Confessions of a Sex Artist: Vol I: Venus, Cupid, Folly & Time
Book Details
Author(s)Billy Bob Stone
PublisherCondor's Quill Press
ISBN / ASIN0615582885
ISBN-139780615582887
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank9,971,833
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
"The Book of Love should be printed, like the quality translations of foreign poets, in parallel text. Then maybe we could understand the opposite sex." -- page 463.
Mr. Stone's debut novel is not afraid to be both romantic and erotic. Nor is it afraid of being both literary and realistic.
Excerpts (both short and not so short) are available for immediate reading from the publisher at condorsquillpress.com.
Billy Bob Stone's freshman year at the University of Chicago is a scholastic success but a social failure. But as 1973 turns into 1974, his life abruptly changes as he becomes progressively embroiled with four very different women. His sexual adventures and romantic contortions crescendo into a four-cornered sexual jamboree that ends, however, in an emotionally bruising catastrophe. As a chastened Billy Bob begins to discover an authentic love with a fellow student, a tragic murder makes him think of dropping out of school, leaving his new-found lover, and escaping Chicago altogether.
The novel's last love poem:
Things begun in sexus
Naturally twist into plexus
To expose the common nexus
Of us human beings: complexus.
Mr. Stone's debut novel is not afraid to be both romantic and erotic. Nor is it afraid of being both literary and realistic.
Excerpts (both short and not so short) are available for immediate reading from the publisher at condorsquillpress.com.
Billy Bob Stone's freshman year at the University of Chicago is a scholastic success but a social failure. But as 1973 turns into 1974, his life abruptly changes as he becomes progressively embroiled with four very different women. His sexual adventures and romantic contortions crescendo into a four-cornered sexual jamboree that ends, however, in an emotionally bruising catastrophe. As a chastened Billy Bob begins to discover an authentic love with a fellow student, a tragic murder makes him think of dropping out of school, leaving his new-found lover, and escaping Chicago altogether.
The novel's last love poem:
Things begun in sexus
Naturally twist into plexus
To expose the common nexus
Of us human beings: complexus.
