The Harder She Comes by D.L. King


The Harder She Comes
Title : The Harder She Comes
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1573447781
ISBN-10 : 9781573447782
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 216
Publication : First published March 1, 2012
Awards : Independent Publisher Book Award (IPPY) Erotica (Gold) (2013), Lambda Literary Award Lesbian Erotica (2013)

What is it about a pretty girl in a tight skirt bent over to adjust her stockings? Or that hotter-than-hot butch, swaggering into the bar like she owns it, eyes undressing every pretty girl in the place?

Some butches worship at the altar of their femmes fatale and many little girls have a need to serve their big, strong daddies. In The Harder She Comes, we meet girls salivating at the sight of well-filled and packed jeans and bois dreaming of having a beautiful girl’s red lipstick smeared across their mouths. D. L. King has curated a singular set of stories filled with sexy sirens luring unsuspecting butches to their demise on the rocky shores of love and hot, confident women in silk and lace during the day who will do anything to serve their daddies' needs at night. The Harder She Comes is great writing with characters that will stay with the reader for a long, long time — sometimes sweet, always sexy, often romantic, and more than a little dangerous.


The Harder She Comes Reviews


  • T.J. Dallas

    Delicious!!

  • Lorraine Rusnack

    There’s nothing better than some hot butch/ femme stories of lust and desire. Super sexy and lots of sizzle.

  • CLo

    Lots of short stories. Some you will definitely like more than others and some you will wish were full stories. However, there a few that left me wanting something more to happen...it was like just when foreplay started the story ended. Anyway...not a bad compilation.

  • Althea

    Stole my girlfriend's copy of this book and I'm glad I did. This was good! I won't say more than that!

  • Kelly

    An incredible anthology of butch/femme erotica. I think there is something for everyone in this volume.

  • Unapologetic_Bookaholic

    I'm not a lesbian but I think using strapons as a sexy toy is really fun role-play. I never really paid much attention to the butch/femme roles in lesbian sex but just by reading this book and knowing the differences made the stories more enjoyable.

  • dreamlisy

    A bunch of short lesbian erotica stories with cowboys, tomboys, all types of femmes, and older women who know what they want. Honestly, it’s amazingly hot, each story well written, and—buy it and devour the hot butches in these stories. That’s it, that’s my review.

  • Lisabet Sarai

    [Originally published at Erotica Revealed
    http://www.eroticarevealed.com]

    I'm probably not the ideal reviewer for The Harder She Comes. I'm bisexual and I definitely enjoy lesbian erotica – I've written some myself. However, I'm pretty clueless about lesbian sub-culture, with its myriad labels, roles and self-identifications. Sure, I've heard the terminology – baby butch, boi, high femme, transman, and so on – but I don't have the first hand experience, the sociocultural background if you will, to fully appreciate the intended distinctions. It's a tribute to D.L. King's acumen as an editor that I enjoyed (and understood!) most of the stories in this book despite my ignorance.

    A simplistic definition equates “femme” with feminine traits, appearance, and behavior, and conversely, “butch” with masculine attributes. One of the messages of this collection, however, is that the real meaning of these terms varies dramatically with the individual. On the one hand, we have Evie, the slinky flapper in Evan Mora's “Speakeasy”, and Jay, the dressed-to-the-nines “gentleman” who claims her during Roaring Twenties night at the local lesbian salon. The roles are well-defined, with Evie literally swept off her high-heeled feet by Jay's confident conquest. At the other extreme, there's the unnamed narrator in Aimee Herman's “Channeling Charles Bukowski”. Impersonating the notorious poet from the title for a Halloween dress-up day at work, she is discovered in the men's room by Emily from accounting, who has changed her usual feminine garb for a cowboy costume. In the steamy encounter that ensues, it's not at all clear who's playing what role – but it doesn't matter.

    Up until now, I had never let a girl go there, minus a few times in college. I am a top, wrist grabber, dominant thruster. Allowing anyone down there puts me in too vulnerable a position. But I'm not me today; I'm not political butch bull dyke; I am a man who was too boozed up and covered in poems to say no or to have a type, so I just let go.

    Suddenly, I understand what it feels like to be bisexual – the best of both worlds – except my genitals are sexual multitaskers, transforming shape and desire. My dick wants to be sucked on, to stick itself into something, someone. My pussy wants to be stuffed, filled, suffocated.

    In between these two poles, The Harder She Comes offers a million variations along the two dimensions of male/female and dominant/submissive. “Winner Take All” by Andrea Dale features a shy, sincere butch who's trying to win a truck for the animal welfare non-profit where she works. Teddie's only real competition is Grace, a petite, glamorous woman who distracts poor Teddie by whispering the most filthy, kinky suggestions the poor butch has ever heard. Ultimately Teddie wins the truck, and Grace takes Teddie as her own prize.

    “It's So Peaceful Out Here” is a funny, sexy story about a naughty femme going camping with a bunch of butches. Flirty, exhibitionistic Frankie is bound, clamped and brutally fucked by her Daddy, just the punishment she deserves – and just what she wants.

    “Manchester 2000” by Stella Sandberg describes a New Year's Eve encounter between the butch narrator and a voluptuous straight woman who apparently believes she's screwing a biological man – or does she?

    “Valentine” by River Light is hard-core BDSM, again with the femme on top. Silvia, the narrator's mistress and lover, presents the butch narrator to her own top, Casey, as a Valentine's gift. The physical trials Casey inflicts are not nearly as difficult to endure as the fear that the narrator has been abandoned.

    In “Farmhand”, Miel Rose creates a confusing but delicious ménage involving a married butch/femme couple and the butch young woman whom they hire to do farm chores in return for rent. From one scene to the next, the power shifts in unexpected but exciting ways. “Official” gender roles are discarded in the pursuit of pleasure and connection.

    Two of my favorite stories concern long-term relationships, in which the butch/femme roles are not really the focus at all. Kathleen Bradean's (literally) luscious “Tamales” is a snapshot of a couple's Christmas traditions, which involves cooking and other sources of heat. “The Bucket List” by Charlotte Dare deals with the unrequited love between a thirty-something butch and her married fifty-something best friend, highlighting the nonsensical barriers to their own happiness people sometimes erect.

    The cocky butch in Valerie Alexander's “A Date With Sharon Date” seems at first to epitomize the stereotypes. Yet her determination to win back the affections of her ex-girlfriend Shandra (who left because of a lapse in the narrator's fidelity) reveals a level of need she can barely admit.

    In Anna Watson's “Bienvenido”, Daisy doesn't just want to play a masculine role; she's desperate to actually be a man. Wade, an unusual consultant, tutors the young butch in male attitudes, behavior and manners, turning his protegé into an accomplished Southern gentleman well-equipped to satisfy a lovely lady.

    Other contributors to this collection include Shanna Germain, Beth Wylde, Rachel Kramer Bussel, Sinclair Sexsmith, C.S. Clark, Crystal Barela, and Teresa Noelle Roberts. The fact that I haven't specifically called out their stories should not be interpreted as negative. I want to leave some tales for readers to discover on their own! Also, these stories in many cases reprise strong themes of dominance and submission that I've already mentioned, sometimes with the butch on top, sometimes the femme.

    Overall, D.L. King has done a great job with this anthology. Whether your criterion of excellence is deft writing, intriguing characters, sizzling sex, or all three, you won't be disappointed by The Harder She Comes.

  • Lisa  R Smith

    Anthology of butch/femme erotica. You’ll like some of the stories but not the others, depending on your sexual proclivities. The author says. “women, since time immemorial, have been loving women in all sorts of varied and beautiful ways” and you certainly get a variety here. Older feminist probably shouldn’t read this book as some situations will not sit well with them 😎. Enjoy!

  • Sarah

    Like most anthologies there were some stories that were exactly what I wanted to read and some that weren't for me at all.

  • Andi

    Wanted to really like it. Only kind of liked it.

  • Stevie Carroll

    Anthologies are always a little hit and miss for me, and this was no exception. Some great stories in there that I'll go back and reread when I'm in the right frame of mind but others left me cold.

  • Allie Kleber

    Just not for me, I think.