Little Tina grows up wanting to be good at one thing and only one thing and that is a good lover. From the high school football team, being hired to break in a 16 year-old boy, to her escapades overseas, Little Tina becomes 'THE-BEST' lover ever.
Jean, a married woman, takes her thirteen year old sister, Tricia, with her on a business trip to Atlanta. Unknown to Jean, her boss has plans for her to be a sexual gift to Japanese buyers. Tricia becomes a bonus. The Japanese pass the Sisters along to a wealthy group of handsome black men for simular reasons.
In Corinne's world women are meat. Corinne is gang-raped, hurt, withering in chains, all but gone. No one will protect her. No one will help. They all enjoy her far too much. She needs a hero, doesn't she?
Jerry is off to college, but before he goes, he sits down with his little 13-year-old brother and gives him the Cliff-Notes version of "his" idea of what the Birds and the Bees are all about. With their mother being the only woman around, little bro decides to make his move.
Pamela was one of the most attractive and most popular girls in her high school. But, on her wedding day, she finds out that decisions made in the past come back to haunt her as Larry, a guy she'd jilted in favor of Bill, comes to her wedding even though she hadn't invited him. And he leaves behind his gift.
If you worked for Special Forces and your job was to torture lady spies, getting information from them however you liked; could you do it, and how would you know? Cecily is tasked with interviewing Howard for such a role and deciding whether he meets the grade, and the main tool she has at her disposal is her body. So if Howard doesn't hurt Cecily enough: he doesn't get the job; but if he hurts her too badly, maybe she won't give him the job either. How far can he go? And how far can she go?