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enlarge | Author: Mary Roach Creator: Sandra Burr Publisher: Brilliance Audio on MP3-CD Lib Ed Category: Book
List Price: $39.25 Buy New: $24.60 You Save: $14.65 (37%)
New (14) Used (3) from $24.60
Rating: 69 reviews Sales Rank: 895445
Format: Audiobook, Mp3 Audio, Unabridged Media: Audio CD Edition: Library Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.1 x 0.6
ISBN: 1423316711 Dewey Decimal Number: 612.6 EAN: 9781423316718 ASIN: 1423316711
Publication Date: April 7, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Showing reviews 6-10 of 69
A great read! September 19, 2008 Pandora V (Shepherdstown, WV) I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Mary Roach's writing is entertaining and informative. This book provides an introduction to the study of sex, and I now find myself wanting to learn more. I don't think this is a book for people who have already completed a lot of research or study on sex, but for those who want an introduction to the topic, this book is fabulous. Highly recommended.
Curious coupling indeed September 19, 2008 Ilya Grigorik (Toronto, ON, Canada) A curious coupling of science and sex indeed, the book ranges from the hilarious, to mundane and at times boring, and to downright disturbing. Looking past the social taboo of sex and research, Mary Roach offers an interesting perspective on the scientists, and the results of their research based from the last 100 years of work in the area. However, while graphic details abound, there seems to be no point to the overall story - version two is in order.
Interesting, but a little scattershot (3.5 *s) September 16, 2008 One Man's View (Lawrenceville, GA USA) 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
The author in this book basically researches sex researchers and their work: sexual anatomy, function, and response. She does this with certain misgivings, as sex research, even in modern times, has largely had to fly under the radar. Researchers often have to battle insinuations that they "enjoy" their work just a bit too much. She travels widely to investigate any number of relevant topics. The subjects are both human and animal; and the use of a variety of technologies from MRIs, ultrasound, and personal devices receives attention. A major focus of the author is on the understanding and overcoming of sexual dysfunction, ranging well beyond recent obsessions with ED. She does all of this with understated humor, even volunteering herself and her husband for some not-so-discreet ultrasound imaging. The book is definitely not without merit and is interesting, but it is scattershot - a little bit of this, a little bit of that. It tends to bounce along the surface alternating among the scenario, equipment, the science, the researcher, the participant, etc. More focus and organization are needed, but is still a pretty good contribution to a field that seemingly cannot be discussed forthrightly in the pseudo moralistic US.
Tough topic handled fairly well September 11, 2008 PeggyK (Oregon) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Mary Roach treats her topics with a healthy blend of disrespect and appreciation for the experts she harvests and repackages and adds her own somewhat glib take on their perspectives. This may be the only way to tackle this culturally heavily laden subject and make it readable.
You'll never view sex quite the same September 1, 2008 Blaine Greenfield (Belle Meade, NJ) 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
BE FOREWARNED: The following review has some adult-type language that may offend some readers . . . if that be the case, please skip this review; the book is probably NOT for you. BONK by Mary Roach is a book that is probably not for everybody, in that it deals with the subject of (dare I say it?) S-E-X. It does so, however, do so in a way that is both enlightening and quite funny in many parts . . . for example, here's how she describes her meeting with one of Egypt's top sex researchers: * Dr. Ahmed Shafik wears three-piece suits with gold watch fobs and a diamond stick pin in the lapel. His glasses are the thick, black rectangular style of the Nasser era. He owns a Cairo hospital and lives in a mansion with marble walls. He was nominated for a Nobel Prize. I don't care about any of this Shafik won my heart by publishing a paper in European Urology in which he investigated the effects of polyester on sexual activity. Ahmed Shafik dressed lab rats in polyester pants. There were seventy-five rats. They wore their pants for one year. Shafik found that over time the ones dressed in polyester or poly-cotton blend had sex significantly less often than the rats whose slacks were cotton or wool. (Shafik thinks the reason is that polyester sets up troublesome electrostatic fields in and around the genitals. Having seen an illustration of a rat wearing the pants, I would say there's an equal possibility that it's simply harder to get a date when you dress funny.) As if that's not enough for you to learn, check out what she has to say about what women find appealing: * I have a better suggestion for Cutler's customers. Stop wearing cologne. Women don't find it attractive. If you don't believe me, here is a quote from a press release from the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago: "Men's colognes actually reduced vaginal blood flow." Foundation director Al Hirsch hooked women up to a vaginal photoplethysmograph and had them wear surgical masks scented with ten different aromas or combinations of aromas. (to be sure the women weren't just getting aroused by dressing up in surgical masks, Hirsch put unscented masks onto a control group.) In addition to the smell of cologne, the women were turned off by the scent of cherry and of "charcoal barbeque meat." At the top of the women's turn-on list was, mysteriously, mixture of cucumber and Good 'n' Plenty candy. It was said to increase vaginal blood flow by 13 percent. Though I'm not so sure about that last recommendation or whether I'd ever try it, I do give the author a lot of credit for the research that she did . . . in fact, she sometimes even recruited her husband: * "Regarding the position," he says when we return in our johnny tops. He wants us on our sides, spoons-style. (This was explained, sort of, in the instruction sheet: We will ask the penis to be inserted into the vagina from his partner's back.) "I think facing the wall is better," says Dr. Deng. As opposed to facing him. "That will be more romantic," he adds. On the wall, someone has hung a painting of a hillside harbor town. As though by looking at it we could convince ourselves that we were off on the Amalfi Coast-or, just as good, that Dr. Deng was. "And I will switch off the lights." "Where are the candles and soft music?" says Ed. "Oh, I am sorry," says Dr. Deng, straight-faced, chagrined. Then he brightens. "I can turn on my laptop. I have the soundtrack to Les Miz." His efforts are sweet though pointless. There is no way to make this situation romantic, normal, sexual. It feels like a medical procedure, something to be got through. Dr. Deng goes next door and returns with a 9-by-11 envelope and hands it to Ed. Inside is a copy of a U.K. version of Maxim. "This is very erotic," he assures Ed. The implication being, I suppose, that the sight of one's wife in a baggy knee-length hospital Johnny and threadbare socks is not. I'm still laughing at that description. There's much to like about BONK, including some great chapter titles . . . I also liked Roach's explanations of scientific studies . . . my only criticism is that the book could have used an index.
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