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First rule of Running Club. Nobody talks about Running Club. |
Five Stars!
The Coach's Discipline is an utterly lovely spanking story which tells the story of runner
Claire Jacobs. It is set in a world of competitive off-road running, fitness coaching
and Olympic tryouts which on the face of it, is not my cup of tea all. Cups of
tea are my cups of tea. Marathon
training is something else entirely.
It turns out that my lack of interest in sport really wasn’t
an impediment at all to my enjoying this book. Which is a relief because I am so not into sport. Not even slightly. I
am always a bit baffled by how much people get into it to be honest. Not so
much the doing of it – I appreciate that there’s endorphins, senses of
achievement and self-worth, increased life-expectancy – you know if you’re into
that sort of nonsense.
I don’t understand why people want to watch other people do
it though. Not something I’ve felt the inclination to do, to be honest. The
Olympics happened round these parts a couple of years ago and I managed to miss
it entirely despite the fact that bits of it were happening a stone’s throw
from where I’m sitting now. (Not a literal stone’s throw. Not if I were throwing,
anyway. If we’d had stone-throwing teams at school, I would have been
picked last.)
It did strike me before I started reading that a fitness
trainer was very much the perfect guy for a BDSM-ish spanking book. Doms and
personal trainers tick all the same boxes. They demand obedience; they push people
as far as they can go while remaining conscious of their limits and they cause
pain. Lots and lots of pain.
Also, there's this sort of thing. |
Based, presumably on my horrific experience with PE
teachers, I was expecting Claire’s coach, Nick Fox to be something of a
monster. Turns out he’s actually a total sweetie. I mean sure he’s all about barking commands, and enforcing discipline
but his absolute devotion to the girls
in his running squad and especially towards Claire is so touching that I found
myself wanting to reach into my Kindle and give him a big hug.
I really love the author's writing style, particularly the
way she handles the switches between Claire’s and Nick’s points of view. While
Nick handles his and Claire’s relationship – both personal and professional - with
a calm alpha authority which is a hot as hell, it’s lovely to hear his thought processes behind it including his own doubts and vulnerabilities.
They are such a cute couple. Their banter is just adorable, particularly when
Claire teases her man, although she usually has to pay the price for that. You
know what I should include in these reviews? Some kind of spankings to
things-that-aren’t-spankings ratio. Maybe like those traffic light food labels.
Some kind of kinky version of this. |
That way you’d know at a glance if it was a straightforward romance
with a couple of playful taps or one massive non-stop spankfest with no room
for characterisation or plot development.
I don’t know how many spanking scenes there were in the
book. There were a pretty good number and the spankings/things-that-aren’t-spankings
ratio was absolutely perfect. There was a real heartfelt story here with Claire’s
personal journey at the heart of it. There were some great secondary characters
including the other girls form the running squad, Claire’s best friend Jenny
and a mysterious guy called Oz who I’m hoping is going to get a book of his own
at some point. Meanwhile, Katherine Deane includes lots of opportunities for
Nick to bend Claire over something and give her the spanking she needs.
Claire’s not the easiest of girlfriends; she has lot of
personal baggage including an emotionally abusive mother and a history of
bulimia. Sometimes she needs encouragement, sometimes she needs discipline and sometimes
she just needs someone to hold her and remind her to breathe. Nick is absolutely
the perfect man to do that.
And while a lot of the sportsing references went sailing
over my head, I did appreciate the book’s many references to movies - including quite
a few with spanking-related themes. I love films. What I lack in any kind of fitness
regime, I more than make up for with my ability to sit in a darkened room
watching stuff. I want to give some kind of award for including a
reference to the Castle Anthrax scene in Monty
Python and the Holy Grail. Nice to know that I probably wasn’t the only
person who had a couple of jokey throwaway lines from a comedy film seared permanently into their brain
after watching that.
This is Katherine Deane’s first solo book and she has certainly hit the ground running*. I am really, really looking forward to whatever she writes next. It’s not that often that you encounter a book which had you laughing out loud one minute, blinking back the tears the next and then becoming incredibly hot and bothered by the sexy, sexy descriptions of two lovely people getting to know one another in the best possible way** a minute or so after that. Katherine Deane delivers all that and more, here.
She sounds pretty knowledgeable about the sports side of things
too which will probably make it even more
enjoyable if you’re actually into that sort of thing.
Although, to be honest, I’m not sure I could have enjoyed
this book more than I did. It was just about perfect.
* Hahahahahahahaha! Hit the ground running! I didn’t even do that on purpose! I’m like some kind of punning
genius!
** For the avoidance of doubt, the best possible way is
spanking, obviously. Sex comes second.
Fantastic review for a super amazing book! :)
ReplyDeleteOMG thanks Etta!
ReplyDeleteThis was such a fantastic post to come home to after a sad time leaving the beach. :) (I didn't want to come home)
Thank you so so so so much!!
I'm glad we are on the same wavelength about the Castle Anthrax ;)
Have you ever seen Robin Hood men tin tights?
hilarious!!! no spanking though :(
We could hook up and write a fan fic, though! ;)
Thanks again!!
<3
I loved this book as well and yes, she did hit the ground running! That was funny, well done. I think you're crazy, you know that, right? It's a compliment, believe it or not. Seriously though, the not running thing, I too am not a runner but I felt like I just learned a lot about it while just reading a story I liked.
ReplyDelete