Erotic fiction author arrested over disturbing pedophilia book featuring adults perverted thoughts about 3-year-old

Police have arrested a Sydney author on child abuse material charges following global outrage over her book entitled: “Daddy’s Little Toy.”Christian charity marketing executive Lauren Tesolin-Mastrosa, who writes erotic fiction under the pen name “Tori Woods,” caused an online furore following the release of her latest novel, which outlines the relationship between an 18-year-old and her father’s friend.Readers said that in the book, whose cover features children’s building blocks, the man speaks about how he has desired the teen since she was three years old.“About 12:30 pm [on Friday] detectives attended a home on Penn Street, Quakers Hill and arrested a 33-year-old woman before being taken to Riverstone Police Station,” NSW Police wrote in a statement.“At the home, police executed a search warrant – seizing several hard copies of the novel – to be forensically examined.”Tesolin-Mastrosa was charged with possessing child abuse material, disseminating child abuse material, and producing child abuse material.She was granted conditional bail to appear before Blacktown Local Court on Monday, March 31, 2025.Before her arrest, Tesolin-Mastrosa took to social media, explaining the backlash as a “big misunderstanding.”“DLT is definitely not promoting or inciting anything ever to do with (child sexual abuse) or pedophilia,” she wrote.“What is being said is grossly disturbing and breaks my heart as well as makes me sick.”Tesolin-Mastrosa has since pulled down her social media accounts.The book has also been removed from Amazon and GoodReads.The designer of the cover, Georgia Stove, has also put out a statement, saying she has received death threats as a result of the book.“I have cut ties with Tori Woods, effective immediately,” she said.She said she was not aware of what was in the book when she designed the cover.“All I had known about the book was the blurb which read ‘barely legal’ and in my mind I truly thought that was ...