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I like this book, always have,in each of its editions and the latest is like the return of an old friend after a facelift and a trip to the healh farm. The picture of the front seems to be the same one chosen for the upcoming Gay Man's Kama Sutra from Terry Sanderson, but no matter. It no longer teaches me anything new, but it did. It just has that sense of being a "must have" book like a car maintenance manual even if you don't fix your own. I like pencil drawings instead of photographs, but I do miss the old Greek and Roman mosaics in the front. It is nice to dip into and read a section or two, just to have the book......and I have bought maybe three editions over the years before disposing of each one; then hesitating and buying yet another replacement copy. I decide to live without it and move on, but am drawn back to buy another copy.......stupid really, but it has a reassuring quality about it.....simple, forthright, clear, and it makes gay sex seem almost mainstream and yet, its appearance on a coffee table would make others blush at the very sight of its title. It is the original gay-lifestyle manual; I like Jack Hart's Gay Sex; and probably will find Terry Sanderson's Kama-Sutra fun to read; but TJGS is without question the book to accompany Spartacus on the modern man's bookshelf as a statement to himself symbolic of a rite of passage and identity.
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