Disaster France: Described as a “dark romance”, a book containing paedophilia is causing controversy, with a petition calling for its withdrawal - Number 1 Amazon bestseller in the romance category, written by a mother of three.

Having gone viral on social media, French author Jessie Auryann's book Corps à cœur (Body to Heart) has sparked controversy. Classified in the highly popular ‘dark romance’ category, the novelist depicts paedophile acts that have traumatised some readers who have purchased it. A petition is calling for its immediate withdrawal.

https://www.cnews.fr/culture/2026-0...vre-vantant-la-pedocriminalite-fait-polemique (A)

How far does creative freedom go? Dark Romance, a genre that is very popular with teenage girls, now occupies a prominent place on bookshop shelves. It is a literary category that combines eroticism and abusive relationships, sometimes going so far as to promote rape culture, and whose pages find their way into the hands of middle and high school girls. Recently, Jessie Auryann's book Corps à cœur caused a stir, provoking an outcry among readers who are fans of the genre.

Although preceded by the warning ‘Attention: this is a Dark Romance for mature audiences only’ on the Amazon platform where it is sold, the novel by the French author, who is herself a mother, has been the subject of numerous calls for censorship from readers and many internet users who have heard about the controversial book on TikTok.

A book glorifying paedophilia

The blurb on the back cover gives no hint of the horror that awaits the reader once they turn the first few pages: "Arkhan dared to reject me and impose a part of himself that is growing inside me. But he never imagined for a second that he had given me the key to get him back. He is so righteous that he will not be able to resist the call of his daughter. I just have to wait to give birth to this being who will bring him back to me." And yet, this unborn child turns out to be one of the protagonists of a sordid story, where darkness and abomination are revealed under the guise of a very popular literary genre.

In her biography on the Babelio website, author Jessie Auryann makes no secret of it: she distils the worst vicissitudes of the human soul in each of her works. ‘My stories are built around uncomfortable situations and sensitive subjects, seeking out what we don't want to discover. I play with society's taboos and talk about what we want to keep quiet,’ she wrote on the literature platform.

‘I don't hesitate to provoke disturbing and tortured scenes. And of course, I don't necessarily condone what I'm going to write, but I don't stop myself from writing the unbearable either,’ added the author, at the centre of an uproar over her latest novel, Corps à coeur. From the very first pages, the unhealthy setting is established: ‘In this story, you will encounter sensitive subjects such as death, mental illness, manipulation, suicide, abuse, paedophilia, incest, physical and psychological violence, rape, death, torture and prostitution.’

‘I felt like throwing up’

The author has deeply shocked readers and crossed the boundaries of what is acceptable, according to numerous comments on sales platforms and content posted on social media mentioning the novel. ‘This author romanticises the rape of infants. This is not prevention but a collection for paedophiles and the mentally ill. The excerpts I read traumatised me so much because they were so detailed and violent, I felt like vomiting,’ shared one of the readers.

‘It's shameful that someone could write such scenes! I cried when I read the excerpts on social media. We fight against rape and abuse of any kind. The author has children herself, how could she imagine such a thing?’ wrote one internet user who had access to a few pages of the novel shared on TikTok.

Calling for its immediate removal from online retailers, where it is available for €25, a petition has been launched on Change.org and has since gathered more than 18,000 signatures [now 31,000]. ‘Jessie Auryann's book Corps à Cœur crosses an ethical and legal red line that requires immediate action,’ reads the online petition platform.

"The book contains descriptions and scenes that directly conflict with French law. Article 227-23 of the Penal Code: the law severely punishes the dissemination of any pornographic representation of minors. The use of fiction to normalise or eroticise relationships involving minors constitutes a serious breach of public order," states the petition launched on Sunday 22 February.



Despite widespread criticism, the author nevertheless enjoys some support, particularly on her Facebook page.

Here's what she posted:
FINAL STATEMENT
For several days now, a smear campaign and misinformation have been targeting my work as an author and my person. While literary criticism is a fundamental right, it cannot justify harassment, incitement to hatred or defamation.
The truth in a few points:
Prevention: Contrary to the claims made to damage my image, my novel includes clear warnings, an author's note and explicit trigger warnings from the very first pages.
Defamation: Extremely serious statements associating me with actual criminal activity have been made. These slanderous accusations go beyond the bounds of law and decency.
Incitement to hatred: Calls for hatred have been made and encouraged publicly.
Consequences:
A complete file, including all evidence (videos, comments, digital identities), has been compiled and secured for legal proceedings. Social media is not a lawless zone.
My priority remains my safety, my mental health and respect for my work. This account is once again a space dedicated to literature and kindness.
Thank you to those who have supported me.

Attached is an excerpt in French found on Xitter that I will not translate. It narrates the rape of a baby. It is very blunt and unambiguous.

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The book has since been heavily criticised on Amazon, where more excerpts have been shared.

Btw:
Capture d’écran 2026-02-24 à 02.25.29.png
 
The audience isn't pedo men. Men tend to like engaging with more visual media.
I don't know much about this author, but from the descriptions on her books in the articles, it is likely not to appeal to teen girls either. I would say the demographics are young adult (post-college) to middle-aged women. There are a decent amount of women who like the idea of being taken by an evil, but attractive, man and either turning him from evil or taking vengeance on him. Some even like the idea of being forced to cavort with such a man, and then doing evil things with him. And they generally like the idea of self-inserting into a more innocent, younger time.

That said, it's generally just fantasy. An extremely small number of women would actually want this to happen, and they know it. Just like anime-loving men like to fantasize about having a large harem of strong, beautiful women, and then when they actually think about it, they realize that there are many reasons that would end up being a hellish experience, especially when you're out-of-shape and your penis doesn't because you're gooning five times a day.
It is pedo men , there was a case where a man ran pedo stories site together with other pedos.

Men love to blame women for this shit because the romance and fanfiction market is predominantly female and use it as an excuse that women are just as perverted but when you dig in the most depraved shit is usually written for men by men . This is not written for women period . Its written mostly for men . I am not saying women aren't reading this but that is the minority. Pedophilia is mostly male trait Wikipedia puts them at 10:1 ratio. And that is generous estimation

Here is the case btw.
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
What a terrible day to speak French. Lock this woman up and throw away the key.
I'm not going to translate directly but in summary, the narrator is masturbating to a video of himself raping a newborn on her mother's stomach, and he's deliberately delaying his orgasm to enjoy more of the video. When he ejaculates in the video, he images his semen pouring from the newborn's mouth because he filled her up so completely. He then calls his little girl over, who was playing on the rug, and directs her to clean him up with her mouth. He notes she's used to this abuse so that this almost feels normal to her, and makes a repulsive comment about how nice it is to be cleaned by a little tongue after a big orgasm. Then he chats to her about how for his next film he wants to rape an unborn infant inside her mother's womb, fantasising about having an elongated penis to achieve this goal, and that he'd like to get his daughter involved in it to make it a "family fuck".
That is the worst shit I have ever read. Like I don't even feel disgust or revulsion I feel deadened because of it.

When talking about edgy books they talk about de Sade. But in reality it's just de Sade going: "Trust me bro if you give me like a few more years I would totally write the worst things I can think off."

I am now curious as to where would the story go. So does the baby rapist get killed or does the baby rapist get converted by 5/10 mediocre pussy into not raping kids or is just a pornographic novel about marrying a baby rapist and the hijinks that ensure like a slice of life about the worst human you can think off.
 
From what I have seen on her social media accounts, the main audience of ‘Jessie Auryann’ is indeed not really teenage girls, let alone men, but women in their twenties, thirties or slightly older. There is no doubt that younger girls may have read it, however, given the appeal of this type of reading material to some female readers. It is surely not in decline.

This article from last year explained that dark romance was the third most popular literary genre among 16- to 19-year-olds in France (in 2024).

Unhealthy relationships, non-consensual sex and even human trafficking... These are the themes frequently explored in dark romance. But far from criticising them, the genre idealises and glorifies them, turning them into love stories.
Appearing in the early 2000s on the writing and reading platform Wattpad, the genre has enjoyed commercial success in recent years. The second volume of Captive, the genre's best-known novel, even rose to the top of the book sales charts in France in 2023. The plot? A young woman held captive falls in love with her captor.
Almost all of these novels are not recommended for readers under the age of 18. However, in France in 2024, dark romance was the third most popular genre among 16-19 year olds, according to a study conducted by Ipsos for the Centre National du Livre (CNL). For readers, who are almost exclusively female, the genre is discovered on social media. In particular, YouTube, TikTok and Instagram, according to the same study.


There are indeed TikTok influencers who spend all their time talking about it. One of them, ‘Zymal Ahmad’, 17 years old is featured in the article.

‘[What I like] is the forbidden aspect, the tension. The fact that the character is, at first, a little mistreated,’ explains the teenager. However, she acknowledges that the mature themes addressed in these novels are not suitable for all audiences. ‘People often ask me in their messages if it's suitable for a certain age group. And when I see that they're too young, I say no.’ Zymal admits, however, that she herself started reading dark romance novels when she was around fifteen.

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Zymal Ahmad, a gorgeous French woman who loves dark romance.

Then a bookseller is interviewed: Prevention is the watchword for Marie Wietzorek, bookseller at Escapade, Strasbourg's only bookshop specialising in romance novels. "Dark romance is great. It's incredible to read. (...) But the people who ask me for it are usually minors. So I explain to them what might be in it and show them the list of warnings. And they're usually shocked. [On social media], people talk about it without any caution, so in bookshops, prevention is very important when it comes to dark romance.'

The outrage around Jessie Auryann's book therefore stemmed from the fact that some of these regular readers, who are accustomed to stories that suggest or depict rape, abuse or other forbidden/tortured love affairs, felt that the rape of infants did not fit into the ‘dark romance’ genre. At the beginning, when her Facebook page was not flooded with comments from complainants but rather from her supporters, there were even a few women who were surprised by the controversy, as they often found her books a little too modest. I'm exaggerating, but that was the idea.

Anyway, the book was removed from Amazon yesterday.

A book accused of promoting paedophilia withdrawn from sale by Amazon

https://www.tf1info.fr/justice-fait...te-retire-de-la-vente-par-amazon-2426742.html (A)

Jessie Auryann's self-published novel Corps à cœur (Body to Heart) has sparked controversy. Some passages describe sex scenes with a baby and incest. In addition to an outcry on social media, a petition launched on Change.org calling for the book to be removed from retail platforms has gathered more than 60,000 signatures. According to the text, the book ‘crosses an ethical and legal red line that requires immediate intervention’.

The High Commissioner for Children, Sarah El Haïry, has also spoken out, saying that ‘you can't write anything in the name of “dark romance”’. ‘Some excerpts amount to the glorification of paedophilia and child sexual abuse. Faced with these abuses for recreational or lucrative purposes, we have a duty to act,’ she insisted, indicating that she had ‘referred the matter to the Pharos platform [online content reporting platform] and the courts’.

For its part, the association Face à l'Inceste (Facing Incest) is surprised that it obtained an ISBN number from the French-speaking agency for international book numbering (AFNIL) and that ‘no age verification system is in place’ for ordering it. For Solène Podevin-Favre, its president, ‘Corps à cœur’ is in line with the ‘paedophile dolls sold by Shein’ and presents ‘incest as an object of fantasy, subjecting the bodies of fictional children to scenes of rape and torture that are difficult to read’.

Faced with this controversy, Amazon has indicated that it will remove ‘the title in question’ from its catalogue after an ‘urgent review’. The platform says it has ‘strict content rules’ and requires ‘all books sold on its platform to comply with applicable regulations’.

Corps à cœur is a series that aims to be ‘dark romance’ – a literary genre that emerged in the 2010s and depicts impossible relationships, sometimes based on sexual or psychological violence. The first volume was released in 2023 and the second a year later. According to author Jessie Auryann, her work ‘includes clear warnings’ from the very first pages. She also denounces ‘a smear campaign’ targeting her ‘work as an author’ and her ‘person’.
 
Throw her in the wood chipper then nuke France, just to be sure.
Absolutely sickening.
 
Faced with this controversy, Amazon has indicated that it will remove ‘the title in question’ from its catalogue after an ‘urgent review’. The platform says it has ‘strict content rules’ and requires ‘all books sold on its platform to comply with applicable regulations’.
This time, the book is available on Anna's Archive, so it's not lost media. But you have to learn the language of love to be able to read it.
 
Dark Romance is still quite a niche genre within Romance/Fantasy. So yes, definitely seeing the Streisand effect here.

The subject matter sickens me but thats kind of the point however the same people kicking up a fuss are the same people who vote in politicians who important foreign baby rapists en masse.

This is fiction and a lot of it is for shock value. These authors arent condoning or organising these things in real life with real people so its hard to get upset.
 
Dark Romance is still quite a niche genre within Romance/Fantasy.
Nigger, bodice rippers have been a thing for decades, with plenty featuring the male love interest raping the heroine, having the heroine raped by someone else, gangraped, beating and strangling her, attempting to murder her, cheating on her repeatedly etc.

And women line up in droves to read this dreck, and then turn right around and call men porn addicted perverts that all want to rape women.
 
This time, the book is available on Anna's Archive, so it's not lost media. But you have to learn the language of love to be able to read it.
I found another excerpt on Twitter:
"Putain, t'es bonne, ma poupée."
Et c'est exactement ce qu'elle est. Il lui fourre ses doigts dans la gorge et elle X prend une fessée à chaque haut de cœur.
"Ouais, suce bien. La vache, on est bien dedans, soupire-t-il en lui tenant les hanches au point de la marquer."
Il la pince, la frappe et la brutalise jusqu'à jouir. Quand il se retire, l'orifice est distendu et ensanglanté. Il lui remet une couche et on reprend la route. Elle chouine un temps, puis finit par se taire pour ne pas énerver Lucas qui vient de lui gueuler dessus.
"À la maison, je te présenterai Benjamin. Tu verras, c'est un bon gamin."
"Quoi? Tu plaisantes, là ? Y a un gosse où on va?"
"Ouais, j'ai acheté un môme dans une famille de pédo. Il a treize ans et a eu sa première éjaculation, donc son daron ne voulait pas qu'il foute ses sœurs en cloque."
"Et il va servir à quoi ?"
Putain, il a de ces idées, parfois.
"À baiser. Les vidéos entre mineurs, ça cartonne sur le dark web. On va gagner un maximum de fric."
This is from the perspective of another character, watching (I assume) the same man violate (I assume) the same little girl while beating her and leaving her bloody. The girl whimpers for a bit but falls silent because she's scared he'll get angry with her. The man, Lucas, then reveals he's purchased a 13 year old boy - Benjamin - from a family of paedophiles; the father sold him as Benjamin had had his first ejaculation, so his father didn't want Benjamin getting his sisters pregnant. Lucas is going to introduce Benjamin to the little girl, and Benjamin will be used "for fucking" as videos of minors make a lot of money on the dark web and this will make him rich. The narrator - who I think is the little girl's mother - merely observes "wow, he does come up with some strange ideas, sometimes" (basically).

Sometimes when books are mentioned on A&N I'll download a copy from Anna's Archive and provide a bit of a summary. But not this one. I do not want to read another sentence of this, nor do I want it on my hard drive.
 
It is pedo men , there was a case where a man ran pedo stories site together with other pedos.

Men love to blame women for this shit because the romance and fanfiction market is predominantly female and use it as an excuse that women are just as perverted but when you dig in the most depraved shit is usually written for men by men . This is not written for women period . Its written mostly for men . I am not saying women aren't reading this but that is the minority. Pedophilia is mostly male trait Wikipedia puts them at 10:1 ratio. And that is generous estimation

Here is the case btw.
You are just White Knighting, which is the main reason things escalated to this level. The same way that unchecked coomerism lead men, some with families, to chop off their dicks, so unchecked coomerism leads women to flick their clits to baby rape.

Having a vagina doesn't make you immune from constantly increasing dopamine tolerance.
 
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