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Lauren Ashley Mastrosa, author of a controversial novel about toddler role-play, has been convicted of writing child abuse material but avoided jail time. She received an 18-month community corrections order instead.
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The author behind an offensive novel depicting toddler role-play has been convicted but spared jail for penning child abuse material.
Lauren Ashley Mastrosa, a 34-year-old former marketing executive for a Christian charity, wrote Daddy’s Little Toy under the pen name Tori Woods and published it through an online pre-release in March 2025.
The book – which was read by a handful of advance readers – is about an 18-year-old woman named Lucy who role-plays as a toddler with Arthur, an older man who is her father’s best friend.
Mastrosa appeared for sentence at Blacktown local court in western Sydney almost three months after being found guilty of three child abuse material offences relating to the novel.
The judge, Bree Chisholm, convicted the 34-year-old and imposed an 18-month community corrections order.
“General deterrence looms large and the sexual exploitation of children even from such an unsuspecting defendant cannot be minimised,” she said.
Mastrosa gasped as the sentence was handed down.
She sat in the public gallery accompanied by her husband, Adam, during the hearing.
Earlier on Tuesday, the high-profile criminal barrister Margaret Cunneen SC asked the judge not to convict her client, arguing that she had simply made a mistake.
“She was planning to write an erotic book, she wasn’t planning to write child abuse material,” she told the court.
There was no ongoing risk to the community as the books, which were about fictional characters, had been destroyed, Cunneen said.
“She’s not a paedophile, she’s someone who wrote a book which offended against the law.”
Mastrosa wrote the book as an escape after being diagnosed with thyroid cancer and having multiple miscarriages, the court heard.
Cunneen said the 34-year-old had lost her job as a marketing executive for the Christian charity BaptistCare, had been exposed to online death threats and vitriol, and would never write anything like the book again.
Mastrosa was willing to undergo psychological treatment after being diagnosed with anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder since her arrest, the barrister added.
The crown prosecutor, Milijana Masanovic, pushed for a conviction.
“The book speaks for itself,” she submitted. “The matter’s an objectively serious one.”
The novel normalised child abuse material and fuelled the market of child exploitation, Masanovic said.
She acknowledged character references shown to the court that described Mastrosa as a kind, charitable woman. “Sometimes good people can do bad things,” she said.
In February, Chisholm found that the book sexually objectified children.
Lauren Ashley Mastrosa was convicted of three child abuse material offences related to her novel depicting toddler role-play.
Daddy’s Little Toy follows an 18-year-old woman named Lucy who engages in toddler role-play with Arthur, an older man who is her father's best friend.
Mastrosa was sentenced to an 18-month community corrections order instead of jail time.

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“The reader is left with a description that creates the visual image in one’s mind of an adult male engaging in sexual activity with a young child,” she ruled at the time.
Mastrosa was found guilty of producing, possessing and distributing child abuse material.