Recent Comments

1/28/24, 6:19 AM
Wow, what a great first entry to the contest! Definitely going to reread this one a ton in the future. Such a hot mind control method, and so hot to read the progression of the transformation. Really great work balancing the two perspectives so well as they mutually change each other, neither aware of the full picture.
1/28/24, 5:28 AM
Oh! Oh! I love this story so far! I love where it's going, and I love your description of Jackson, at the beginning of the story and where he is ended up so far! I've got the perfect Twitter images for him! They're delivering pizza, but I think they'll fit. 😛 https://vxtwitter.com/NijiChara/status/1705884782444355942?s=20 https://vxtwitter.com/NijiChara/status/1703785962818421136?s=20
1/28/24, 4:32 AM
I love this story! So fucking hot and romance. Great work.
1/28/24, 3:41 AM
I’m so excited for some dad and son fun time.
1/28/24, 3:36 AM
Really perfect ! Need more preppy clothe !
Drake
1/28/24, 2:08 AM
Fun read. I had this bizarre plot twist idea running through my head half way through that the end of the story would be a cut away scene to the dad spying on the two boys and laughing at his experiment of "what would happen if my sons forgot they were brothers and one of them forgot he was my son?" Question. All. Reality. lol
1/28/24, 1:09 AM
are there any updates to this story? its so good
1/27/24, 2:21 AM
I was wandering what town in Kansas one would find the Double B Ranch as I started this chapter. Worlds cross, do worlds collide?

1/27/24, 1:31 PM
@[TexMuscle](/user/show/10002223) I had a realization a few years ago that most of my stories set in a "rural" atmosphere always end up in Kansas. Honestly, I think it's the influence of Superman comics growing up -- that Smallville really made an impression. I have directly connected the Pholus universe to the Pollination universe with the shared character of Wolf Murdock. But even though the Bowden Farm has shown up in this story, it's not intended to be the same reality as Pollination, just an inside joke to long-time readers.

1/27/24, 7:09 PM
@[absman420](/user/show/162063) I've noticed your geographical motif of Kansas. There's certainly some Superman in there, but I also think it's the paradox that your works often have a very Americanized Tom of Finland sensibility: your characters often fit into archetypes of American masculinity and manhood, particularly stereotypical "smalltown" America- the Coach, the Sheriff, the Biker, the Homecoming King, etc. But much like dear old Tom, you push those archetypes into an exaggerated, almost performative place that is always erotic and often slyly camp: the Village People if they were buff and made their own porn! And of course, the celebration of the implicit sexuality of these American archetypes flies in the face of the cultural conservativism these characters are often surrounded by. Personal queer liberation is achieved by embodying American masculinity to a parodic degree- the only way to Get Out is to Go Deeper!

1/27/24, 8:32 PM
@[ParadoxBear](/user/show/10002417) First of all, that was a brilliant observation -- thesis worthy? Perhaps my smalltown-ness reflects my own upbringing, a small "village" in upstate New York, population -- cows! There were less than a hundred in my graduating class and we had VERY LIMITED exposure to gay iconography. (I remember discovering Arnold in a Playboy my dad had stashed in his closet.) I still have fantasies about some of my high school coaches. ("Lidster" ring a bell to anyone?)

1/28/24, 1:02 AM
@[absman420](/user/show/162063) I think our favored male archetypes and “job” kinks are defined by the men we are surrounded by in childhood. I didn’t have any male teachers in grade school, but I had lots of uncles… Oh, and it occurs to me that the Kansas thing also invokes The Wizard of Oz! Pulled out of boring, sepia-tone reality into a bright, colorful world of wonder and peril! Muscle growth, mind control, sex slaves, oh my!
1/28/24, 1:02 AM
Love it