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Blushing at Both Ends
Blushing at Both Ends
Oct 27, 2024 3:33 PM

Author:Philip Kemp

Blushing at Both Ends

Funny, full of surprises and always arousing, this is a brilliant collection of stories about innocent young women drawn into scenarios that result in the sensual pleasures of spanking. Girls who feel compelled to manipulate and engineer situations in which older authority figures punish them, over their laps, desks, or chairs.

Reviews

The best in the field

—— Headpress

Fabulously evocative

—— DESIRE

A compelling story…in her inimitable style

—— Peterborough Evening Telegraph

Ruth Rendell is surely one of the greatest novelists presently at work in our language. The extraordinary depth and accuracy of her psychological portraits is matched only by the rare inventiveness of her storytelling

—— Scott Turow

Psychologically acute and extremely disturbing, Ruth Rendell’s work is outstanding

—— The Times

A piercing satire of Communism and the language of revolutions

—— Ángel Gurría-Quitana , Financial Times, *Books of the Year*

Yan probes the darkness and absurdity of Chinese society and history with a sexy satirical tale of the Cultural Revolution as wrought in a small village . . . distinctive and punchy. Yan's exuberant and unflinching tragicomedy is undeniably appealing

—— Publishers Weekly

Surreal and amusing, biting and fun

—— Caroline Overington , The Australian

A gritty, memorable story . . . Yan's study of power and class struggle becomes, in the end, a near-classic tragedy

—— Kirkus Review

Yan's signature biting wit creates another indelible work of bittersweet humor and socio-political insight

—— Booklist

Predicted to become a new future classic . . . this is a powerful, multi-faceted book that questions everything from marriage to sexual desire, power and the dangers of hubris

—— Clara Strunck , Buro

Gao Aijun, the narrator of this boisterous novel, set during the Cultural Revolution, finds his life charmless: his village is like "a pool of stagnant water," and his wife makes him feel "a clump of cotton" in his throat. Then he meets a beautiful woman, also married, and, to attract her, sets out to lead the "revolution" in their village. In speech larded with Mao quotes and traditional maxims, Gao reveals how their romance, fuelled by the feverish political climate, pitches the village into ever-escalating extremism -- a years-long parade of self-advancing schemes culminating in an unthinkable end

—— New Yorker
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