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Over The Moon

Over The Moon

A Sizzling BBC Sci-Fi Novella

A Taboo Novella
38,996 words; Published: January 2nd, 2019
Big Black Cock / Petite / Interracial / Zero-G
Too big. Too black. And way too tempting not to at least have a taste.

Waking up on a space station 350,000 years into the future isn’t the worst thing that’s ever happened to Cole. Sure, he’ll miss his family, his homies, and he’ll never get to play pro baseball, but nor will he ever have to face the consequences of that last day when—

 

Bump! Thump!

 

After eons in cryo-sleep, he can still hear that kid going under the wheels. Like it was yesterday.

 

Esther is a nice distraction. Born and raised in the low gravity of Earth’s moon, her race has never encountered Cole’s huge African physique. She’s truly tiny and utterly gorgeous, like a pixie from a fantasy book, and she seems every bit as taken by Cole’s size as he is with hers. It’s hard not to notice how she watches him when she thinks he’s not looking.

 

The deeper Cole falls for her, the harder it becomes to unburden his guilt, and the tighter that noose draws around his throat. He’s not the only one harboring secrets, though. As he learns to navigate this unimaginable future, he comes to realize the woman he loves has other plans for him.

 

Over the Moon is Interracial BBC Exotica so big, you’ll need both hands just to guide it in.

One thing about Ms. LaPage - she's never boring. I consider myself a true Sci Fi geek. I was ready to pounce on this book and declare fraud, since so many authors that don't primarily write science fiction think all they have to do is put flashy words like "laser gun" and "light speed" in a story to qualify it. I was pleasantly surprised that Ms. LaPage didn't try to take the easy road, and wrote a book covering hundreds of thousands of years (not each and every one, of course) and even threw in a traffic accident. I kept looking for a pounce target only to be drawn deeper into the story. Instead of instantaneous Earth/Moon travel, the book slows that down for a good reason and with excellent results. I would definitely recommend this book to anyone wanting a change of pace from predictable plots. Another well earned "Well Done" for Ms. L.

B. Binkerd - Amazon

The Author's Story

This one just seemed to get away from me. Pippa at Uruk asked me for a 10K word space opera, and I said: Yeah. 10K? No worries. I'd been fiddling with this post-armageddon idea of a contemporary-era guy waking up on a space station and falling in love with what was to all intents and purposes, the last woman in the world. The story needed a kink, and clearly this was going to be a Mars and Venus number, so the contrasting shades of black and white, big and small... it had to be BBC Erotica.

I'm a plotter, so I broke it down into 3 acts, broke them down into scenes, and paced it out so I knew how many words I had to work with. When the first scene came out 20% over, nobody panicked. I emailed Pippa and she said Fine - a bit long is okay. Then the second scene went long... then I figured I'd missed some important emotional transition, requiring another scene... or two. Um, Pippa, how do you feel about 40K?

Looks like Pippa is getting a different space opera.

Science fiction is always a risk. Not everybody will be able to suspend disbelief. Just in case you're wondering:

  • Is L1 a thing? Yes, Google LaGrangian points. A space station at Earth-Moon L1 could stay in geo-stationary orbit, but it wouldn't be stable. Like a pencil balanced on its point, it would need constant minor adjustments to stay in place. Theoretically, that might be possible with gyroscopes and solar power, so I'd say yes, the self-contained L1 Space Station is feasible.

  • Is a Kevlar tethered space elevator feasible? On the Moon, yes. On Mars, no. It would need a stronger, lighter material. Bring on the nano-tubes!

  • Could a space station and space elevator last 300K years? Probably not. Degradation from solar winds and asteroid strikes would be a big problem.

  • Would moon people really get so small? Maybe. Without competition (and in the absence of artificial selection), natural selection would freeze, halting  evolution, but a constant low-protein diet would make for a much smaller humanity.

  • Wouldn't language evolve? Probably. Perhaps less so in a small, isolated community. But that would make for a less entertaining read.

  • Could the Earth recover like that in 300K years? Probably.

  • Did you just make all of this up? Yes. Well, kind of. I did a lot of Googling and reading on space colonisation, but I wouldn't call it hard research. I'd like to think it's plausibly made-up.

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