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A review by riversnowdrop
Kink by R.O. Kwon, Garth Greenwell
Oof. Okay. As with any short story collection with multiple authors, it’s hard to rate this. Some were dull, some were written well, but my overall feeling is this book kind of was a let down and not very kinky at all? Kink here only seems to mean bdsm and also a (personally for me) gross obsession with spitting.
There is one story I have a massive issue with though, which was ‘Impact Play’. I wrote a whole rant about that immediately after reading, which I will now include (it’s long):
Fuck the story ‘Impact Play’ and the lack of trigger warning for ~actual~ incest: yeah, no, children engaging in sexual acts, veering into child on child sexual abuse*, is not kink - idfc how you frame it! This story is not told in a responsible way at all: having the incest be a “surprise twist” reveal moment. Fucking gross and, like I said, wildly irresponsible. There is a way to talk about incest alongside kink but god that is not it. I guess the real sin is, as well as being offensive, it’s not even hot! Like, write a kinky adult incest story, sure! Or, write a story of someone experiencing this as a child who then goes on to roleplay the abuse in adult life with partners! The key thing is the sexualising happens to the adults, not the kids. It’s made me so angry how wrong they’ve got this; not just as a victim myself, but as a sex-positive person who embraces the overlaps between trauma and kink and fetish! It’s maddening! Furthermore, the framing of this story further entrenches shame and secrecy, it does not free the main character from it.
*correcting myself: it’s not veering, it literally is. According to sex educators who discuss guidelines on what is/isn’t appropriate sexual behaviour for children at different stages, the acts that were depicted in this book fall under the category of ‘red behaviours’, and even though they are “consenting” (a word that loses all meaning in this context), this is concerning, as in real life this would probably indicate outside, wider abuse is happening that has led the children to these particular sex acts. It is harmful that the author implies that this is part of natural curiosity, or ‘green behaviour’, when all educational resources would label it otherwise.
There is one story I have a massive issue with though, which was ‘Impact Play’. I wrote a whole rant about that immediately after reading, which I will now include (it’s long):
Fuck the story ‘Impact Play’ and the lack of trigger warning for ~actual~ incest: yeah, no, children engaging in sexual acts, veering into child on child sexual abuse*, is not kink - idfc how you frame it! This story is not told in a responsible way at all: having the incest be a “surprise twist” reveal moment. Fucking gross and, like I said, wildly irresponsible. There is a way to talk about incest alongside kink but god that is not it. I guess the real sin is, as well as being offensive, it’s not even hot! Like, write a kinky adult incest story, sure! Or, write a story of someone experiencing this as a child who then goes on to roleplay the abuse in adult life with partners! The key thing is the sexualising happens to the adults, not the kids. It’s made me so angry how wrong they’ve got this; not just as a victim myself, but as a sex-positive person who embraces the overlaps between trauma and kink and fetish! It’s maddening! Furthermore, the framing of this story further entrenches shame and secrecy, it does not free the main character from it.
*correcting myself: it’s not veering, it literally is. According to sex educators who discuss guidelines on what is/isn’t appropriate sexual behaviour for children at different stages, the acts that were depicted in this book fall under the category of ‘red behaviours’, and even though they are “consenting” (a word that loses all meaning in this context), this is concerning, as in real life this would probably indicate outside, wider abuse is happening that has led the children to these particular sex acts. It is harmful that the author implies that this is part of natural curiosity, or ‘green behaviour’, when all educational resources would label it otherwise.
Graphic: Incest