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Unaccompanied Women
Unaccompanied Women
Oct 6, 2024 11:23 AM

Author:Jane Juska

Unaccompanied Women

As a result of what she calls 'the only stroke of genius I've ever had', Jane Juska placed a personal ad in a newspaper, that began: 'Before I turn 67 - next March - I would like to have a lot of sex with a man I like.' The response was overwhelming, and it changed Jane's life. She told all in A Round-Heeled Woman, which Lynne Truss called 'the best book about sex I have read', and which shocked some, amused many and became a bestseller.

Five years later, Jane has, like it or not, become a kind of icon for the post-menopause generation. She's a friend and confessor to women of all ages with poignant, tragic or enchanting stories - unaccompanied women, alone for now but searching for sex and romance. And despite her success, Jane herself is still looking for a man to keep her company - not a husband, not even a partner, but the perfect lover, described by Katharine Hepburn as one who 'lives nearby and visits often'.

So the story continues, looking around at her generation, back to her youth, and forward to... whatever grabs her fancy. And like many unaccompanied women, Jane's also in search of a better place to live. Her current tiny apartment doesn't allow for much in the way of romance, let alone the giant toy box she wants to fill for her granddaughter, born on her birthday and now just two, who's brought another kind of love to her life. But as a sporadic earner on a teacher's pension, she can never afford the dream house.

So the search continues, for love, friendship, sex, a roof over her head - it's what keeps this seventy-two year old author young, and will keep readers wonderfully entertained in this funny, deft and touching memoir.

Reviews

Poses questions that will not go away

—— Rhoda Koenig , Evening Standard

She is...very, very funny

—— Kate Saunders , Sunday Times

Utterly and irresistibly feminine book

—— Jeffrey Taylor , Express on Sunday

She writes it sharply, rawly, truly

—— Helen Brown , Daily Telegraph

Packed with fascinating social history ... compelling and informative

—— Scarlet

In telling the stories of those who use them, Cocks shows how personal columns were not only a vital way of making friends and meeting lovers but also of forging a community when homosexuality was still illegal, when being single past the age of 21 was seen as embarrassingly shameful and when the difficulty of divorce could make marriage seem an intolerable burden

—— Telegraph

the great pleasure of this book is the jump from the euphemistic wording in the ads to the sexual truth behind it

—— Harry Mount , Literary Review

Whether you're a SWF, NS, GSOH or merely intrigued by the lives behind the acronyms, this book takes a quirky look at modern relationships

—— Lauren Laverne , Grazia

How Britain has evolved from Victorian prudishness is the subject of this engrossing survey of our quest for love and sex over the past century

—— London Paper

An interesting look at a social phenomenon that is becoming less and less shrouded in stigma as virtual reality becomes the norm

—— Time Out

A fascinating book

—— Word Magazine
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