aotearoa, social science, movie theatre, drunk strip, pride, auto reviews, alice fredlund, money, seattle, capsules, sale books literature, ultimate, masturbation, editorial, theater, animal sex with human, young teen sex, drunk party, tennis, adult, beastality, women's health,
|
Her ailment, which she likens to "a little dentist drilling a little hole," stumps a host of specialists. They prescribe a variety of treatments, from vinegar rinses to tea brother and sister baths, from biofeedback to antidepressants, all to no avail. Kaysen may be short on some details, omissions that leave the reader feeling a bit adrift (Where does she live? What does brother and sister she do for a living?), but readers will be drawn in by her ingenuous confessions. She's brutally honest about her relationship with her unnamed live-in boyfriend. "Now that I didn't want to brother and sister have sex, though, we got into trouble," she writes. Their relationship deteriorates into constant fighting and even violence as his forced abstinence causes major friction. Kaysen doesn't drift into explicit or intentionally shocking territory; she remains witty and plainspoken throughout the whole medical ordeal.
|