Content Warnings

Providing you with content/trigger warnings is an extremely important responsibility, and I take that responsibility very seriously. I don't want anyone accidentally reading something that brings up trauma. Therefore, this page is a work-in-progress and will be consistently updated. 
 
Red links and covers will redirect you to my store for purchase. Thanks!
 

FAIR WARNING, from here on out, SPOILERS ABOUND!!!!

 

 

 

 

Cover image of Guarded by the Spider by Cassie Alexander.

Guarded by the Spider is a MF romance between a socialite and a spider-monster bodyguard. But don't worry: early reviews say this book helped them come to love spiders! Nine is a virgin, cinnamon roll, double-dicked spider-monster, and Sloane is a hilariously worldly, sexually experienced FMC. There is light violence, DP, DVP, rope bondage, light breeding kink, and not to mention so, so, so very much, very, very much, fucking!

 

 

 

 

Cover images of Transformation Trilogy (titles include: Bend Her, Break Her, Make Her) by Cassie Alexander.

The Transformation Series: A Dark Beauty and the Beast Fantasy Romance is an MF romance, and contains consensual BDSM with assorted impact play, and annoying, “Goddammit, he’s always right, that fucker,”-dom-ing, and is thematically similar to Kushiel’s Dart, if you remember the book.

 

 

 

 

Cover images of Dark Ink Tattoo Series (made of 6 titles) by Cassie Alexander.
The Dark Ink Tattoo Series is a dark paranormal romance with explicit sex scenes and sexuality, along with on-page violence. (For a TV Show reference, think Sons of Anarchy, mixed with the full frontal of Spartacus or the sexy times on True Blood.) I don’t think this is a trigger, but just in case, over the course of the series it contains MM, MF, FMMMM, FFM, and FF pairings. Consensual BDSM is both referenced and on-page, as is knotting.
In addition to that:
Blood of the Pack has references to a past sexual assault.
Blood at Dusk has a short scene of a plot-relevant, sexual assault (this is the one in the past referenced in the prior book), and a plot-relevant moment of homophobia (that’s immediately dealt with.)
Blood by Moonlight has a scene of mind-controlled-by-a-vampire sex.

 

 

 

 

Tonally, Her Ex-Boyfriend’s Werewolf Lover is also a dark paranormal romance, involving sex and violence. Sex work is mentioned and practiced; there’s a brief, plot-relevant sexual assault on-page in a flashback; and there’s on-page consensual BDSM and knotting. Contains MF and MM scenes.

 

 

 

 

 

 Her Future Vampire Lover has my normal level of sexual drama and violence and consensual BDSM. Contains MF, FF, and FFM scenes.

 

 

 

 

Rough Ghost Lover is ALL ABOUT THE SEXUAL DRAMA and has a TON of consensual BDSM. It does NOT have an HEA. It should be considered erotic horror–I wrote it to be like a sexy version of Shirley Jackson’s The Haunting of Hill House. (Yes, really.) Contains MF, FF, and FFM scenes. You may see versions with the old cover floating around, but it's still the same scorching story!

 

 

 

 

 The House is a select-your-next-scene book (kinda like the ones we read when we were kids) written in the 2nd person, where you, as a reader, get to go through the sexual experiences of The House. Inside The House, there are scenes of: intense but consensual BDSM, MF, MM, FF, FFF, FFM, MFM, massive orgies, roleplay, masquerades, and knife-play. FOR EACH OF THESE SCENES THOUGH the reader is given the option of an out. I was highly sensitive to the fact that reading in 2nd person makes the reader more "responsible" for their choices, and I didn’t ever want a reader to be trapped in a scene they wouldn’t enjoy reading, seeing as this book is really a smorgasbord of fun, kinky, occasionally intense stuff. This is an updated cover, so don't be surprised if you run across a copy with the old cover.

 

 

 

 

AITA? is my one-off, happy rom-commy book, a FF paranormal romance set in the present day. It contains a character dealing with alcoholism, one brief MF scene, multiple FF scenes, tail sex, wings, and cheating.

 

 

 

 

Collage image of the covers from the Prince of the Other Worlds Series by Cassie Alexander.

The only content warning for the Prince of the Other Worlds Series is that they’re very hetero for me, heh. MF only, and there’s light, consensual BDSM over the course of the series, as the main characters’ relationship intensifies.

 

 

 

 

Collage image of covers of the series Wardens of the Other Worlds by Cassie Alexander.
More hetero goodness here in the Wardens of the Other Worlds Series.
Dragon’s Captive: warning-wise, kidnapping and a lot of the open sea, if that’s something that gives you heebies like it does me.
Wolf’s Princess utilizes virginity and fake relationship tropes.

 

 

 

 

Collage image of covers of the series Edie Spence by Cassie Alexander.

 The Edie Spence Series is about Edie, a nurse who works on a floor for vampire-exposed humans. I’m a nurse in real life, and nurses love these books because they’re as medically accurate as I can make them. That can be a pro for some people, and a con for others. They’re more urban fantasy than my normal fair, still high drama, medium violence, but much less sex, and only MF pairings. Some moments of body horror over the course of the series as well as light references to cannibalism, seeing as one of the characters is a zombie.

 

 

 

 

If, as you read, you find something that didn’t occur to me to mention, but that I should have, please let me know.

Thank you!
Cassie💋