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The
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Indispensable
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Perfect
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Provocative
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MUST
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Ebony
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My
Girlfriend Comes to the City and Beats Me Up
Stephen Elliott $13.95
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Eddy |
Freddy |
Comments |
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Strange,
alarming, disturbing, and provocative. Read at your own
peril. |
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Synopsis:
A series of highly erotic,
BDSM stories.
Our Review:
Here's a great review from the
LA Weekly,
which mirrors our own thoughts...
BDSM Buddies
By
HILLARY JOHNSON
The pieces that make
up author and political activist Stephen
Elliott’s new collection, My Girlfriend Comes to
the City and Beats Me Up, tell the story of a
sex life, from its awkward, teenage beginnings to
the first moments in which Elliott’s character,
Theo, begins to integrate sex with self. In the
introduction, titled “This Could Have Been a
Memoir,” Elliott writes, “I take responsibility for
these stories, for every sexual act depicted, many
of which occurred when I was younger, before I made
the effort to acquire the information I needed. I
acquired scars instead.”
Sounds like a pretty generic description of the
sexual coming-of-age process for a lot of us — who
hasn’t felt at times that their adult sexual
identity was carved out of that vulnerable flesh of
youth? The difference here is that Theo’s scars are
“real.” He is a masochist, and the sex acts he
refers to involve physical pain and humiliation,
from the dominatrix in Amsterdam who casually flips
her cigarette ash into his mouth, to the titular
girlfriend, Eden, who marks her territory by carving
words into his flesh.
Not many authors who write about sex are able to
control the urge to turn their sexual fetishes into
literary ones — a fascination with the ornamentalia
of sex, its rituals and sacraments, leading to a
kind of cloying preciousness.
But despite the inherent exoticism of his subject
matter, Elliott’s knack as an author is to shock us
with the mundane. His world is his world, and he
inhabits it so honestly that we can’t help but feel
as though we’re in it with him. In a scene where
Theo is being abused by a girlfriend who isn’t quite
getting it right, he isn’t interested in titillation
but in the awkwardness of the moment: “She was
hurting me and being mean and it was so
unreasonable. Maybe if I were tied up or something I
could get in the mood. But what do you do when
you’re not in the mood and someone is hitting you
and you want them to stop?”
At the same time that he’s stripping away the
romance, Elliott questions the opposite tendency in
the BDSM community to go so far in pursuit of
normalcy and acceptance that alternative sexuality
becomes a kind of “Up With Kinky People”
self-parody.
“It’s always been hard for me to imagine that there
are others out there,” he writes, “healthy couples
who tie each other up and beat each other and then
go to the movies or something... You can judge by
the size of the BDSM section on the porn store walls
and all the videos and books they carry in the
regular bookstores. All of those books seem to have
the same message, that it’s OK. I despise that
message.”
As political as his writing is, Elliott is unwilling
to stoop to propagandizing. Theo isn’t seeking
health, he’s after fulfillment, and when he finally
gets it, or at least comes close, we’re very much
aware of the difference.
Elliott’s epiphany is that his idea of sex is as
normal as anyone else’s, that at root, sexuality
itself is both deeply freaky and utterly mundane, a
cataclysm and a constant. In the end, Elliott’s
refusal to compromise is oddly comforting, and
hopeful. Don’t expect to ever be completely
reconciled with your sexuality, he seems to be
saying, because as long as you’re alive, that
particular story has no ending.
Freddy and Eddy Say: Though some of the
descriptions are sure to repulse the shyer among us,
this collection of stories is provocative and
ultimately satisfying. With so much erotica focused
on fantasy situations that probably won't ever
happen, it's refreshing to read stories of sexual
deviance, gritty, hard, and REAL, that present
themselves in tone much like a reporter might put
forth in a news weekly. A very good effort and well
worth the read.
Interested in purchasing
this book?
Click here to visit Amazon or on the links above.
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