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Sensuous Magic by Patrick Califia-Rice

Screw the Roses, Send Me the Thorns, by Philip Miller and Molly Devon

The Sexually Dominant Woman, by Lady Green

  • Bisexuality: when gender is a different kind of factor
  • Feminism: the empowerment of women is good for everyone
  • Fetish: reclaiming sensuality
  • Kink: what it is that some of us do
  • Polyamory: multiple responsible committed loves
  • Queer: more than just politics
  • Screw the Roses, Send Me the Thorns, by Philip Miller and Molly Devon

    Philip Miller and Molly Devon think that S/M is fun, and "that reading about it should be fun, too." Screw the Roses, Send Me the Thorns is definitely fun, not to mention approachable, chatty, and insightful. What makes it truly special, however, is the sheer weight of loving details. There's clear explanations and detailed tutorials for beginners, as general as "safe, sane, and consensual" and as specific as "you will be swinging the whip with your arm pivoting at the shoulder." There's also solid advice, safety measures, steamy suggestions, plenty of black-and-white photographs, useful and humorous drawings, an extensive glossary, and over 900 entries of S/M clothing and equipment vendors, publications, computer bulletin boards, and organizations worldwide. As sadomasochism is a practice that's still taboo for many people, the chapter on finding partners and sharing your fantasies with existing partners can be invaluable.

    Screw the Roses enthusiastically covers all the basics and even some of the not-so-basics--bondage, negotiation, sex, endorphins, dominance and submission, toys, safety, S/M community, and beyond. It's written primarily from the point of view of male dominant/female submissive interactions, but it's easily translatable into valuable advice for any relationship configuration. Miller and Devon's explanations of not just the how, but also the why, of sadomasochism are honest, sexy, funny--and a must-have for anyone who wants to learn about sadism, masochism, dominance, submission, or bondage.

    review © Amazon.com

    Last revised: 2003 December 22
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    all text Copyright © 1997-2003 by Cheryl Trooskin
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