Prices in AUD. Shipping worldwide. Flat rate $8 postage per order within Australia. International by weight calculated at checkout. Read full terms.
-
Reckless Living
Richard E. Geis
London: Softcover Library, 1972.Smut fiction. “Women on the prowl, men on the loose…” Originally published in the US as The Saturday Night Party.
-
For Reading In The Bath
Catulle Mendes
: Snuggly Books, 2019.“For Reading in the Bath, here presented in English for the first time in a delightful translation by Brian Stableford, is one of a number of risquae collections of ultra-short fiction produced by Catulle Mendaes (1841-1909) during the fin de siaecle. Always poetic, often perverse, and sometimes even chaste, these highly amusing, masterfully constructed tales of amour and immorality, featuring a large cast of Parisian characters, including the ubiquitous Valentin and the many women he pursues, are confections of great artistry that will be happily savored by anyone with a longing for suggestive treats.” (publisher’s blurb)
-
Airport Encounter
James Badger
: Privately Printed, 2012.Erotic coming of age fiction with some homosexual themes set in Brisbane, Armidale, and Toulouse. Limited private printing of 100 copies. “Nigel Wellesley is an Australian choirboy and this book follows him and his talented group of friends from their first sexual experiences into being teenagers. The action switches between Brisbane, Armidale and Toulouse as Nigel has to cope with his girlfriend Jane Barton being in a different city, and then in a different country, but he has plenty of sex-play with his fellow boys while they are separated. Music naturally plays a major part in the story. Mark Ambon is a talented composer and his very shy girlfriend Rose Trescowick is a poet, while Andy Riemer (son of a jazz musician) juggles being a child prodigy pianist with surfing. All of these have major parts in the plot, as do a dirt-poor Moroccan immigrant family in Armidale who Nigel and Jane befriend. A heart-warming, and quite sexually explicit, story.” (publisher’s blurb)