I’m Amy Wilkes
I write feminisation fiction. Reluctant boys, patient women, the slow discovery that the person he’s supposed to be might not be the one who fits. I write about a man standing in his girlfriend’s bathroom in knickers she chose and a bra he told himself he didn’t want and the moment he catches his reflection and his hands stop shaking and his cock doesn’t. I write the bit where his resistance goes quiet and he hasn’t surrendered yet but he’s stopped fighting, and his body has made a decision his mind is still three chapters behind on.
Getting the dressing scene perfect is the thing I care about most. The precise fabric weight against skin that wasn’t expecting it. The sound of stockings being rolled up a freshly shaved leg. The way a corset changes your breathing before it changes your posture. The instant he sees his reflection and the person looking back is wearing a fitted skirt and a silk blouse and heels and a bra that fits and his face does something he wasn’t prepared for and neither were you. That’s the writing I want to do, and it’s the writing I want to read, and it’s the writing I think about at three in the morning when I should be sleeping.
SilkFiction is where I do both. I review books in this genre, I write about the tropes and craft behind them, and I’m working on my own fiction. Whether I’ll ever be brave enough to publish it is another question entirely, but you’ll find excerpts in my column if you want to see what I’m up to. Fair warning: they’ll make your face hot.
What You’ll Find Here
Genre Guides — In-depth looks at every corner of feminisation fiction. What makes each subgenre work, what the kink actually is when you strip away the euphemisms, and what separates the books that make your stomach tighten from the ones that make you put your Kindle down. I write about reluctant feminisation, forced feminisation, chastity, sissy fiction, institutional programmes, crossdressing romance, gender transformation, and sissy maid fiction. I write about them the way they deserve to be written about: honestly, specifically, and without pretending the reader’s body isn’t involved.
Reviews — Honest takes on individual books. What tropes it hits, how it handles them, whether the dressing scenes make your breath catch or make you skim, and whether it earns its ending. I care about craft. I care about whether the female lead has a life beyond feminising him. I care about whether the reluctance evolves or just sits there being decorative. And I care about whether the book delivers on the promise the first chapter makes to your body.
Top 20s — What’s actually selling on Amazon right now across every feminisation subgenre, updated monthly. Real sales data, not personal picks. So you know what readers are buying, what’s making people come back for more, and where the heat is in the market this month.
Amy’s Column — What I’m reading, what I’m writing, what I think. Excerpts from my fiction, opinions you didn’t ask for, and whatever is keeping me up at night. Sometimes that’s a craft question about how to write a mirror moment that stops the story dead. Sometimes it’s a scene I wrote that I can’t stop thinking about. Sometimes it’s just me, at my desk, trying to work out why a man in a satin nightdress makes me feel something I don’t have a word for.
For Writers and Authors
I built the forum for readers and writers. If you write in this genre, come and talk about it. Promote your books. Join conversations about craft. This is the place where people who care about feminisation fiction can discuss it properly — what works, what doesn’t, why the dressing scene needs to be felt in the body and not just described from outside, why your female characters need lives beyond dressing him up, and why the cage is a narrative device, not a prop.
If you’re a reader, come and tell me what I should review and what I’ve got wrong. I want the recommendations nobody else is making. The book that made you lock your phone screen on the bus. The one you’ve read four times. The one you’re slightly embarrassed about and slightly proud of and can’t stop thinking about.
Get in Touch
Got a question, a book recommendation, or want to argue with me? The forum’s open, or you can reach me through my contact page. I read everything. I reply to most things. I’m particularly interested in hearing from anyone who thinks I’ve been too kind or too harsh in a review, because the truth is usually somewhere in the middle and I’d rather be honest than comfortable.