

I wrote in a review recently that I found a marriage of convenience plot a little unbelievable but that I’d definitely gone with stranger things before so I gave it a pass. There is a mutual connection between Violet’s favourite minotaur (whose name turns out to be Rourke) and herself and he makes a special request for her to be the technician he sees for his appointments.

The mythology has it that the minotaur semen – alarmingly copious amounts of which are produced by the clients at the farm – is the magic ingredient in the “little blue pills” for human erectile dysfunction. It’s not a sex service (although there are some creeper minotaurs who try and make it so – every species has them apparently). Apart from him however, she doesn’t get turned on by her job. On Violet’s first day she has an experience with a particular minotaur which she finds arousing. Although, to be fair, there is a fair bit of weird minotaur sex as well.) (A note to DA Readers: there’s more to this book than weird minotaur sex. She clicks on an ad for the Morning Glory Milking Farm in Cambric Creek and before she knows it, she’s “milking” minotaurs for a living. Violet, is a human who needs a better-paying job. It’s a longish novella – around category length really and the cover really does give much of the game away. For now at least, it seems to be only available from Amazon. Geddit? There are sheep people populating this world but they are not major players in the story.) It’s not the kind of book I would usually pick up – it’s definitely one which was purely as a result of multiple *multiple* Twitter recs.

I saw the buzz about this book on Twitter and I bought it because apparently I’m a sheep. Kaetrin B Reviews / Book Reviews Erotic-Romance / Fantasy / minotaur / novella / SFF 10 Comments AugREVIEW: Morning Glory Milking Farm by C.M.
