Fat fetish stuff, sometimes called BBW/SSBBW romance or feederism erotica, is definitely out there but it's not always easy to find in a centralized, high-quality spot. You get a lot of self-published authors who write really niche material and they tend to cluster on specific platforms. The obvious place to start is Amazon's Kindle Store, but their search and categorization is notoriously bad for anything off the beaten path. You have to get creative with keywords like 'plump romance', 'curvy girl romance', 'size appreciation', or even 'feederism' itself, though that last one might get filtered. The real issue is that a lot of these stories get buried under more mainstream 'plus-size' romance, which is often just about a confident curvy heroine without the specific fetish elements of weight gain, admiration of size, or that particular dynamic.
I've had more luck on dedicated erotica sites like Smashwords. Their tagging system is way more granular, and authors can be explicit about content. You can actually find tags for 'Weight Gain', 'Fat Admiration', 'Feederism', and so on. The quality varies wildly, from poorly edited drafts to genuinely well-written stories that understand the psychological nuances. Another avenue is niche forums and communities, but they often link to personal blogs or Patreon pages where writers serialize their work. It feels a bit like a treasure hunt sometimes. You find one good author, check their social media, and they'll mention other writers in the same sphere. It's a whole ecosystem that exists just under the surface of mainstream publishing.
My personal take is that the best material often comes from writers who are part of the community themselves; they get the specific appeal beyond just a physical description. It's not just 'she was big', it's about the scenes, the tension, the celebration of size, and sometimes the transformative aspect. The writing can be surprisingly tender or intensely kinky, depending on what you're after. I'd say avoid the big, generic free ebook sites—the selection is usually poor and packed with mislabeled content. Stick to Smashwords, explore Amazon with very specific keywords, and maybe lurk in relevant subreddits or Discord servers where readers share recommendations. That's where you'll find the good, popular stuff that's actually circulating within the community.
2026-07-14 09:32:33
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