The Kisser
Collection: Romance, Work-in-Progress
His name is Jams. He’s 21, single, and he wants to “play.”
At first Maggie—43, married to Dan—doesn’t know what that means. But she wants to learn, especially after a steamy make‑out session in the back of Jams’ Cherokee on the dark beach.
Why is she cheating? She’s not sure. Or maybe she is. There’s an emptiness in her that has grown too large to ignore, a hollow that wasn’t always there. She was Jams’ age once. She remembers.
His kisses that night drive her wild. She can’t stop thinking about them. Without even thinking, she tries to pull him harder into the script she’s always known—one where foreplay is just the on‑ramp to “real sex.”
Jams is the one who stops.
For him, “play” doesn’t have to end the way everyone assumes. For Maggie, that refusal is the first crack in the story she’s been told all her life about what sex is for—and who she’s supposed to be loving, and how.
While her marriage crumbles, her eyes open: to desire that doesn’t have to end in coitus, to ways of being intimate that don’t fit the standard romantic couple mold, and to the possibility that she might rebuild her life around a different understanding of love altogether.
He wants to play.
Maggie is eighteen again—and for the first time, she’s questioning the rules of the game.
This is not a conventional genre romance. It contains high‑heat scenes and a central relationship, but its primary focus is Maggie’s interior journey and the dismantling of sexual and romantic norms, rather than delivering a traditional happily ever after.
Genres: Romantic drama; Literary Romance / Romantic Literary Fiction; Erotic Contemporary Fiction (character‑driven, high‑heat romantic drama; erotic contemporary fiction about infidelity and rethinking love; a literary, NSFW relationship novel that questions what sex and love are "supposed" to look like)
Themes: Midlife emptiness; age‑gap desire; infidelity and religious sexual guilt; the clash between desire and “good wife” expectations; and, over time, a deep questioning of our cultural scripts about what counts as “real sex” and “real love"; amatonormativity
Setting: San Diego, California
Length: (20K words at present)
Who It’s For: Adult readers who want a frank, NSFW, character‑driven story about a 43‑year‑old woman whose affair with a younger man cracks open her religious sexual conditioning and the story she’s been told about “one true love”—and who are more interested in hard questions and self‑discovery than in a tidy fairy‑tale ending.
If the work of Sierra Simone or other authors who delve into stories with "forbidden" or religious undertones attract you, The Kisser will too.