
Sex with Shakespeare
Here's Much to Do with Pain, but More with Love
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Narrateur(s):
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Jillian Keenan
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Auteur(s):
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Jillian Keenan
À propos de cet audio
A provocative, moving, kinky, and often absurdly funny memoir about Shakespeare, love, obsession, and spanking.
When it came to understanding love, a teenage Jillian Keenan had nothing to guide her - until a production of The Tempest sent Shakespeare's language flowing through her blood for the first time. In Sex with Shakespeare, she tells the story of how the Bard's plays helped her embrace her unusual sexual identity and find a love story of her own.
Four hundred years after Shakespeare's death, Keenan's smart and passionate memoir brings new life to his work. With 14 of his plays as a springboard, she explores the many facets of love and sexuality - from desire and communication to fetish and fantasy. In A Midsummer Night's Dream, Keenan unmasks Helena as a sexual masochist - like Jillian herself. In Macbeth, she examines criminalized sexual identities and the dark side of "privacy". The Taming of the Shrew goes inside the secret world of bondage, domination, and sadomasochism while King Lear exposes the ill-fated king as a possible sexual predator. Moving through the canon, Keenan makes it abundantly clear that literature is a conversation. In Sex with Shakespeare, words are love.
As Keenan wanders the world in search of connection, from desert dictatorships to urban islands to disputed territories, Shakespeare goes with her - and provokes complex, surprising, and wildly important conversations about sexuality, consent, and the secrets that simmer beneath our surfaces.
©2016 Jillian Keenan (P)2016 HarperCollins PublishersI learned, laughed and loved
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There is a lot of entertaining interaction between the characters and the analysis of Shakespeare's plays is brilliant. When the first of the Bard's characters came to life, it is a relief when she tells the reader that she is not hallucinating. By the time the great man himself arrives it seems only natural and right.
Listening to the author tell her own story felt like an intimate privilege.
Entertaining and Insightful
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Hard to follow along.
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