Jealousy (Paperback)
$13.07 - Save $0.93 (6%) - RRP $14.00 Free shipping worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |- Also available in...
- Hardback $19.46
Short Description for Jealousy Catherine Millet's best-selling "The Sexual Life of Catherine M." was a landmark book -- a portrait of a sexual life lived without boundaries and without a safety net. Described as "eloquent, graphic -- and sometimes even poignant" by "Newsweek," and as "[perhaps] one of the most erotic books ever written" by "Playboy," it drew international attention for its audacity, and the apparently superhuma
Full description- Publisher: Grove Press / Atlantic Monthly Press
- Published: 03 March 2011
- Format: Paperback 192 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Memoirs | Erotic Confessions & True Stories
- ISBN 13: 9780802145192 ISBN 10: 0802145191
- Sales rank: 441,782
Full description for Jealousy
Catherine Millet's best-selling "The Sexual Life of Catherine M." was a landmark book -- a portrait of a sexual life lived without boundaries and without a safety net. Described as "eloquent, graphic -- and sometimes even poignant" by "Newsweek," and as "[perhaps] one of the most erotic books ever written" by "Playboy," it drew international attention for its audacity, and the apparently superhuman sangfroid required of Millet and her partner, Jacques Henric, with whom she had an extremely public and active open relationship. Now, Millet's follow-up answers the first book's implicit question: How did you avoid jealousy? "I had love at home," Millet explains, "I sought only pleasure in the world outside." But one day she discovered a letter in their apartment that made it clear that Jacques was seriously involved with someone else. "Jealousy" details the crisis provoked by this discovery, and Millet's attempts to reconcile her need for freedom and sexual liberation with the very real heartache that Jacques's infidelity caused. If "The Sexual Life of Catherine M." seemed to disregard emotion, "Jealousy" is its radical complement: the paradoxical confession of a libertine who discovers that love, in any of its forms, can have a dark side.

