#465 - SDW Stern Dominant Women Harry Nutrix Executive Transvestite Mutrix Bilbrew
Submitted by admin on Mon, 12/15/2014 - 11:53Stern Dominant Women Bind Man in Female Attire
illustrated by Harry
Nutrix Corp., 1964, (New Jersey)
reprinted by Mutrix Corp., (New Jersey)
reprinted by Candor Book, Inc., (New York City)
a digital replica
and
Executive Transvestite, Book One
illustrated by Eneg / Gene Bilbrew
a Mutrix Book, late-1960s
a digital replica
Stern Dominant Women Bind Man in Female Attire,
Mr. Klaw published three Nutrix booklet versions of works by the artist only know as Harry. First advertised in 1964, Stern Dominant Women Bind Man in Female Attire was the last of them. The appearance and proportions of the feminized male in Stern Women duplicate the punished subjects in Dominating Tame-Azons of 1963 [product #431]. As in Dominating Tame-Azons , Harry provides illustrations for a story.
THE PLOTS: The prose has a set of characters and a plot, but does not necessarily coincide with the characters and scenes that appear in the pictures. The first-person narrative is told by Mario, who the Countess and her sister, Wilma, call Marie.
Marie enjoys “dressing up in female attire,”
thinks it’s fun to be dressed as a French Maid,
“loved being dominated by both the Countess and Wilma.”
In the prose, Marie admits,
“What delight I knew in these tender brands of servitude.”
“I was a slave-- and slaves should be bound at all times.”
“I sighed with happiness-- this pain was part of my being.”
“It was a pleasure for me to be manhandled by Wilma or her sister.”
The written narrative is about how two women prepare their slave to participate in a bondage costume competition by dressing him in an assortment of feminine undergarments of rubber and leather and tightly strapping him to furniture.
It’s mostly likely that the story was written by Mr. Klaw after he received the drawings from the artist. With 35 illustrations and 25 pages of text, the pictures do not necessarily correspond with the story. The pictures have characters and contraptions which are not cited in the text. The pictures do not show a setting that looks like a costume ball.
The carefully prepared illustrations show a petite, feminized male in stockings, corsets, aprons, maid’s caps, waist-cinchers, boots, high-heeled sandals, panties, long gloves, and bras. He is bound in helmets, straps, ropes, harnesses, wood and metal devices and several gags. He’s cute and shapely while bound, being spanked or serving as a maid. His helplessness and apparent surrender to the women who use him for their entertainment has submissive appeal. This is not forced feminization so much as it is powerful women exploiting a male’s surrender to the appeal of female garb as a means of turning him into a sexy dress-up doll who submits to their bondage fantasies.
The printed version has done a good job preserving the original grays and sharp-edged blacks. In the ebook, the pictures appear clear, with good contrast. The page sequence has been partially revised to position, as possible, pictures near the text that describes them.
Executive Transvestite, Book One
After Cynthia suggests that he try on her nightie during their honeymoon, Don admits to his bride that he’s “been trying on female garments for years.” At the office, Don’s cute secretary, Stephanie, recognizes that he has a pantie fetish. Bill from accounting identifies him as a cross dresser.
Using sexual blackmail, Cynthia rules at home, keeping Don in lace, heels and makeup. She obtains lip service from both her husband and their maid. At the end of book one, she enters her husband’s office and finds him in the middle of Stephanie.
The writing employs excellent vocabulary and good diction, without too many clichés. Sketching fetish details and personalities with clarity, the first-person narrative places the reader in the scenes.
Mr. Bilbrew’s superb ink work renders feminine forms with subtle curves, nice hosiery, and heels. Eight pictures are included in the Mutrix booklet, a typical number for this kind of fiction. Unfortunately, the lovely images do not closely coincide with the written story.
Omitting advertising, the digital replica ebook presents the content in the original sequence. Both the Eneg illustrations and the anonymous prose are superior to most other Mutrix t-v booklets.
One ebook, one optimized, delivered by download from your 30th Street Graphics account.