Lesbian Wrestling League

Out of Her League |Lesbian Story|
Out of Her League |Lesbian Story|
Imagine the worst female softball team you ever saw, triple it, and you've got Darci Bloom's baseball team. Darci's got a lot to handle this season. She's ended up in a team full of nonathletic misfits. She's got a huge crush on the girl making a documentary about the team. She's got a difficult dad. Now a crazy Russian couple shows their interest in coaching her team. Will this bunch of weirdos going to blast into her life and change it forever? Will they fall apart or can they win the unexpected?
10
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21 Chapters
The Lycan League
The Lycan League
Grey Monroe is given 60 days to pay back her debts. 60 days to free the only family she has. Desperately she turns to the quickest cash she knows; an underground gambling tournament. Harry Styles is constantly searching for the next cash grab. When he stumbles upon an underground gambling tournament, he knows he's found his newest scheme. That is until his path crosses with Grey. Despite their desperation to keep business and pleasure separate, they find themselves entangled with one another. A story of love, pain, tragedy, discovery, and deliverance.
Not enough ratings
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70 Chapters
Hades |Lesbian Version|
Hades |Lesbian Version|
Hades was well-cast to rule over the land of the dead. But what if Hades, the fearsome monarch of the Underworld was, in fact, a goddess? Everyone called her, 'Lord of the Dead' out of mockery since she prefers the company of women. She was considered an isolated and violent immortal, who loathed change and was easily given to a slow black rage like no others. But then everything changed when the dark goddess met the daughter of Demeter, Persephone. Now the tale of Hades and Persephone will be retold with a sprinkle of twists and turns.
9.3
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14 Chapters
Lesbian Aswang Queen
Lesbian Aswang Queen
The carnivorous ways of the Aswang leave little room for love - much less a forbidden one between a queen and human girl. Little did Aswang Queen Catarina know, soon, her life would be changed by a plucky American biologist. A blue eyed, blonde adventurer, Rose Smith from California, who would make Catarina question all she knew, and want to make a human Her Aswang Woman King. ___ Catarina Rosales Marquez, 26, is the Aswang Queen of the Domminga Mountains, but she abhors eating humans. She has genetically engineered the fruits of her goddess Ikapati to produce human proteins in order to bring peace to Mindanao - but the Aswang do not trust this revolutionary, peaceful Queen - and are wary of the American biologist she has taken under her wing. Rose Smith is a German-American biologist doing her dissertation on the elusive, endangered Phillippines Eagle. Having studied the Tarsier in her undergraduate semester abroad in Manila, she fell in love with chicken adobo, pandesal - and Filipina women. Eager to be the first American biologist to do a longitudinal study of the Phillipines Eagle, she sets out into the Domminga Mountains on a bus with a one-way ticket - not afraid of the local's warnings of the rabid Iktapati Aswang Clan that eats humans, and roving bands of Tikbalang werehorses that stampede trespassers to death. When Catarina and Rose collide, it is oil and flame. Catarina, expected to marry a King, finds herself questioning the very cosmos of relationships - can she take a Queen, and a feisty American grad student at that? And can Rose come to terms with the elusive, seductive courts of the Vampiric Aswang? When the Iktapati clan rebels, the Tikbalang war, and the wind spirits coquette, Rose and Catarina must team up to save the humans of Mindanao - and the Phillipines eagle!
8.5
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7 Chapters
The League of Rogues
The League of Rogues
"The League of Rogues takes what they want—but have they taken on too much?For too long Miss Emily Parr has been subject to the whims of her indebted uncle and the lecherous advances of his repulsive business partner. Her plan to be done with dominating men forever is simple—find herself a kind husband who will leave her to her books.It seems an easy enough plan, until she is unexpectedly abducted by an incorrigible duke who hides a wounded spirit behind flashing green eyes.Godric St. Laurent, Duke of Essex, spends countless nights at the club with his four best friends, and relishes the rakish reputation society has branded him with. He has no plans to marry anytime soon—if ever. But when he kidnaps an embezzler’s niece, the difficult debutante’s blend of sweetness and sharp tongue make him desperate for the one thing he swears he never wanted: love.Yet as they surrender to passion, danger lurks in Godric’s shadowed past, waiting for him to drop his guard—and rob him of the woman he can’t live without.Warning: This novel includes a lady who refuses to stay kidnapped, a devilish duke with a dark past, and an assortment of charming rogues who have no idea what they’ve gotten themselves into.The League of Rogues is created by Lauren Smith, an EGlobal Creative Publishing signed author."
10
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311 Chapters
Out of My League
Out of My League
Reese: I know all too well the sting of heartbreak and rejection. Not a lot of men can handle a woman of my stature. I only hope that love is out there. When I agreed to meet up with my Frost cousins and their kids for a Christmas event after another breakup, I didn't expect sparks to fly with their friend Don Hunter. Don: I was surprised to be invited by my coworker Darius Frost to join his family and friends at the holiday lights at the park. It's not like I have family in the area, and I'm self-aware enough to know I wouldn't have some hot date. So why is the gorgeous Reese Nikolaidis giving me the time of day? It has to be a joke because she is out of my league. This is a standalone story but is the four book in the Ravenwood series. Book 1 - The Princess of Ravenwood Book 2 - Chasing Kitsune Book 3 - Expect The Unexpected Book 4 - Out Of My League Book 5 - Man's Best Wingman
10
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43 Chapters

How Should Artists Design Curvy Lesbian Characters Respectfully?

3 Answers2025-11-24 04:39:42

Curvy characters deserve better. I get kind of fired up thinking about how often curves are reduced to a single function — eye candy, comic relief, or a stereotype — and I want to see artists treat them like fully lived people. Practically that means starting with humanity: give her a life beyond being 'curvy.' What does she do when she's not on-screen? What are her hobbies, anxieties, triumphs? How does her body affect her everyday actions in realistic, non-sexualized ways? I'm talking about small choices like sensible shoes for long walks, realistic posture, the way clothes fold and stretch, and the normal little ways bodies carry fat and muscle. Those details make a character believable and respectful.

From a visual standpoint I always try to break out of single-body molds. Curvy doesn't have to mean one silhouette; there are pear shapes, apple shapes, soft but athletic builds, older bodies with curves, and smaller-statured women who are still clearly curvy. Play with proportions and age, and resist camera angles or poses that exist solely to fetishize. Wardrobe tells story: a tailored blazer, a cozy sweater, activewear, or a bold dress all communicate different things without reducing her to a fetish. Also, show her in healthy relationships that aren’t defined by fetish. Examples like 'Bloom Into You' and the dynamics of Ruby and Sapphire in 'Steven Universe' demonstrate emotional variety rather than objectification.

Finally, involve the community. Read queer comics, follow queer visual artists, and get feedback from people who actually share the identity you’re depicting. Intersectionality matters — race, disability, class, and age change how a curvy lesbian's life looks, so don’t erase that complexity. When I design, these layers are what make the character stick with me; I want to draw people I’d hang out with, not caricatures, and that makes the creative work so much more rewarding.

Where Can I Find Lesbian Consensual Roleplay Fiction Online?

3 Answers2025-11-04 12:52:44

Looking to dig into lesbian consensual roleplay fiction online? I’ve spent way too many late nights doing exactly that, and I can tell you there’s a surprising variety of places depending on the vibe you want — collaborative live roleplay, written transcripts, or finished short stories inspired by RP scenes.

My favorite starting point is Archive of Our Own. People post RP transcripts, collaborative threads, and finished fics all the time; the tagging system is excellent so you can search for tags like roleplay, lesbian, consensual, and mature content notes. Literotica is another big archive if you want more explicit, original erotica that’s often clearly marked with consent tags. Wattpad tends to have softer romance RPs and amateur collaborative serials if you prefer slow-burn and character-building. For community-driven back-and-forth roleplay, RolePlayer.me and dedicated forum boards still host active threads, and Dreamwidth or older LiveJournal communities sometimes have deep, established RP circles.

If you prefer real-time interaction, Discord servers, Reddit roleplay subreddits (look for rules and moderation first), and FetLife groups (for kink-friendly communities) are where people actually find partners to play with. Always read community rules, use content filters, and respect age and consent checks. I usually use a throwaway account for NSFW threads, read the tags carefully, and message moderators if anything feels off. Finding the right corner of the internet takes a bit of patience, but once you land on a kind, well-moderated community the writing and exchanges can be really rewarding — I still get a kick when a collaborative thread grows into a polished fic.

How Do Writers Depict Consent In Lesbian Consensual Roleplay Scenes?

4 Answers2025-11-04 01:18:43

I get excited when writers treat consent as part of the chemistry instead of an interruption. In many well-done lesbian roleplay scenes I read, the build-up usually starts off-screen with a negotiation: clear boundaries, what’s on- and off-limits, safewords, and emotional triggers. Authors often sprinkle that pre-scene talk into the narrative via text messages, whispered check-ins, or a quick, intimate conversation before the play begins. That groundwork lets the scene breathe without the reader worrying about coercion.

During the scene, good writers make consent a living thing — not a single line. You’ll see verbal confirmations woven into action: a breathy 'yes,' a repeated check, or a soft 'are you sure?' And equally important are nonverbal cues: reciprocal touches, returning eye contact, relaxed breathing, and enthusiastic participation. I appreciate when internal monologue shows characters noticing those cues, because it signals active listening, not assumption.

Aftercare usually seals the deal for me. The gentle moments of reassurance, cuddling, discussing what worked or didn’t, or just making tea together make the roleplay feel responsibly erotic. When authors balance tension with clarity and care, the scenes read honest and respectful, and that always leaves me smiling.

Which TV Shows Handle A Transgender Lesbian Coming-Out Story Well?

2 Answers2025-11-06 13:04:24

On TV, a handful of shows have treated a transgender lesbian coming-out with real nuance and heart, and those are the ones I keep returning to when I want to feel seen or to understand better. For me, 'Sense8' is a standout: Nomi Marks (played by Jamie Clayton) is a brilliantly written trans woman whose love life with Amanita is tender, messy, and full of agency. The show gives her space to be political and intimate at once, and it avoids reducing her to trauma—her coming-out and relationships are woven into a wider story about connection. I still get goosebumps from how normal and fierce their partnership is; it feels like a healthy portrait of a trans woman in love with a woman, which is exactly the kind of representation that matters. 'Pose' is another personal favorite because it centers trans femmes in a community where queer love is everyday life. The show doesn't make a single coming-out scene the whole point; instead it shows layered experiences—family dynamics, ballroom culture, dating, and how identity shifts with time. That breadth helps viewers understand a trans lesbian coming-out as part of a life, not as a one-off event. Meanwhile, 'Transparent' offers something different: it focuses on family ripples when an older parent transitions and explores romantic possibilities with women later in life. The writing often nails the awkward and honest conversations that follow, even if some off-screen controversies complicate how I reconcile the show's strengths. I also think 'Orange Is the New Black' deserves mention because Sophia Burset's storyline highlights institutional barriers—medical care, prison bureaucracy, and how those systems intersect with sexuality and gender. The show treats her as a full person with romantic history and present desires rather than a prop. 'Euphoria' is messier but valuable: Jules's arc is less of a tidy “coming out” checklist and more a realistic, sometimes uncomfortable journey about identity and attraction that can resonate with trans lesbians and allies alike. Beyond TV, I recommend pairing these with memoirs and essays like 'Redefining Realness' for context—seeing both scripted and real-life voices enriches understanding. Overall, I look for shows that center trans actors, give space for joy as well as struggle, and treat coming out as one chapter in a larger, lived story—those are the portrayals that have stuck with me the longest.

What Novels Include Curvy Lesbian Characters In Romance Plots?

2 Answers2025-11-06 01:57:04

Hunting down romance novels that actually celebrate curvy lesbian bodies has become one of my favorite little quests, and I love sharing what I find. If you want lush, emotional romance with women who aren't written as rail-thin prototypes, start with a few modern and classic reads where readers often point to vivid, voluptuous characters and genuine queer love. 'The Price of Salt' (also published as 'Carol') is a classic that centers a mature, desirous relationship — the physical descriptions aren’t the main focus, but many readers celebrate how adult, sensual love is portrayed between women. Sarah Waters’ novels, especially 'Tipping the Velvet' and 'Fingersmith', give you immersive historical settings, frank queer desire, and characters described in tactile, sometimes generous terms; Waters writes bodies with real presence, and the romances are intense and satisfying.

For contemporary vibes, 'The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo' features sapphic romance threaded through an opulent life story — Evelyn’s allure and presence are frequently described in ways readers interpret as curvy and glamorous, and her relationships with women (and the emotional stakes) are central to the book’s appeal. Beyond those, indie queer romance spaces are where you’ll often find explicitly size-positive heroines: look for tags like ‘fat femme’, ‘plus-size’, or ‘BBW’ on romance indie lists and small presses. A lot of small-press and self-published queer romance authors write with body positivity front and center, so the protagonists are fully realized women whose bodies matter to the story in affirming ways, not just as shorthand.

If you want concrete hunting grounds, check out community-curated lists on sites like Goodreads and Autostraddle, and follow fat-positive queer book reviewers and bloggers — they highlight newer indie novels that mainstream outlets miss. I also love combing through queer romance hashtags and small-press catalogs for keywords like ‘plus-size heroine’ or ‘fat lesbian protagonist’ because that often uncovers heartwarming contemporary rom-coms and slow-burns that fit the bill. Personally, I find a mix of the sensual classics and the fresh indie romances gives the best balance: the classics for complex, lived-in portrayals of lesbian love, and the indies for explicit body-affirming joy. Happy reading — I always feel thrilled when a character looks like someone I could see at a coffee shop, falling in love on their own terms.

Is Lesbian A Slur In Historical Texts And Literature?

4 Answers2025-11-05 11:50:20

I get asked about this a surprising amount, and I always try to unpack it carefully. Historically, the word 'lesbian' comes from Lesbos, the Greek island associated with Sappho and female-centered poetry, so its origin isn't a slur at all — it started as a geographic/cultural label. Over time, especially in the 19th and early 20th centuries, medical texts and mainstream newspapers sometimes used the term in ways that were clinical, pathologizing, or sneering. That tone reflected prejudice more than the word itself, so when you read older novels or essays, you’ll sometimes see 'lesbian' used in a judgmental way.

Context is everything: in some historical literature it functions as a neutral descriptor, in others it's deployed to stigmatize. Works like 'The Well of Loneliness' show how fraught public discourse could be; the backlash against that novel made clear how society viewed women who loved women. Today the community largely uses 'lesbian' as a neutral or proud identity, and modern style guides treat it as a respectful term. If you’re reading historical texts, pay attention to who’s speaking and why — that tells you whether the usage is slur-like or descriptive. Personally, I find tracing that change fascinating; language can be both a weapon and a reclamation tool, which always gets me thinking.

Is Lesbian A Slur In Different Cultural Or Legal Contexts?

4 Answers2025-11-05 08:10:16

People ask this all the time, and I tend to answer with a mix of patience and bluntness. The word 'lesbian' itself is a neutral descriptor of a sexual orientation — it's been used in medical, social, and community contexts for well over a century. Most of the time, when someone uses it politely or descriptively, it isn’t a slur; it’s simply how a person identifies.

Where it becomes hateful is about intent, tone, and power. If someone uses 'lesbian' as a way to demean, to yell at, to mock, or to dehumanize, then functionally it’s being deployed as a slur. That matters legally and socially: many anti-harassment policies and anti-discrimination laws look at whether speech is hostile or incites violence, not just at the dictionary definition. I try to listen for context — is it a neutral mention, an in-group reclaiming of identity, or an attack? That helps me decide how harmful it feels in the moment.

Is The Mixer: The Story Of Premier League Tactics Worth Reading For Football Fans?

2 Answers2026-02-12 17:43:01

If you're a football fan who's ever wondered why the Premier League feels so different from other leagues, 'The Mixer' is like uncovering a treasure map of tactical evolution. Michael Cox dives deep into how strategies shifted from the physical, direct play of the '90s to the possession-heavy systems we see today, and it's packed with moments that make you go, 'Oh, THAT'S why that happened!' Like when he breaks down Arsène Wenger’s early Arsenal sides—those Invincibles weren’t just flair; their spacing and pressing were revolutionary. It’s not just dry analysis, either; Cox peppers it with wild anecdotes (remember Wimbledon’s 'Crazy Gang' hoofing it long before it was ironic?).

What really hooked me, though, was how it connects tactics to cultural shifts. The book argues that the Premier League’s chaos isn’t just randomness—it’s a product of specific managerial philosophies clashing with player strengths. You finish chapters feeling like you’ve watched a documentary, not read a textbook. And even if you’re not a tactics nerd, the stories about Klopp’s gegenpress or Mourinho’s parking the bus at Chelsea are pure entertainment. My only gripe? It leaves you craving a sequel covering the last five years of Pep and Arteta’s chess matches.

Is THE LESBIAN DEVIL TO THE STRAIGHT MAN SAINT Based On A True Story?

2 Answers2026-02-13 21:46:17

I stumbled upon 'The Lesbian Devil to the Straight Man Saint' while browsing through some niche manga recommendations, and it instantly caught my attention with its provocative title. At first glance, the dynamic between the characters seemed intense, almost like a psychological battleground. I dug a bit deeper into interviews with the author and found that while the story isn't directly based on a true event, it draws heavily from real-life power struggles and societal tensions. The author mentioned being inspired by observations of toxic relationships and the way people manipulate each other, especially in contexts where sexuality and power intersect.

What fascinates me is how the manga exaggerates these dynamics to almost mythic proportions. The 'devil' and 'saint' archetypes aren't just characters—they feel like symbols of broader cultural conflicts. I’ve read similar works like 'Killing Stalking' or 'Happiness,' where the line between victim and perpetrator blurs, but this one stands out because of its raw, almost satirical edge. It doesn’t claim to be a documentary, but it’s unsettling how relatable some of the emotional manipulation feels. Makes you wonder how much fiction is really just polished reality.

How Historically Accurate Is Bush League: A History Of Minor League Baseball?

2 Answers2026-02-14 16:34:44

Bush League: A History of Minor League Baseball is one of those books that feels like a love letter to the underdogs of America's pastime. I picked it up because I’ve always been fascinated by the gritty, unpolished side of baseball—the stories that don’t make it to the big leagues. The author dives deep into the early 20th century, weaving together anecdotes, stats, and cultural context to paint a vivid picture of minor league life. From the wild promotions to the financial struggles of small-town teams, it captures the chaos and charm of the era. I cross-referenced some of the historical claims with other sources, and while there are a few minor liberties taken for narrative flow, the core facts hold up. The book doesn’t shy away from the darker sides, either, like segregation and the exploitation of players, which adds layers of authenticity.

What really stood out to me was how the author balances nostalgia with critical analysis. It’s not just a rosy-eyed look back; it acknowledges the myths and realities of minor league lore. For example, the chapter on 'barnstorming' teams debunks some romanticized tales while preserving the spirit of adventure. If you’re a baseball history buff, you’ll appreciate the depth of research, though casual readers might find some sections dense. Overall, it’s a compelling mix of scholarship and storytelling that feels true to the heart of the game’s untold stories.

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