Adventures of Bondor Woman
The stuff of sweaty lesbian bondage fantasies made it into the pages of the 1940s Wonder Woman comic books, and with the release of the Wonder Woman movie in 2017, it's about time somebody had some FUN with it!

Dateline: Hollywood
Location: June

"The Adventures of Bondor Woman" by Pat Powers is a 100,000 word epic erotic parody that rips the lid off the kinky goings-on at Transformation Island, a morally and legally dubious legacy of Golden Age Wonder Woman.

In the Golden Age Wonder Woman comics, Transformation Island was a place near Paradise Island where Wonder Woman takes certain select female prisoners to be reformed of their criminal way – by forcing them to wear "Venus Girdles" that look like chastity belts, which magically compel the wearers to respond positively to the loving authority of large, muscular Amazonian women who wear drum majorette outfits. The Amazons reform the prisoners by keeping them in chains and forcing them to play bondage games with one another. Under this regimen, the prisoners soon grew to love their chains and collars, not to mention their very fit and sexy Amazon guards.

It was pretty kinky for a 1940s comic book. It sounds more like the basis for an erotic superhero parody. Which is why I wrote one. Bondor Woman is a DIFFERENT superheroine who runs the Transformational Institute in Bagooly-Nooly. There criminals are reformed by being forced to wear love girdles of an, um ... slightly different design ... and are trained by Transformers, men and women who are expert at bringing the loving authority goodness to their naked and chained charges.
Bondor Woman is also a member of the League of Goody Two-Shoes, a society of superhumans and metahumans led by her and her friends Beyonderman (a superhuman alien from Crapton) and Bearcatman, an ordinary human with the greatest superpower of all ... billions of dollars. When the League busts some supervillains bent on destroying a solar power array, Bondor Woman picks several of the women and spirits them away to the Tranformational Institute before the cops arrive with their pesky requirements for legal arrests and legal extraditions and so forth.

We follow one of the villainesses, the Panther Person, as she goes through the Transformational Institute process and becomes Slinky the Catwoman.

When Bearcatman suspects that Bondor Woman might not be the goddess of goodness and consensual sex slavery that she SEEMS to be, he investigates ... and gets much more than he bargained for.
Meanwhile the Secret World Oligarchy has hired the Evil Planning Committee, a group of criminal masterminds, to discover a weakness in Bondor Woman, who, being a goddess, is just a tad overpowered for their evil tastes. Will they discover a weakness in a goddess? Will the Panther Person be transformed into a force for good in the world by the Transformational Institute? Will Bearcatman be able to cope with what he discovers in Bagooly-Nooly?

Sound like you've got some reading to do!

This book is a standalone, but if you're interested in learning more, the story of the discovery of the All-Mother religion is told in "Treasure of Bagooly-Nooly" and the origin of Bondor Woman is told in "Adventures of the Ooga-Wooga Kid," both available right here on Barnes & Noble.
"1126465954"
Adventures of Bondor Woman
The stuff of sweaty lesbian bondage fantasies made it into the pages of the 1940s Wonder Woman comic books, and with the release of the Wonder Woman movie in 2017, it's about time somebody had some FUN with it!

Dateline: Hollywood
Location: June

"The Adventures of Bondor Woman" by Pat Powers is a 100,000 word epic erotic parody that rips the lid off the kinky goings-on at Transformation Island, a morally and legally dubious legacy of Golden Age Wonder Woman.

In the Golden Age Wonder Woman comics, Transformation Island was a place near Paradise Island where Wonder Woman takes certain select female prisoners to be reformed of their criminal way – by forcing them to wear "Venus Girdles" that look like chastity belts, which magically compel the wearers to respond positively to the loving authority of large, muscular Amazonian women who wear drum majorette outfits. The Amazons reform the prisoners by keeping them in chains and forcing them to play bondage games with one another. Under this regimen, the prisoners soon grew to love their chains and collars, not to mention their very fit and sexy Amazon guards.

It was pretty kinky for a 1940s comic book. It sounds more like the basis for an erotic superhero parody. Which is why I wrote one. Bondor Woman is a DIFFERENT superheroine who runs the Transformational Institute in Bagooly-Nooly. There criminals are reformed by being forced to wear love girdles of an, um ... slightly different design ... and are trained by Transformers, men and women who are expert at bringing the loving authority goodness to their naked and chained charges.
Bondor Woman is also a member of the League of Goody Two-Shoes, a society of superhumans and metahumans led by her and her friends Beyonderman (a superhuman alien from Crapton) and Bearcatman, an ordinary human with the greatest superpower of all ... billions of dollars. When the League busts some supervillains bent on destroying a solar power array, Bondor Woman picks several of the women and spirits them away to the Tranformational Institute before the cops arrive with their pesky requirements for legal arrests and legal extraditions and so forth.

We follow one of the villainesses, the Panther Person, as she goes through the Transformational Institute process and becomes Slinky the Catwoman.

When Bearcatman suspects that Bondor Woman might not be the goddess of goodness and consensual sex slavery that she SEEMS to be, he investigates ... and gets much more than he bargained for.
Meanwhile the Secret World Oligarchy has hired the Evil Planning Committee, a group of criminal masterminds, to discover a weakness in Bondor Woman, who, being a goddess, is just a tad overpowered for their evil tastes. Will they discover a weakness in a goddess? Will the Panther Person be transformed into a force for good in the world by the Transformational Institute? Will Bearcatman be able to cope with what he discovers in Bagooly-Nooly?

Sound like you've got some reading to do!

This book is a standalone, but if you're interested in learning more, the story of the discovery of the All-Mother religion is told in "Treasure of Bagooly-Nooly" and the origin of Bondor Woman is told in "Adventures of the Ooga-Wooga Kid," both available right here on Barnes & Noble.
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Adventures of Bondor Woman

Adventures of Bondor Woman

by Pat Powers
Adventures of Bondor Woman

Adventures of Bondor Woman

by Pat Powers

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Overview

The stuff of sweaty lesbian bondage fantasies made it into the pages of the 1940s Wonder Woman comic books, and with the release of the Wonder Woman movie in 2017, it's about time somebody had some FUN with it!

Dateline: Hollywood
Location: June

"The Adventures of Bondor Woman" by Pat Powers is a 100,000 word epic erotic parody that rips the lid off the kinky goings-on at Transformation Island, a morally and legally dubious legacy of Golden Age Wonder Woman.

In the Golden Age Wonder Woman comics, Transformation Island was a place near Paradise Island where Wonder Woman takes certain select female prisoners to be reformed of their criminal way – by forcing them to wear "Venus Girdles" that look like chastity belts, which magically compel the wearers to respond positively to the loving authority of large, muscular Amazonian women who wear drum majorette outfits. The Amazons reform the prisoners by keeping them in chains and forcing them to play bondage games with one another. Under this regimen, the prisoners soon grew to love their chains and collars, not to mention their very fit and sexy Amazon guards.

It was pretty kinky for a 1940s comic book. It sounds more like the basis for an erotic superhero parody. Which is why I wrote one. Bondor Woman is a DIFFERENT superheroine who runs the Transformational Institute in Bagooly-Nooly. There criminals are reformed by being forced to wear love girdles of an, um ... slightly different design ... and are trained by Transformers, men and women who are expert at bringing the loving authority goodness to their naked and chained charges.
Bondor Woman is also a member of the League of Goody Two-Shoes, a society of superhumans and metahumans led by her and her friends Beyonderman (a superhuman alien from Crapton) and Bearcatman, an ordinary human with the greatest superpower of all ... billions of dollars. When the League busts some supervillains bent on destroying a solar power array, Bondor Woman picks several of the women and spirits them away to the Tranformational Institute before the cops arrive with their pesky requirements for legal arrests and legal extraditions and so forth.

We follow one of the villainesses, the Panther Person, as she goes through the Transformational Institute process and becomes Slinky the Catwoman.

When Bearcatman suspects that Bondor Woman might not be the goddess of goodness and consensual sex slavery that she SEEMS to be, he investigates ... and gets much more than he bargained for.
Meanwhile the Secret World Oligarchy has hired the Evil Planning Committee, a group of criminal masterminds, to discover a weakness in Bondor Woman, who, being a goddess, is just a tad overpowered for their evil tastes. Will they discover a weakness in a goddess? Will the Panther Person be transformed into a force for good in the world by the Transformational Institute? Will Bearcatman be able to cope with what he discovers in Bagooly-Nooly?

Sound like you've got some reading to do!

This book is a standalone, but if you're interested in learning more, the story of the discovery of the All-Mother religion is told in "Treasure of Bagooly-Nooly" and the origin of Bondor Woman is told in "Adventures of the Ooga-Wooga Kid," both available right here on Barnes & Noble.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940157169374
Publisher: Pat Powers
Publication date: 05/27/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 410 KB

About the Author

Pat Powers may not be the most interesting man in the world, but when he writes about himself in third person, he tries to give that impression.

You can check out his blog at and find links to all his books in all countries here: You can email Pat Powers at .

Pat Powers believes the secret to writing about adult topics is to bring one's humanity to the topic, and let it inform the humanity of the characters. Plus, keep it raunchy!

Pat Powers is the author of a number of stories and novels, many of which features Strong Sexual Content, including Karg, Riverbeast, President Slave Girl, Siren7 and many others. His blog is Pat Powers' Wholesome Author Blog.

Among his favorite movies are Deathstalker, Barbarian Queen, Slave Girls From Beyond Infinity, Fencer of Minerva, Thor and the Amazon Women, Vicious Circles, and many others, to give you some idea of his general lack of taste.

Among Powers' favorite books are Little Big, Far Tortuga, Declare, John Norman's Gor novels, Nine Princes in Amber, Iain Banks' Culture novels, A Fire Upon the Deep, Rex Stout's Nero Wolfe novels and John Parker's Spenser novels. Not all of these are works of complete genius, though Powers would say Little Big and Far Tortuga might well be.
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