The Book Club Blog - Who is Belle de Jour?

     
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Sunday, July 04, 2004

Belle de Jour is one among many!

According to The Telegraph, "Explicit sex is now used to lure young women readers": "Over the next 12 months British publishers will be launching an unprecedented number of sexually graphic books - fact and fiction - to appeal to a new generation of young women."

While we're on the subject, has anyone out there read "Diary of a Manhattan Call Girl" by Tracy Quan?
Diary of a Manhattan Call Girl is a wonderfully intelligent, sexually frank, rollicking novel that introduces us to Nancy Chan, a turn-of-the-millennium call girl who lives and works on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Nancy is full of contradictory desires; she frequently has to choose between making love and making money. On good days, she gets to do both. Surrounded by devoted, wealthy, and powerful johns, some of whom want more than just sex, and caught between two all- consuming call girl friends who complicate her life, Nancy navigates the tricky currents of the world’s oldest profession. With one foot in the bedrooms of her rich and demanding clients and one in the straight world of her unwitting fiancé, who has started to apartment-hunt and arrange a wedding, Nancy keeps her two worlds from colliding in her inimitable style. The Village Voice, August 29, 2001: A subversive riff on the Feminine Mystique-era question: Can you become a wife and still pursue a career? Or The Diary of Nymphomaniac, written by a Spanish prostitute, Valerie Tasso. A quest for love, affection, self-knowledge, recognition, and personal accomplishment... Or One Hundred Strokes of the Brush Before Bed, by Melissa Panarello, which the Pope issued a warning against reading? One Hundred Strokes of the Brush Before Bed is the fictionalised memoir of a highly libidinous Sicilian teenager, who seeks love and companionship through a series of heterosexual sexual situations, involving impromptu one night stands in the backseat of cars, spliff induced group orgies and S&M. Or Brass, by Helen Walsh. The story of an undergraduate in Liverpool who uses prostitutes to re-enact pornographic scenes, which was published earlier this year, insisted, however, that the use of sex was not always a deliberate ploy to increase sales, and instead was simply a reflection of modern life. Or Girls, by Nic Kelman, which tells the story of a series of men pursuing their sexual fantasies with young women. They include a father who leaves his family to spend the night in a girls' college dormitory and a company chief executive whose lust for a friend's daughter leads him to feign a broken ankle to sleep with the teenager.

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