Audrey Carlan's Top 3 Hottest Books

Frivolity makes an argument for a Audrey carlan that prioritizes the hot over any narrative intention. Something like that Paris Hilton began to write novels advised on the aesthetic proposal by Lady Gaga. Romanticism reaching its highest levels of misery, as Groucho Marx would say. It is not about belittling, but it is about locating the narrative of this author in that space of fast food literature, the equivalent of fast food, tasty but lacking in good nutrients.

And despite everything, we find some books that are easy to read if you abstract yourself from any minimal search for exclusively literary pretense and focus on the mud of sentimentality in an erotic review. Readings to warm up at a stroke and absolutely despising any approach to mundane reality.

Erotic fantasy and unbridled passion ... love as a luxury only accessible to chic people and sex as a vent disguised as a carnival of the erotic. A distorting mirror towards the materialistic idealization of love.

It is true that the erotic narrative tradition in Spain is based on authors light years away from Carlan in terms of literary quality, such as Almudena Grandes and his Lulu. And of course, in the United States, the birthplace of Playboy, the references to the erotic and the sexual are different. And so it finally happens that the contents screech on this side of the ocean.

When some of Carlan's books such as Mía's saga reach the top sales positions in the US, over writers who know well they face a market niche that should have its own rankings (Competing a heavyweight against a featherweight It's never fair), we discovered that literature is not always synonymous with cultivating the mind. And it is that in every area there are always exceptions.

Having said all this, which is not little, if you want a book for a hottie with topical patterns that even if it is used for some kind of fetishist game far from reality, maybe one of these books will help you ...

3 "best" books by Audrey Carlan

Calendar Girl 4

Let's see, deep down the intention can even be good ... In fact, the echo of predestination between Mia and Wes, which permeates an entire saga, sounds like human redemption in an elitist setting that transforms fleeting love into something purely dependent on money .

It is already known that power has its eroticism, that proximity to those who have wealth by punishment can provide an interesting fly that may well serve to get extra money to put a flat for you.

But this end of the saga offers us a point of hope, a descent into the mundane to finally discover Mia and Wes simply two beings found to love each other, despite simply beginning an exchange of fluids.

The different circumstances of one and the other weigh a lot, as it should be understood in a capitalist society in which one of the first questions that can arise between two people who know each other is how much do you earn per week? But as I say at the end, the chrematism issue may remain as a distant echo defeated by the love that arose in the most unexpected way.

Calendar Girl 4

Everything is possible

The tremendous story of Parker Ellis, Eric Zimmerman's alter ego by Megan Maxwell. Because Parker is convinced that price drives everything.

Love has its labeling and Parker Ellis, CEO of a large multinational, extends his business knowledge to his most personal circle. Nothing more lacking in substance than someone convinced of the price of everything and the value of nothing.

That is why these types of stories full of eroticism and romanticism end up triumphing. Because in the end the Parkers or Zimmermans always succumb when the love that remains after the hangover of passion confronts them naked with an unknown world of emotions in which they do not know how to move and where they can end up shipwrecked to face unknown islands.

Humor, concerted love and fascinating Carlan-style discoveries to attract new readers to a new saga.

Everything is possible

Calendar Girl 1

It never hurts to start at the beginning for a bestselling author like Carlan. The Pretty Woman syndrome is something that is still in force today (you just have to see how they replace the movie over and over again any Saturday or Sunday in the afternoon).

Mía's pressing financial need, linked to a case of life or death, leads her to spaces where her body can become merchandise.

She knows herself attractive and decides to offer herself to the highest bidder. Luxury prostitution takes on a different look depending on the high circles of power. Accompanying great men in various activities to get the money she needs, Mía will gain wisdom with which to navigate towards her end.

With this novel, a frenzied calendar starts that, although it approaches an ignominious dedication, ends up trying to rescue the courage of that woman to achieve its plausible end ...

Calendar Girl 1
5/5 - (8 votes)

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