Get It Now He, An Irreverent Look At The American Male Written And Illustrated By Florence King Accessible Via Text

from being misanthropically rightwing, this text is completely contingent upon various untenable principles of differentiation sex, gender, amp sequellae,

Something like a theophrastian typology here, perhaps corrupted by cynical wit, but deploying thencurrent stock character stereotypes regarding American sic males sic,

Instability in its deployment of class, which does not appear to turn upon the wellknown theories Marx, Weber, Durkheim, but is rather a vague and conceptually weak term of opprobrium, lacking rigor.
Some silly commentary on feminism as author apparently understood it, or rather misunderstood it,

That said, comical at times, such as when describing sex amp dating:

With a talent for partitioning unrivaled since the Congress of Vienna, the fifties coed divided herself into a rigidly classified set of loveplay areas known as Above the Waist, Below the Waist, There, and that ultimate form of petting called Inside Me.
To make matters even more complicated, there were the subcategories of Over the Clothes, Under the Clothes, Naked in the Front Seat, and Naked in the Back Seat,
Very complicated indeed, considering the generalized subcategory in my experience has by contrast been lets fuck,

Recommended for those who read Henry James when horny, readers scared to death of semen, and misogynists with an inability to bring off a bawdy remark with elan and affection.
Available at the Internet Archive:
sitelink org/details/unreliabl Born in Washington, D, C. into a bookish British father and a tomboy American mother, Florence King spent her childhood living with her parents,
Get It Now He, An Irreverent Look At The American Male Written And Illustrated By Florence King Accessible Via Text
her maternal grandmother, and her grandmothers maid, King showed talent in French, but unable to pursue it as a major at American University, she switched to a dual major of history and English, She attended the University of Mississippi for graduate school, but did not complete her M, A. degree after discovering she could make a living as a writer, King, who lived in Fredericksburg, Virginia at the time of her death, retired in, but resumed writing a monthly column for National in, She died on January,at the age of, Born in Washington, D. C. into a bookish British father and a tomboy American mother, Florence King spent her childhood living with her parents, her maternal grandmother, and her grandmother's maid, King showed talent in French, but unable to pursue it as a major at American University, she switched to a dual major of history and English, She attended the University of Mississippi for graduate school, but did not complete her M, A. degree after discovering she could make a living as a writer, King, who lived in Fredericksburg, Virginia at the time of her death, retired in, but resumed writing a monthly column for National in, She died on January,at the age of, sitelink.