Preview

Summary Of Kayla Cummings's 'Cuckolding My Boyfriend?'

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
410 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Summary Of Kayla Cummings's 'Cuckolding My Boyfriend?'
Cuckolding my boyfriend? is a Kindle e- book written by Kayla Cummings. The book’s full title is “Hard at Work: Cuckolding my boyfriend.” An English language e-book, the adult content thriller lives up to the expectations of readers in this segment. Kayla Cummings tells the story of Rachel, a career woman whose job is on the line. Rachel is caught red handed by her boss, Mr. Hudson, as she takes naughty pictures and videos at her office. She intended to send the pictures and videos to her boyfriend Lance. Clearly, her unbecoming behaviour does not in any way thrill her boss, the reason he is threatening to terminate her services.
On second thought, Mr. Hudson decides to strike a deal that will help Rachel keep her job, but not her boyfriend.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    Two stories that are abundant with feminist views and stereotypes are Cisneros' Barbie-Q and My Tocaya. In both stories, we see characters struggle with what it means to be a woman. Cisneros explores the standards women are held up to, and the standards they make for themselves. Cisneros does a wonderful job of bringing out the worries, fears, and Otherness that women frequently grapple with in their daily lives. She writes her tales, all the while reflecting and dismantling stereotypes of women. Cisneros, when participating in a project titled Interviews with Writers of the Post-Colonial World, stated: "I guess my feminism and my race are the same thing to me. They're tied in one to another, and I don't feel an alliance or allegiance with upper-class white women" (Jussawalla, Dasenbrock, 74).…

    • 1014 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Womens basketball is often overlooked and judged, little do people know how much of an impact it can have on a lady playing the sport. Most people think of basketball as a mans sport, and could never interpret the game from a female players perspective. In the autobiography "She Got Game: My Personal Odyssey" by Cynthia Cooper it shows the reader just that, the dedication being brought by a woman into the game of basketball. Cynthia Cooper is one the best female basketball players America has produced. In the past ten years she has accumulated MVP awards, scoring titles, gold medals, and championships. Cooper shares how she made it to the top of her profession after growing up poor in Watts and wining a scholarship to USC. She spent years on a European basketball court where she proved herself to be one of the best female basketball players of all time, culminating with Olympic glory and becoming a WNBA star. "She Got Game" is the story of a female gifted athlete that is living proof that hard work, commitment, and determination can pave the way for success no matter what obstacles are put in front of you.…

    • 865 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Denise Mann, writer of, “Emotional Troubles for ‘Cyberbullies’ and Victims” states that there are emotional and physical issues as well as ways to stay safe online in his article. Denise uses facts, studies, and research from WebMd Health News, which has been reviewed by Louise Chang, to talk about cyber bullies. Emotional issues, according to Denise Mann, include being more emotional, bad behavioral issues, as well as the lack of ability to get along with other peers. Denise also states that teens who were bullied reportedly had more frequent headaches, recurring stomach aches, and issues sleeping which all lead to physical issues. According to Denise Mann a woman by the name of Perry Aftab has made it her life to stop cyber bullies. Aftab…

    • 164 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    According to the social trends, splitting becomes a main issue which bothers people’s lives. In majority of the cases, splitting indicates people whose thoughts are not matched by deeds. These people are often troubled in dealing with interpersonal relationships and behaviors. As Leslie Bell introduces contemporary women in her article” Selections from Hard to Get: Twenty-Something Women and the Paradox of Sexual Freedom”, she proposes most young women who have splitting issues which can be classified as “Sexual Woman” and “Relational Woman”. These two kinds of women often lose themselves in the balance of sexuality and relations. Nevertheless, Bell also mentions the third kind of woman called “Desiring Woman” who may successfully restore the…

    • 219 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The late Iris Chang hoped that her work “THE RAPE OF NANKING” would lead to an official Japanese apology for the atrocities Japanese troops committed in Nanking in 1937. Chang’s well-intentioned attempt to secure a Japanese apology for the Nanking atrocities is meaningless because many of the perpetrators and victims are now dead. Thus, a Japanese apology would be an empty gesture that has no meaning. "We will probably never know exactly what news Hirohito received about Nanking as the massacre was happening," she writes, " but the record suggests that he was exceptionally pleased by it" (p. 179).…

    • 968 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    “Against Love”: immediately controversy is conveyed by the title of Laura Kipnis’ article on modern relationships. The reader is put on the defensive as Kipnis starts her argument with strong metaphors attacking one of the most basic human interactions that we see as natural and embrace without question. Namely, love, a word held in superposition between complex and simple. Kipnis argues it has been overrated and too much is sacrificed in the pursuit of making it last. Defining her own terms that apply to most relationships such as “advanced intimacy” and “mutuality” she provides a new perspective on old notions. Her tone throughout is consistently sarcastic but make no mistake, Kipnis is addressing a real issue on what we value as a society. Descriptive language is Kipnis’ fishing line that keeps you reading, often creating vivid and objectionable images that no one can avoid cringing at. Concepts surrounding love and the ideal couple change from age to age and from culture to culture but Kipnis doesn’t disregard this. She compares today’s norms to historical precedence as she identifies the shift from focusing on the convenience of financially organized marriages to the achievement of unending life-long love. Kipnis’ article presents a fascinating argument by proposing an idea…

    • 1481 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Democracy implies equal chance for all. Such is not the case for the black children of the ghetto, as we learn through reading Toni Cade Bambara 's "The Lesson". During the course of the story the narrator, Sylvia, develops as a character due to the trip that Miss Moore takes her on. Miss Moore, an educated black woman who comes to the ghetto to give back to the children, takes children from the ghetto of New York to F.A.O Shwarz which is an extremely glamorous toy store. She does this to make the children aware of their social and economical situations by forcing them to face the difference between them and the people who would purchase toys from such a store that would sell a toy sail boat for over a thousand dollars. The theme of this story is very similar to the lesson Miss Moore is trying to teach the children. It is that through the loss of innocence and naiveté that poor black children can have a chance to stand up and fight for their piece of the pie. In "The Lesson" all the children come from poor families. They live in apartment buildings where drunkards who reek of urine live in the hallways that reek of urine from the drunks who pee on the walls; they live in what Miss Moore would call the "slums." The children 's families, however, exhibit somewhat of a varying degree of monetary security. For example, Flyboy claims he doesn 't even have a home whilst Mercedes has a desk at home with a box of stationary on it, gifts from her godmother.…

    • 922 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In "Kiss and Tell", Judith Stone's claim is to change the way people view their environment and surroundings, and to open people's eyes to what they are not comprehend. She appeals to the audience's feelings and emotions to convey her message effectively and clearly.…

    • 183 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the article written by Sharon Block, “Rape without Women: Print Culture and the Politicization of Rape, 1765-1815.” The author is explaining the way rape was dealt with in the eighteenth century. She also goes on to add that rape was hidden from the public because of its graphic details. Rape was viewed as having national and social boundaries that the public should not see, yet there were broadcasts and newspapers published about rape cases that a court system would not process. The women would step up to testify for being raped but the justice system thought they were lying. In that time period, women did not have as many rights as men did. There rapes reoccurred because men knew they could get away with it. The mass production of propaganda…

    • 583 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “Sex, Lies, and Conversation,” author Deborah Tannen claims that understanding cultural differences can apply to gender differences in communication. Thus, she also claims that men and women communicate in different ways and because of that wreaks havoc in marriages; however, in the essay “In My Tribe,” author Ethan Watters claims that the people of his generation are getting married later in life and that it is becoming more popular and due that the divorce rates are declining and making marriage more enjoyable.…

    • 796 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jamaica Kincaid is the author of “Girl”. Jamaica was born on the Island of Antigua in the West Indies in 1949. At the Age of seventeen, she felts she had to save herself from the crazy cultural and family situation. To get out of her family life that she was born into, she moved to New York to be a servant. Also, Jamaica turned to writing to save her life as well. Jamaica is not what her original name was. She changed her name from Elaine Cynthia Potter Richardson because her parents didn’t approve of her writing. The story “Girl” was her first story that in appeared in the New Yorker. “Girl” is almost an autobiography about Jamaica Kincaid’s relationship with her mom. Through out the story, I wondered why she gave this story the title “Girl”.…

    • 283 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    a lot to say about Beyonce’s physical appearance rather than how good the Pepsi looks…

    • 757 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Lizzie Velasquez is our hero. We chose her as our hero because she stayed strong and confident throughout all the things that happened in her life so far. She was called the ugliest woman alive at the age of 17 by a mean classmate from her school and viewers on youtube by the millions were watching the video. She was asked to come talk at a Ted Talk and her life changed after that day. She has been at countless interviews, wrote 3 books and just had a documentary made about her life called A Brave Heart: The Lizzie Velasquez Story.…

    • 366 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the realistic story of “Is Sex All That Matters”, Joyce Garity talks about a seventeen year old girl named Elaine, who is pregnant with her second child. Elaine’s first child was in foster care at the point of time because of her situation. The story also explains how Elaine conceived her two children, and how the sexual media had a lot to do with the two births. It also suggests how society can help young people not to make these costly mistakes over and over again.…

    • 585 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    The author of the story The Stolen Party, Lilian Heker, was born on February 9, 1943 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Hekers career began at the age of 17 when she met Abelardo Castillo. Castillo was writer and chief of the literary periodical, who introduced Heker as an editor to a magazine. In 1966 Heker published her first collection of short stories, Los que vieron la zarza. In 1972 she published Acuario and then her first novel Zona de Clivaje in 1987. Heker had been devoting herself to an analysis of political repression. She wrote another novel in 1996, El fin de la historia, during the Argentine dictatorship which was a time marked by state brutality and by the disappearances of many of the systems critics. Heker states that her text where meant to be facts as literature (Artist Portrait: Liliana Heker).…

    • 1545 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays

Related Topics