Laurie Weeks penned 'Zipper Mouth,' and wow, does her voice crackle with energy. I first heard about it from a punk-lit zine, of all places, and tracked down a used copy online. Weeks’ writing is like a fever dream—chaotic, lyrical, and brutally honest. It’s not every day you find a book that feels like it’s tearing its own seams apart to tell the truth. The way she tackles alienation and desire is just mesmerizing.
Yep, Laurie Weeks wrote 'Zipper Mouth'! It’s one of those cult favorites that doesn’t get enough attention. I found it while browsing a tiny indie bookstore, and the cover just grabbed me. Weeks’ writing is visceral—like she’s carving words into the page. It’s messy, funny, and heartbreaking all at once, the kind of book you finish in one sitting but think about for weeks.
Laurie Weeks is the genius behind 'Zipper Mouth,' and man, what a ride that book is. I read it during a phase where I was obsessed with transgressive fiction, and it fit right in. Weeks doesn’t hold back—her narrator’s voice is so immediate, like she’s whispering secrets straight into your brain. The book’s structure is unconventional, jumping between moments of clarity and chaos, but that’s what makes it feel alive. If you’re into authors who break rules to tell deeper truths, this is your jam.
'Zipper Mouth'? That’s Laurie Weeks! I picked it up after a recommendation from a bookseller who said it was 'like if Kathy Acker and Jean Genet had a punk-rock love child.' Weeks’ prose is jagged and beautiful, weaving between humor and heartbreak. It’s short but packs a wallop—perfect for anyone who loves edgy, experimental lit.
The graphic novel 'Zipper Mouth' is such a raw, powerful piece of work—it really stuck with me. I stumbled upon it while digging through indie comics a few years back, and the storytelling just hit differently. It’s written by Laurie Weeks, who has this incredible knack for blending gritty realism with poetic introspection. Her style feels almost like a punch to the gut in the best way possible—unfiltered and deeply personal.
What’s fascinating is how Weeks captures the chaos of addiction and self-discovery with such vivid, fragmented prose. It’s not an easy read, but it’s one of those books that lingers. I remember lending my copy to a friend, and we spent hours dissecting the themes afterward. If you’re into works that don’t shy away from messiness, this one’s a gem.
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Whispers of Submission (Whispers #1)
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Twenty-six, brilliant, and achingly untouched, PhD student Cassie walks into the city’s most exclusive sex club because of a bet against her virginity. She chooses him blindly: a cruel Dom who drags her to the hidden chambers, spreads her trembling thighs, and takes her virginity with slow, savage thrusts while she screams. She never sees his face.
She buries the memory under ambition, until her mother’s death forces her back to her home.
Her brother offers her an internship with his best friend, Reginald Walker; an introverted, lethal and impossibly controlled CEO. The man whose mere presence makes her wet and reckless. Cassie pushes until Reggie snaps, chains her on the wooden crucifix, spreads her legs and fucks her till she's speaking in tongues.
Despite the fact that Reggie cannot do emotions, their secret affair turns raw and desperate: His hand is always fisted in her hair, his neck filled with hickeys that his shirt cannot hide. Their love and lust is so violent it terrifies them both.
Then the devil returns. Dominic is the one who broke Cassie's virginity and he recognises her one night at a party. He does everything to get a taste of her again, including blackmail.
When Reggie refuses to believe that the pictures he received are from the past, he walks out but they get back. Before they can fully reconcile, Reggie's ex comes with full force. Cassie runs to her brother with a broken heart. Reggie drowns in whiskey and self-loathing. On his knees in the rain,he begs for her forgiveness and love.
She gives it, but nothing is the same again. They start over slowly, trying to rebuild what Dominic nearly destroyed.
One careful kiss, one trembling “I love you,” one fragile heartbeat at a time.
"Fuck," I snap, unzipping her jeans skirt and tearing the thing down her legs, throwing it over my shoulder. "You've driven me to the edge, little girl. It was hard enough having you wiggle that tight ass around in my lap without coming. Then I see other males looking at you?" I yank down her panties and discard them in the foot well. "For that, I'm going to pump so deep, you'll see stars."
"Yes," she gasps, spreading her legs wider as I go down and take a long, sweet whiff of her pink pussy. "I'd like that very much, Daddy. Please me. Please, Daddy...fuck..."
I take the first lick, my fingers digging into her laps as she moans out in pleasure.
"Oh, fuck! Oh. Oh my God." One more lick and her pussy starts to quiver, her legs stiffening where I've rested them on my shoulders. "Damien."
I close my lips lightly around her clit and apply careful suction, increasing the pressure until she's crying out. "What do you really want from me, little girl?"
"Go faster, Daddy. Please me harder. Please me..."
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Warning: This book is intended for 18+ audiences. It is an erotic boxset, containing seventeen original erotic short stories. Steamy, fun, and fulfilling, just how ya'll like it.
Michael Nate Clark has always been identified as the stutter boy. His previous three years of high school was a disaster where he was constantly bullied and made fun of for his stutter.Now Nate is about to have a fresh start as he got admission into a highly reputed boarding school in Texas with scholarship. He has some hope that people in this new school would leave him alone and he can finally have a prosperous school life. But he is proved wrong as he happens to stare at Ethan Vance, a guy from his Calculus class, who looks alike his late brother Alex. Ethan turns out to be a bully and starts bullying Nate along with the rest of the jocks. But does Ethan really like to bully Nate or is he doing it to keep his place in the popular crowd ? What happens when Ethan and Nate has to share a dorm room. When will the bullying stop ? Will it ever? Or will Nate learn some shocking truths regarding his birth?Follow Ethan and Nate as they explore feelings they never thought they would get to experience and maybe even more than that.
Mom was a world-class micro-expression expert. She always said no lie got past her.
To replay every emotional moment of Maya and me, she packed our house with HD security cameras.
When Maya scraped her knee and burst into tears, Mom called it real pain.
But when stomach cramps twisted my face, she pointed at the monitor and picked me apart.
"The mouth twitch. The darting eyes. Classic attention-seeking."
That day, I'd accidentally eaten something I was deadly allergic to. My throat swelled shut. I could barely breathe.
Panicking, I clawed at my neck and crawled to her feet, begging for help.
Mom adjusted her glasses, flipped open her notebook, and calmly wrote everything down.
"Rapid breathing. Bluish skin. Sophie Schneider, your acting's gotten better again. Too bad your micro-expressions gave you away."
To punish me for lying to her, she shut off the house's panic button, locked the front door, and took Maya to a concert.
"If you love putting on a show so much, keep performing for the cameras. We'll see how long it takes before you admit you were wrong."
I curled up on the cold tile, shaking in pain, and looked at the camera's blinking red light.
My vision faded.
Mom, you spent your whole life reading people.
But you never understood your own daughter.
Xavier Bishops and Rain Simmons are an odd pair. Xavier is the quiet rich guy who instigates her bullies and Rain is the girl who finds him hot despite knowing this. They find themselves in a supply closet together on school prank night and they share their first kiss. Xavier's obsession with her increases after this but he still doesn't know how to act towards Rain. They soon enter a secret relationship but Xavier's attitude towards Rain in public doesn't change. He no longer eggs his friends on but he doesn't address her in public either. Rain convinces herself that she's okay with this but her patience continues to wear thin as Xavier's friends keep treating her worse. It all ends when they trash a car her father gave her for her birthday and she exposes her secret relationship with Xavier to everyone. Xavier denies it and laughs at her. Humiliated beyond belief, Rain leaves town for winter break but she doesn't come back and no one knew why. Rain is in a new town, pregnant and alone with grandparents who think she's worthless. They insist she has an abortion and when Rain refuses, they agree to give the baby up for adoption. When Rain changes her mind, they throw her out. She can't go back to her sick father with a baby she can't take care of so she drops the baby with Xavier, promising to come back soon.
Twelve years later, Rain is back. She is a military investigator and is investigating a leak in Xavier's company. Her son hates her and his father still wants her. She has a lot on her plate, make her son forgive her, get Xavier to leave her alone and find the person selling government secrets in Xavier's company.
He bought my body.
The bond claimed my soul.
Kael Draven is a ruthless Alpha who never loses. I'm the Omega he acquired to settle a debt I never made. I should hate him. I should escape. But when enemies come for me, he'll spill blood to keep me safe. The only problem? Falling for him might cost me everything.
The manga 'Snake Jaw' has this wild, gritty vibe that instantly hooked me—it’s like if 'Alien' met a survival horror game. The author behind it is Oshimi Shuzo, who’s honestly a genius at blending psychological tension with body horror. I stumbled on it after binging his other work, 'The Flowers of Evil,' which messed with my head in the best way. 'Snake Jaw' feels like a natural extension of his style, where every panel oozes dread. Oshimi’s knack for pacing makes even the quiet moments feel like a ticking bomb.
What’s cool is how he plays with reader expectations—just when you think you’ve figured out the monster, he flips the script. It’s not just about gore; the characters’ paranoia becomes the real villain. If you dig Junji Ito’s stuff but crave more emotional gut punches, Oshimi’s your guy. I’ve lost sleep over that last arc.
I just finished reading 'Mouth to Mouth' last week, and wow, what a ride! The author is Antoine Wilson, and let me tell you, he's crafted something truly gripping. The way he layers suspense with introspective moments is masterful—it feels like you're right there with the protagonist, questioning every decision.
What struck me was how Wilson plays with morality and chance, making you ponder how one random act can spiral into obsession. His prose isn’t flashy, but it’s razor-sharp, letting the tension simmer until you’re practically holding your breath. If you’re into psychological dramas that linger, this is a must-read.
The mysterious 'Mr. Widemouth' has been floating around creepy pasta forums and indie horror circles for ages, and tracking down its creator feels like chasing a ghost! From what I've pieced together, the character originated in an obscure Japanese horror manga anthology called 'Kowai Zasshi' back in the early 2000s, credited to an artist who only used the pen name 'Enokizu.' But here's the weird part—some fans swear they've seen earlier versions of the concept in 90s doujinshi or even Western webcomics. The ambiguity kinda adds to the charm though; it's like trying to solve an urban legend puzzle while getting lost in this whole ecosystem of underground horror artists who inspire each other.
What's fascinating is how 'Mr. Widemouth' evolved beyond its origins. You'll see fanart where the design borrows from Junji Ito's spiral obsession or takes cues from American analog horror aesthetics. It makes me wonder if the original author ever imagined their creation would become this collaborative nightmare fuel. If 'Enokizu' is still out there, I hope they know their toothy abomination became a cult icon!
The first time I stumbled upon 'Zipper Mouth,' I was immediately drawn by its edgy title and cover art. The story revolves around a young girl named Lily who wakes up one day with her mouth literally zipped shut—no explanation, no warning. As she navigates this bizarre reality, the narrative delves into themes of forced silence, societal oppression, and the struggle to reclaim one's voice. The surreal premise is grounded by Lily's emotional journey, which feels painfully relatable despite the fantastical setup.
What really hooked me was how the story layers metaphors—like the zipper representing societal censorship or personal trauma—without feeling heavy-handed. The supporting cast, from her skeptical parents to a rebellious classmate who sees her condition as a protest symbol, adds rich tension. It’s one of those stories that lingers in your mind, making you question how often we ‘zip’ ourselves to fit in.