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Bonk The Curious Coupling Of Science And Sex Mary Roach

  • SKU: BELL-53764594
Bonk The Curious Coupling Of Science And Sex Mary Roach
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.7

106 reviews

Bonk The Curious Coupling Of Science And Sex Mary Roach instant download after payment.

Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.67 MB
Author: Mary Roach
ISBN: 9780393334791, 0393334791
Language: English
Year: 2009

Product desciption

Bonk The Curious Coupling Of Science And Sex Mary Roach by Mary Roach 9780393334791, 0393334791 instant download after payment.

“Rich in dexterous innuendo, laugh-out-loud humor and illuminating fact. It’s compulsively readable.” —*Los Angeles Times Book Review*

The best-selling author of Stiff turns her outrageous curiosity and insight on the most alluring scientific subject of all: sex.

Roach is not like other science writers. She doesn't write about genes or black holes or Schrödinger's cat. Instead, she ventures out to the fringes of science, where the oddballs ponder how cadavers decay (in her debut, Stiff) and whether you can weigh a person's soul (in Spook). Now she explores the sexiest subject of all: sex, and such questions as, what is an orgasm? How is it possible for paraplegics to have them? What does woman want, and can a man give it to her if her clitoris is too far from her vagina? At times the narrative feels insubstantial and digressive (how much do you need to know about inseminating sows?), but Roach's ever-present eye and ear for the absurd and her loopy sense of humor make her a delectable guide through this unesteemed scientific outback. The payoff comes with subjects like female orgasm (yes, it's complicated), and characters like Ahmed Shafik, who defies Cairo's religious repressiveness to conduct his sex research. Roach's forays offer fascinating evidence of the full range of human weirdness, the nonsense that has often passed for medical science and, more poignantly, the extreme lengths to which people will go to find sexual satisfaction. (Apr.)

The New Yorker dubbed Roach “the funniest science writer in the country.” OK, maybe there’s not a lot of competition. But even if there were thousands of science-humor writers, she would be the sidesplitting favorite. Of course, she chooses good subjects: cadavers in Stiff (2003), ghosts in Spook (2005), and now a genuinely fertile topic in Bonk. As Roach points out, scientists studying sex are often treated with disdain, as though there is something inherently suspicious about the enterprise. Yet through understanding the anato

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