Description
From his precocious childhood to the end of what he calls his "amatory career," an adventurous Victorian known only as "Walter" records a breathtaking carnal epic through hundreds of sexual encounters with one or more nursemaids, prostitutes, cousins, actresses, workingmen, and other men's wives. In ruling everything sexual within the realm of possibility, Walter reveals "varied delights...whims and fancies normal and abnormal," sexual violence, fetishes--and sometimes, surprisingly, love. From his many escapades, he learns an invaluable lesson: "One can never know too much concerning human nature." Portraying an era of notorious repression, in which the appearance of propriety had to be strictly maintained, My Secret Life provides a rare look at the hidden side of Victorian life: the upstairs and downstairs encounters where nothing is "proper"--or forbidden. First published in London around 1900, this landmark work freshly illuminates the complex sexual dynamics of a society strictly divided between rich and poor, male and female, sexual and chaste. In James Kincaid's abridgment, Walter and his world come to vivid life in new and often surprising ways. Edited and with an Introduction by James Kincaid and with an Afterword by Paul Sawyer
Author: Anonymous
Publisher: Signet Book
Published: 01/06/2015
Pages: 624
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.63lbs
Size: 6.90h x 4.24w x 1.28d
ISBN13: 9780451530721
ISBN10: 0451530721
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Personal Memoirs
- Psychology | Human Sexuality (see also Social Science | Human Sexuality)
Author: Anonymous
Publisher: Signet Book
Published: 01/06/2015
Pages: 624
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.63lbs
Size: 6.90h x 4.24w x 1.28d
ISBN13: 9780451530721
ISBN10: 0451530721
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Personal Memoirs
- Psychology | Human Sexuality (see also Social Science | Human Sexuality)
About the Author
My Secret Life is by far the most famous and the longest sexual autobiography written in the nineteenth century. It has in it invaluable material for social and cultural historians, literary scholars, students of manners and morals--and it has more of what we might call 'encounters' than any narrative ever penned in English.
--From the Introduction by James Kincaid