headset? 13-year-old Daryn Dixon finds such a world hidden in a virtual reality game called Aeviternity. Considering his own world is one of gang violence and inner-city poverty, the decision to escape would seem like a no-brainer. There is a catch. In Aeviternity, Daryn doesn’t acquire magical powers or super strength. In Aeviternity, he is a toddler wearing only a nappy. Now would you go? At first, his answer is no. Later, as Daryn makes friends and encounters caregivers who love him, his answer turns to yes. Daryn thinks he can be happy in Aeviternity, on a planet called Parvulis, forever. Then something goes terribly wrong. When those intent on its destruction enter Parvulis, Daryn must find a way to defend an essentially defenceless world populated by babies and their gentle caretakers.




The Regression Archives (Nappy Version)


Book Description

Barry Oliver is a fabulous author of scifi books with an ABDL twist. In these three books, technology plays a part in literally reverting a person back to infancy. If you like your ABDL stories a bit different and with a scifi/technology bent, then this book is for you. Contains: The Virtual Reality Regression The Sissy Regression Baby Cruise




The Rehab Regression - nappy version


Book Description

What is the price of starting life over again? For college student, Toby, starting over will cost him everything. At just nineteen, Toby’s new life is about to begin. After a near-fatal overdose, he found himself kicked out of school and facing either jail or drug rehabilitation. Now, more than ever, he needs a do-over. A special drug rehabilitation center called Forever Free just might be able to help. This special program promises to make its clients “forever free” from their addiction to drugs and alcohol. However, this treatment comes at quite a price as Toby learns, when he is given his new start on life - quite literally! He finds himself transformed into a young child, a toddler living at a daycare center, with no memory of how they did it, or how to return to his adult life. As he struggles to keep his mind from sliding into early childhood along with his body, Toby discovers something surprising. Life in nappies isn’t all that bad. He makes new friends, and discovers he is surrounded by people who actually care about him - something denied him during his first pass through life. Toby must make a choice. Either try to get back to his old life with all its failures, or remain a child surrounded by people who love him. Which would you choose? For those who feel their infantilism touches something deep and alive inside, this story is for you. Beyond the diapers, early childhood is about a world filled with new relationships and vivid experiences. What matters most in Toby’s world, turns out to not be the material stuff after all. You are invited to walk through the regression chamber at Forever Free, step into the world of Buttons and Blocks Daycare, and experience for yourself - through the eyes of Toby - the transforming power of really starting over.




The Daycare Regression - nappy version


Book Description

Barry Oliver's gripping first book - The Rehab Regression - now continues with a new story centered once more on the Buttons and Blocks daycare center. The Daycare Regression Summer and Elise are in their senior year of college and best friends. Elise is studying social work, while Summer plans on going into early childhood education. Currently, Summer has a most unique part-time job at a daycare center called Buttons & Blocks which partners with a drug rehab center called Forever Free. Together, they offer a 100% cure for their drug-addicted clients by physically regressing them into infants and toddlers still in nappies with no memory of their drug-addicted past. To prove this incredible claim to her skeptical friend, Summer regresses Elise into a 2-year-old girl for one day. Elise is immediately hooked. She enjoys the experience of being in the body of a young child so much that she asks to return again and again. But what happens when the power to cure is misused for the power to silence its critics? Elise soon finds herself trapped in a toddler’s body unable to return, as one by one, the people who would help her escape are themselves transformed into helpless babies. She must try to figure out who is behind this and if they can be stopped — all while trying to escape the trappings of early childhood including the inexorable regression of her own mind into that of an actual 2-year-old child. That’s a lot for a mere toddler to accomplish. Will she run out of time? As it turns out, help sometimes comes from unexpected directions.




Adult Baby Science Fiction (Nappy Version)


Book Description

Science fiction allows us to explore otherwise impossible storylines and as adult babies, don't we deserve a little bit of that? Stories of diapers and adult babies in places and times that don't really exist in our world. This compendium has two full novels - one of another world full of sentient animals where diapered regression can save it from destruction while the other explores another world of diapered life available through the wonder of Virtual Reality. Then there is a story of travelling the multiverse... in diapers as a sissy baby. And of course, there has to be a story about... magic! A compendium for everyone who wants something less predictable and more inspiring in our ABDL world




My Transformation (Nappy Version)


Book Description

Book two in the 'My Adoption' Trilogy In the first book of the My Adoption trilogy, we met Christopher aka Chrissy who desperately wants to be a diapered baby and also... a sissy baby. But becoming a sissy baby has lots of confusion, problems and issues that he/she struggles to navigate. We meet a cast of new characters as the lengthy story develops and Chrissy finds answers, some love and a deeper understanding of living as a baby... girl. A wonderful and complex story you will no doubt enjoy.




Tiger Cav (Nappy Version)


Book Description

War is hell and no less so for the tigers of Tiger Cav - "Death from the sky!" In a seemingly endless war, Lt Todd Stalk is assigned a covert mission flying his heavily armed attack helicopter into neutral territory to search for three lost choppers from Bravo Squadron. Naturally, everything goes wrong and the four-tiger crew discovers that an astonishing and inexplicable force is somehow operating that affects them the moment their helicopter touches down in neutral territory. They become younger. And the further in they go, the younger they become. It is a bloody and violent tale - as war inevitably is - but within is a story of heroism, of lives lost and lives regained all in the midst of returning childhood. War ends many lives, but it also begins many and for a select few, they get to begin their lives... once again. A furry tale of bravery and regression... NOTE: This book is available in both nappy and diaper versions in eBook, Paperback, and Audiobook.




A [REDACTED] Summer - Nappy Version


Book Description

Stephanie was a spoiled girl. Fresh out of high school and immune to repercussions, her whole world gets turned upside down when she and her best friend Tenaya get arrested for underage drinking at a beach party. Facing two years in prison or a plea deal, she takes what she thought was the easy way out without reading the fine print. Now stuck under house arrest and legally bound to the plea deal, she's put back into diapers for 120 days. But can she survive her punishment and the social exile of A [Redacted] Summer?




The Connecticut Baby (Nappy Version)


Book Description

Delilah Perkins has a family secret that is about to be discovered. At 109 years of age and nearing the end of her time, Delilah’s descendants number in the dozens. She lives in a home surrounded by photos of her memories spanning over a century. 21-year-old Zachary Perkins, one of Delilah's forty great-grandchildren, is just starting his life, only months away from his college graduation. While paying a final visit to the family matriarch, Zachary uncovers an old photograph that reveals Delilah's secret - a long-lost child, unknown to anyone in the Perkins family. What happens next is simply beyond Zachary's comprehension. He is transported back to Delilah's past where he experiences her family secret in the first person, incredibly as the very child same in the photograph. It is the Summer of 1922. The United States is crawling out of its post-war (World War I) recession. The 1920s are at last beginning to roar. Zachary discovers not only Delilah's long-lost child, but the long-lost life of a woman heretofore unknown to the Perkins family. He uncovers a lifetime buried on the distant side of a World War and the Great Depression; the lifetime of the beautiful and free-spirited Delilah Hayes at just 21 years, his own age in the present time. Over the course of the Summer, Zachary becomes more and more attached to Delilah's past. He falls in love with the coastal town of New Orchard, Connecticut, where Delilah got her start; along with the quirky people who inhabit his young great grandmother's life. Zachary begins to feel that Delilah’s past, in fact, belongs to himself; that this is the life he was supposed to live. Zachary questions whether he is even in the past at all. He asks the question: would it be possible to abandon his future to remain in the year 1922? If he makes that fateful decision, what will become of the future Zachary Perkins living in the year 2010? More immediately, if he stays, what will become of the two-year-old boy who was Delilah's first child?




Living Happily as An Adult Baby (Nappy Version)


Book Description

Understanding. Knowledge. Insight. It is the goal of most people and humanity in general to understand and to gain knowledge. To understand our natural world. To understand space. To understand those things so tiny we can never see them. We want to understand what other people are saying, insight into what they are feeling and what makes them tick. For most people, it is natural to want to understand more about a wide variety of topics and disciplines. Perhaps the most important understanding of them all is the knowledge of self. Adult babies have traditionally not fared well in the area of understanding of ourselves. The few professional attempts to explain ABDL behaviour and thinking have been less than helpful and often insulting and deeply offensive. Being described as a paraphilia alongside and adjacent to paedophilia and other serious disorders has been the nightmare that has haunted the community for a generation. Slowly however, the light has been dawning on the extraordinary world of the adult baby. The first step was the recognition that being an adult baby is no mere affectation, fetish or odd choice of behaviour. It was the understanding that the baby self is a genuine and subjectively real identity. Not a thing, not a concept or a feeling, but an identity. A few professionals have belatedly drifted onto the scene and made a few inroads, but they have been well behind the small group of hard-working ABDLs themselves who have sought to build a body of understanding on who we are. Knowing who we are is the key to success, happiness and the ability to move forward. The works of B. Terrance Grey, Rosalie and Michael Bent led the way to building an intellectual basis of understanding of who Adult babies are. Then came Dylan Lewis, whose canon of work in this area has no peer. This new book – Living Happily as an Adult Baby – makes a promise in its title that is almost obscene in its arrogance. Adult Babies have often struggled with the power of their baby identity and happiness - especially long-term happiness – has often eluded them. This work is commended to all adult babies, their family and friends as it seeks to further humanity’s understanding of this most complex identity structure. The Adult Baby.