Author:Ann Summers
In the third volume of Madame B's saucy tales our intriguing hostess tells all. Ten women confess their stories of seduction, revealing their most intimate and devilish desires and steamy sexual encounters.
Jet - a young woman finds herself joining a very exclusive club when she is upgraded to business class
Menage a Trois - a voyeur gets to see her neighbours at close quarters
The End of the Pier Show - a night out clubbing in Brighton comes to an unexpected climax for Kyra and her friends Rick and Sam
I Heard Love Is Blind - deprived of sight, a woman goes on a sensory journey with her young lover
Rumble in the Jungle - a yoga retreat is spoiled by the presence of the obnoxious David; or do opposites attract?
The Camera Never Lies - models Sara and Kim get carried away at a magazine photoshoot
Fetisch - a waitress at a fetish club meets an intriguing new customer
The Captain's Table - an invitation to dine with the captain on a swinging cruise ship means more than just dinner for one young couple
Shopped - a security guard comes up with a novel 'punishment' for shoplifting
Fireman's Pole - on her hen night, a bride-to-be decides to have one last fling... with the stripper!
No fantasy is off limits, and with private indulgences stripped bare for all to see, Madame B's Stories of Seduction ensures that nothing remains a secret any more.
Reads like a madcap Montaigne on acid
—— MetroThe most entertaining of American writers, almost a new Mark Twain...his words can travel on through time
—— Daily MailThe wittiest man since Groucho Marx and the wisest since Karl Marx
—— The TimesImbued with the innocence, empathy, and kindness that always seemed central to Vonnegut's sensibility
—— Lionel Shriver , Financial Times(Vonnegut) was a splendid preacher of American populism at its most radical...always funny and sometimes refreshingly vulgar
—— IndependentThe best of these unpublished pieces are as mad, bitter, hilarious and, in their healthy disrespect not only for 'Get Tough America' but for humanity in general, as startlingly timely as the best of his output
—— Daily TelegraphYou should buy this book
—— SpectatorDark, funny and disturbing
—— London Review of Books