Solace Ames | |
---|---|
Occupation | Author |
Genre | Erotic Fiction |
Notable works | The Submission Gift, The Companion Contract |
Website | |
solaceames |
Solace Ames is an American writer specializing in erotic fiction. She has also written under the pen name Violetta Vane. [1]
Ames is a self-taught writer. [2] Her short story "Tomorrow's Much Too Long" placed third in Hyphen's first Erotic Writing Contest in 2013. [3]
Ames first published The Dom Project with Carina Press with another author, Heloise Belleau in 2013. The main character was a tall, "tattooed Asian bad-boy Dom." [1]
Ames's first solo book, The Submission Gift, released in 2014, was reviewed by Publishers Weekly, which called it a "nuanced look at polyamory and BDSM." [4] In the story, a husband hires a rent boy as a "gift" to his wife. [5] He does this because he has just recovered from a bad car accident and can't provide a full sex life for his wife any longer. [6]
Her second solo publication, The Companion Contract, released in 2015, was also favorably reviewed by Publishers Weekly. [7] This book is about a woman who works as a pornography actress, but wants to move onto another career and another place in her life. [8]
Ames always makes a point to include safe sex practices in her writing whether this includes using condoms or partners being regularly screened for sexually transmitted infections (STI). [9] When Ames first started writing romance novels, she wanted to create multicultural stories. [10] She says that "Characters aren't as real to me if I don't understand where they come from." [10] Ames also stresses how treating multiculturalism in erotica must be rooted in a sense of personhood, rather than "fetishizing" or objectifying the person for their differences. [11]
Ames's father was a Japanese citizen, and her mother was raised in the United States: each had different expectations on how to raise their daughter. [11] Ames has characterized them as "anarcho-hippies". [11] Growing up, Ames felt that she was often fetishized by men who viewed Asian women as sex objects. [11] During her early twenties, she worked in a strip club in order to make money, though she doesn't "talk about it much after because of the stigma". [11]
Ames is married and has children. [2]
Solace Ames | |
---|---|
Occupation | Author |
Genre | Erotic Fiction |
Notable works | The Submission Gift, The Companion Contract |
Website | |
solaceames |
Solace Ames is an American writer specializing in erotic fiction. She has also written under the pen name Violetta Vane. [1]
Ames is a self-taught writer. [2] Her short story "Tomorrow's Much Too Long" placed third in Hyphen's first Erotic Writing Contest in 2013. [3]
Ames first published The Dom Project with Carina Press with another author, Heloise Belleau in 2013. The main character was a tall, "tattooed Asian bad-boy Dom." [1]
Ames's first solo book, The Submission Gift, released in 2014, was reviewed by Publishers Weekly, which called it a "nuanced look at polyamory and BDSM." [4] In the story, a husband hires a rent boy as a "gift" to his wife. [5] He does this because he has just recovered from a bad car accident and can't provide a full sex life for his wife any longer. [6]
Her second solo publication, The Companion Contract, released in 2015, was also favorably reviewed by Publishers Weekly. [7] This book is about a woman who works as a pornography actress, but wants to move onto another career and another place in her life. [8]
Ames always makes a point to include safe sex practices in her writing whether this includes using condoms or partners being regularly screened for sexually transmitted infections (STI). [9] When Ames first started writing romance novels, she wanted to create multicultural stories. [10] She says that "Characters aren't as real to me if I don't understand where they come from." [10] Ames also stresses how treating multiculturalism in erotica must be rooted in a sense of personhood, rather than "fetishizing" or objectifying the person for their differences. [11]
Ames's father was a Japanese citizen, and her mother was raised in the United States: each had different expectations on how to raise their daughter. [11] Ames has characterized them as "anarcho-hippies". [11] Growing up, Ames felt that she was often fetishized by men who viewed Asian women as sex objects. [11] During her early twenties, she worked in a strip club in order to make money, though she doesn't "talk about it much after because of the stigma". [11]
Ames is married and has children. [2]